Hello, friends, and welcome back to Nations 4 Jesus. As we approach Easter, I want to share a story that embodies the very heart of the resurrection—not just as a historical event, but as a living power that transforms the darkest places on earth.
Today's story comes from deep inside the jungles of Ecuador… a place once known as the "Auca territory," a tribal word meaning savage.
But this is not a story about savagery.
This is a story about resurrection—about the power of Easter breaking cycles of hatred, vengeance, and death.
I spoke about this during one of my Christmas podcasts. So let me take you back to January 1956.
Five young missionaries landed their small yellow Piper aircraft on a sandy strip of riverbank the locals called "Palm Beach."
Their names were Jim Elliot, Nate Saint, Ed McCully, Roger Youderian, and Pete Fleming.
These men had been working for months to establish gentle, peaceful contact with the Waodani people—a tribe feared for generations for their history of violence and revenge killings.
They brought gifts. They shouted friendly phrases in the Waodani language. They waved from the plane. They prayed for an open door.
They believed God had called them to bring the Gospel to this unreached tribe, and they were willing to risk everything.
But on one quiet afternoon, Waodani warriors rushed out of the trees with spears raised high.
By sunset, all five men who had come to bring the Good News lay dead on the riverbank.
Try to imagine that moment. Five families shattered. Five wives became widows. Nine children lost their fathers. The world looked at what happened and called it a tragedy. A failed mission. A closed door. A senseless waste of young lives.
But Heaven was not finished.
Two years passed.
Two women—Rachel Saint and Elisabeth Elliot, the sister and wife of two of the martyrs—prayed and waited.
Think about that. Elisabeth Elliot's husband Jim had been killed by these warriors. Rachel Saint's brother Nate had been speared to death. They had every human reason to stay away, to protect themselves, to close that chapter and move on.
But they didn't.
And around Easter 1958, the unimaginable happened.
A Waodani woman named Dayuma, who had fled tribal violence years earlier, agreed to lead them into the tribe.
Rachel Saint along with Elisabeth Elliot and her young daughter Valerie, walked into the same village where the killers lived. Where the spears had been sharpened. Where their loved ones had died.
But instead of resentment, instead of revenge, instead of bitterness—they brought the message of Easter:
"Jesus is alive. And because He lives, we forgive you."
Friends, this was the moment resurrection walked into the jungle.
Can you imagine what those warriors must have felt? They had killed these women's family members. They expected vengeance. They expected hatred. That's all they had ever known—the endless cycle of killing and revenge that had defined their culture for generations.
But instead, they encountered forgiveness. They encountered the Gospel. They encountered the risen Christ.
One by one, warriors who had killed the missionaries came to Christ.
Entire families turned. Children who had grown up learning to hate and kill learned about a Savior who died and rose again. Generations of revenge—ended.
One of the most violent people groups in South America became known for their gentleness and faith.
Let me share three powerful truths from Scripture that this story brings to life.
First, Easter forgiveness defies all human logic.
Jesus said from the cross, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do." That's Luke 23:34.
The Elliots and Saints lived this Scripture out loud. They didn't just quote it—they embodied it. They walked into the village of their loved ones' killers and extended the same forgiveness Christ extended from the cross.
Easter forgiveness is not theoretical—it transforms enemies into brothers and sisters.
Second, the seed that dies bears much fruit.
Jesus said in John 12:24, "Unless a grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit."
The deaths of those five missionaries looked like defeat. But they became the seed that brought an entire tribe into the Kingdom. Their martyrdom opened a door that their lives alone could not have opened. Their blood watered ground that would produce a harvest of souls for generations.
What looked like failure to the world was actually the beginning of God's great work among the Waodani.
Third, resurrection power replaces cycles of violence with peace.
Ephesians 2:14 says, "He has broken down the wall of hostility."
What generations of tribal conflict could not end, the risen Christ ended. The Waodani had been locked in cycles of revenge killing for as long as anyone could remember. Violence begat violence. Death begat death. No one could break the cycle.
But when the Gospel came—when the message of a Savior who conquered death and offers forgiveness came—everything changed.
Now here's the part of the story that still brings me to tears every time I think about it.
Years later, Steve Saint—the son of the martyred pilot Nate Saint—returned to Ecuador as a young man.
He was baptized in the Curaray River… by the very man who killed his father.
Let that sink in. The son of the murdered missionary, baptized by his father's killer. Both of them brothers in Christ. Both of them changed by the resurrection.
This is resurrection power, friends. This is Easter.
Decades later, the Waodani church is vibrant and alive. Some of the very men who once killed outsiders have traveled the world preaching forgiveness, reconciliation, and the power of the Gospel.
A tribe once known for taking life is now known for new life.
And every Easter season, the Waodani believers remember the moment the Gospel walked into their village—not with spears, but with forgiveness. Not with vengeance, but with grace. Not with condemnation, but with the good news that Jesus is alive.
So what does this story mean for us today?
Easter is not just a historical event that happened 2,000 years ago. Yes, Jesus rose from the dead on that first Easter morning. Yes, the tomb was empty. Yes, death was defeated.
But Easter is also the ongoing power of God to step into impossible situations—into hatred, violence, and despair—and resurrect hope where death once ruled.
The Waodani story reminds us of three vital truths:
First, no people group is unreachable. If God can reach the Waodani—a tribe so violent they were called savages—then He can reach anyone. Your unsaved family member is not too far gone. Your hostile coworker is not beyond God's reach. That nation that persecutes Christians is not outside of God's plan.
Second, no wound is unforgivable. If Elisabeth and Valerie Elliot could forgive the men who killed husband and father, if Rachel Saint could forgive the men who killed her brother, if Steve Saint could be baptized by his father's killer—then no wound you've suffered is too deep for Easter forgiveness to heal.
Third, no enemy is beyond Christ's redemption. The men who wielded those spears became preachers of the Gospel. The warriors who took life became bearers of new life. The same Jesus who walked out of the tomb walks into tribes, nations, and families today, transforming enemies into brothers.
Let me ask you some questions. Is there someone in your life you've written off as unreachable? Is there a wound you've been holding onto, convinced it's too deep to forgive? Is there an enemy you believe is beyond redemption?
What if Easter power could change all of that? What if the same resurrection that transformed the Waodani could transform your situation?
Friends, I challenge you this Easter season—don't just celebrate what Jesus did 2,000 years ago. Ask Him to demonstrate His resurrection power in your life today. Ask Him to help you forgive the unforgivable. Ask Him to reach the unreachable people in your world. Ask Him to resurrect hope where death has ruled.
And if God is stirring your heart toward missions, toward unreached people groups, toward the hard places—don't ignore that call. The Waodani needed those five missionaries to be willing to go. There are tribes and nations today that still need someone willing to bring the Gospel, no matter the cost.
Let me pray…
Thank you for joining me today. This story of the Waodani reminds me why Easter matters—not just for our personal salvation, but for the transformation of entire people groups who are waiting to hear that Jesus is alive.
Until next time, keep your eyes on the nations, remember that resurrection power is still at work today, and never forget—the same Jesus who conquered death can conquer anything in your life.