If we were to sum up our life since April 2020 in one word, it would be: uncertainty. Our journey taught us to embrace the ambiguity – the unfolding of God’s will is always a mystery.
During our eight years of seeking spiritual understanding alongside the Cofán people, we have learned to experience God more deeply — we have been challenged to give up any notion of finding God in certainty, conformity or control. God has been faithful to meet us even in the “valley of the shadow,” in the pause, in the in-between.
God met us by challenging our assumptions through studying Native Christian theology and when we struggled to learn basic linguistics.
God was present with Jerrell when his mother, Florence, breathed her final breath and with Jane while she cared for her father, Felton, through the last stage of his life.
God comforted us as our nest emptied of three of our four children.
God guided us through an unwelcome journey with epilepsy.
God picked us up when we were disappointed by three failed attempts to travel to Ecuador.
God healed our bodies of Coronavirus.
When gun violence touched our family, God drew near.
When depression threatened our relationships, God gave light.
Amid all this uncertainty, we were blessed by our visits to communities and home congregations. We praise God for the chance to be together again in person and for safe travels. Through our home stays, shared meals, and conversations over coffee, we sensed a deep love and commitment for indigenous people of Ecuador and around the world.
Our time living in the Cofán community in Zábalo, Ecuador, brought new understanding of the threats faced by Indigenous Peoples worldwide and we are feeling called to broaden our work.
We recently expanded our community by joining the Dismantling the Doctrine of Discovery Coalition, an Anabaptist group which works diligently to break down structures that continue to systematically dispossess Indigenous Peoples of their ancestral lands and human rights. This connection widened our circle of awareness to include:
- The Mayan people of Hopelchén, Campeche, in the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico.