Gordon Smith
(14 Oct 2010)
"WHY....THE 33 Chilean
minors survived for 69 days ...THERE WERE TRUE
'BELIEVERS' IN JESUS CHRIST ON BOARD
DOWN THERE !"
2 Chilean miners accept Christ while trapped underground
Posted on Oct 11, 2010 | by Tristan Taylor
SANTIAGO,
Chile (BP)--José Henríquez leads a small group of men in prayer every
evening in northern Chile -- 2,300 feet below the surface of the earth.
For
more than two months, 33 Chilean miners have been trapped beneath the
desert floor in a chamber the size of a living room. A partial collapse
blocked the mine exit Aug. 5.
Chilean Mining Minister Laurence
Golborne confirmed Oct. 11 that a trial run of a rescue capsule was
successful. The miners' rescue is scheduled to begin at midnight, Oct.
12.
When the mine collapsed, three of the miners -- including
Henríquez -- were Christians. Since then, two more of them have made
professions of faith.
"It was José who made the request that
an evangelical pastor come to minister to the miners and their
families," said Bryan Wolf, an International Mission Board (IMB)
missionary serving in Vallenar, Chile.
Rescue engineer Igor
Bravo, a member of First Baptist Church of Santiago, was one of the
first to hear of Henríquez's request for a pastor and contacted the
Chilean Baptist Union.
Bernardino Morales, director of the
Baptist union's Social Testimony Network, searched for a pastor who
lived near the mine in Copiapó but no one was available. Two weeks ago
he called Marcelo Leiva, pastor of Vallenar Baptist Church in Vallenar,
Chile, located about two hours away.
"Pastor," Morales said to Leiva, "it's either you, or it's you."
Leiva's response: "Amen."
The
miners had been on the pastor's heart before Bernardino called. He said
Bravo contacting the Chilean Baptist Union was the "channel of
blessing" that brought him to Camp Esperanza (Hope), where the miners'
families are staying.
When Leiva arrived at the camp, he didn't know anyone. But Henríquez's family quickly connected him with other families.
"That
[connection] allowed a lot of other people to hear the Word," Leiva
says, "and to know that in the midst of this catastrophe, God is in
control, and it is the Lord who has kept their family members alive."
The
wife of one of the miners who became a Christian since being trapped in
the mine met with Leiva over the past two weeks and also accepted
Christ.
Miners' families have been staying at Camp Hope for
weeks in what Leiva describes as rudimentary conditions. They receive
three meals a day and sleep on mats inside government-provided military
tents. Despite the simple accommodations, being close to their loved
ones brings them comfort.
After the frenzy of activity during
the day subsides, Leiva finds the families are more available to talk
with him in the evenings. He has noticed the difference between the
families who know Christ and the families who do not.
"This
has been a testimony to what the Lord can do in a person's life," Leiva
said. "Those that are the children of the Lord have been those that
have shown, even in the midst of the storm, a testimony of peace,
tranquility and trust in the Lord."
At Henríquez's request,
Leiva was recently given 10 minutes to speak through a telephone that
connects the trapped miners with the rescue crew. Leiva used that time
to pray for Henríquez and encourage him.
Henríquez sent a letter
to Leiva on behalf of the trapped miners, calling him a blessing and
thanking him for being there with their families. Leiva also has been
sending down letters of encouragement to the trapped miners.
Besides
Leiva, a Pentecostal pastor is the only other evangelical preacher
allowed in the camp. The two have been working together when they can
and have made a "good team," Leiva said.
Leiva has had the
opportunity to witness to family members, Chilean policemen and foreign
press -- including a Japanese reporter, Wolfe said. Leiva also wrote
down a Scripture portion from Psalms and gave it to Mining Minister
Laurence Golborne.
As the rescue draws near, the families in
Camp Hope are anxious. Leiva realizes that this unique opportunity to
share the Gospel is a fleeting one.
"Let's do our job and
fulfill the purpose for which God brought us here," Leiva said. "Not to
just have a protagonist role without sharing the Gospel. Because this
camp, in a few more days, is going to close and the people will return
home.
"Pray that we, the children of God, will do our job," Leiva said.
--30--
Tristan Taylor is an International Mission Board writer in the Americas.