The people who lived in the jungles of Papua New Guinea, under the
shadows of towering trees and the power of dark spirits, dreaded death. They
had good reason to; people screamed as they died. They thrashed and moaned,
tormented by spirits that they had spent their whole lives trying to appease.
That was death as the people of Irian Jaya, Papua New Guinea knew it.
But now, they were hearing stories. Rumours that not all men died this
way. There had come to some of the neighbouring tribes, men who served a
different spirit, a white spirit. These men were said to die in peace, even
with smiles on their faces.
It was this news which caused somewhat of a crisis at the mission
stations. It seemed like a week didn’t go by without word of a new tribe who
wanted to hear how to die well. Occasionally, natives even came in person, risking their lives to cross enemy territory that they
might ask for a missionary.
The mission board couldn’t keep up, there simply weren’t enough
missionaries to send!
There weren’t enough foreign missionaries.
The gospel was new to the tribes of Papua New Guinea but not so new that
there weren’t converts. One tribe had even begun to train up pastors from among
their own people. It was to this tribe that the missionary board turned. Asking
for men who were willing to take the gospel they had received and share it with
others.
They would be missionaries. Bringing the gospel to a different tribe;
who, though living only a few miles away, spoke an entirely different language
from their own.
One of these tribal missionaries was a man named Guatono. He was known
as “the happiest man” for, in the midst of a land filled with spiritual
oppression, Guatono always wore a smile.
Though sent without missionary training or classes in advanced theology,
Guatono had an advantage over foreign missionaries. He could not understand the
language any better than they but he understood the tribal culture.
Because he knew how to serve the people it didn’t take long for
him to win all their hearts. All, except for one - the witch
doctor.
The witch doctor, saw Guatono as a threat. A threat to his livelihood,
his influence, his very way of life. A threat that he could not ignore.
So, in broad daylight, before a whole village of witnesses, Sheerun kicked down Guatono’s fence and took one of his chickens.
So, in broad daylight, before a whole village of witnesses, Sheerun kicked down Guatono’s fence and took one of his chickens.
Chicken theft, trifle though it may sound, was a serious offence in this
poor, tribal community. The people were horrified that the witch doctor would
treat Guatono in such a manner. He had openly insulted the missionary they had
waited so long for and everyone feared Guatono would
leave.
The chief called the people together.
As drums pounded in steady rhythm, the villagers hurried to an open
place near the river. Women left their cooking; men their afternoon naps;
dripping wet children came up from swimming in the river. When all were
present, the drums and the people alike fell silent.
The chief was the first to speak. He began by explaining the reason for
the tribunal, though everyone already knew it. Then he apologised to Guatono
and stated his hope that the missionary, who had served them so well, would not
leave on account of one man’s offence.
Finally, he turned to the people and called for them to suggest what payment the witch doctor should be required to make.
Finally, he turned to the people and called for them to suggest what payment the witch doctor should be required to make.
For a long time, all was silent. No sound could be heard except the call
of a distant parrot and that of the village pigs rummaging through the leaves
on the forest floor. Everyone was fond of Guatono, but no one wished to be the
one who suggested the witch doctor’s punishment. They were afraid to incur his
anger or that of the demons he worshipped.
Finally, the chief saw that it would be up to him. “I say that Sheerun must give two chickens to Guatono to pay for the one
he stole!”
The villagers began to nod. Soon they were clapping their hands and
shouting. “Two chickens for Guatono! Two chickens for Guatono!”
The chief silenced them by raising his stick. “Guatono, will you accept
two chickens as payment?”
The offer was a generous one - double what had been taken. The chief
felt sure that Guatono would gladly accept, but the missionary shook his head.
“I don’t want his chickens.”
The chief’s eyebrows rose. The people began to whisper. He
doesn’t want chickens? What does he want, if not chickens?
Guatono was staring at the witch doctor, who stood across the circle,
dressed in his full ritual garb. “I want the man.” He said.
What did he mean? What was Guatono saying? The people’s whispers
turned into a full debate. Some suggested that he didn’t know what
he was saying. He was, after all, still learning the language. Perhaps he had
chosen the wrong words.
But Guatono wasn't confused. He hadn’t taken his eyes off the witch
doctor and now he repeated his request. “I want the man.”
“You want the man?” The chief asked. “O favoured Guatono, we do not know
what you mean by this.”
“I want him to bring out his bag of witchcraft. Let him bring it and set
it here in the light.”
A gasp rose from the crowd. The people’s eyes grew wide.
Bags of witchcraft were not brought into the light! They were kept in
the dark, tucked away in a corner of the witch doctor’s house. Hidden from the
eyes of all but him.
No one was allowed to look at the magical contents that had the power to
conjure, heal, and kill. But Guatono seemed unmoved by the people’s fear.
Gradually, the people began to nod. Their curiosity overcoming their
trepidation.
“Yes! Have him bring out his magic bag!” One man shouted.
Seeing the crowd’s expressions changing, the witch doctor began to
scream. He cursed, cried, and threatened that he would summon the demons to kill
them all.
The chief looked at a group of young men. “Take Sheerun to his house and
make him bring his bag of magic.”
The young men looked from the chief to the witchdoctor then back to the
chief, as if trying to decide who they feared more. Finally, they seized the
dancing Sheerun and carried him up towards the village. Those who remained in
the clearing could hear his shrieks and wailings the whole way.
After a few minutes, the party returned with a dark, pig-skin pouch that
was sown shut. Guatono took it and tore it open. He dumped the contents on the
ground.
Bits of bark and rotten berries fell onto the hard-packed dirt. The
remains of a bat’s wing, what looked like a rat’s tail and a pig’s ear among
them. Guatono knelt by the strange assortment of decaying items. And one by one
he picked them up.
He put the bark in his mouth a broke it in two with his teeth.
When he had handled every one of the items, he rose. "I have
touched all that you fear and notice that nothing has happened to me. Now I ask
that he would hold my book.”
From a pouch slung over his shoulder, Guatono pulled his copy of the new
testament. He held it out towards the witch doctor.
“I wont touch it! It is a demon’s book!” The witch doctor screamed.
He pulled away, but the young men who were still gathered around him pushed
his hands against the Bible’s cover.
The witch doctor winced and closed his eyes. The people stepped back. The
chief watched with growing interest.
Then…nothing.
The witch doctor didn’t fall down dead. He didn’t break out in leprous
spots, or go up in smoke and flames. It seemed as though nothing happened.
At least, nothing that they noticed that day.
Early the next morning, the witch doctor went to Guatono’s house, with
tools in his hand, and fixed the fence he had broken. From the day he touched Guatono’s
book on, he was a changed man. He looked for every opportunity to serve the
missionary, he was the first one in the village to understand the gospel and be
saved and he spent the rest of his life helping Guatono in his ministry.
Guatono got the man!
He brought the powers of darkness into the light and showed them to be
powerless against his God. He gained the man. He won the people.
May this story serve to remind you today that your
God is greater than your enemy, greater than any bag of tricks, greater than
sickness and disease, greater than all the powers that be.
In Christ
Quiana
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