This month’s big news is that Honduras came in number one in
two separate categories, but unfortunately not in areas to be happy about.
The rather shocking story was all over our news broadcasting
that an international study found Honduras has the highest rate of homicides in the world.1
This was followed a week later with a report that Honduras
has once again regained it’s position as being the poorest country in Central
American (a position that over the years has been swapped back and forth
between Honduras and Nicaragua).
Along with these headlines were the continuous daily reports
of corruption, drugs, natural disaster and many more problems that plague the
daily life of those living in Honduras.
These drastic findings in Honduras may cause you to wonder
is it wise for us to be here, or what could have ever lead us to go, or maybe
if you were in our place you would be deciding it’s time to pull the plug and
head back to the states. These are
rather valid points and so we would like to address them and share some of our
perspective.
Since our first involvement with missions in Honduras back
in 1996 we have known about the high and growing rate of crime. The gang activity in the two principal
cities, Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula, is very strong and has only been
increasing over the years. Gang
activity is related to the drug trafficking which is primarily to the
states. Both of these, gangs and
drug trafficking, with the addition of a high poverty level, I believe, all
play into the surreal homicide rate.
The report was from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime’s
Global Study on Homicide and they found that Honduras had a rate of 82 homicides for every
100,000 persons.1
As a comparison, Belize has a rate of 41.7, Guatemala is
41.1, while Mexico is only 18.1.
To bring it back home, the United States had a rate of 5, Canada was
1.8, and the UK a low 1.2. So, the
rate in Honduras is quite significant.
Do we see this in our daily lives? Yes, we see it in many ways. That every bank, grocery store, gas station and little
convenience store has an armed guard standing by or at the door. On our way to church one Sunday this
month we saw several police cars and a crew of reporters at one of the many
piles of trash along the side of the road. As we came closer we realized there was a body that had
been, quite literally, dumped there on the trash during the night. It was quite unsettling and
significantly colored the day.
Does it effect the way we live? Well, yes and no.
In many ways it does not impact our day-to-day routine. We live our lives, meet with people,
walk the streets, drive around, and we are not afraid and do not see public
violence. At the same time, we are
cautious. We purpose to not return
home after dark (about 5:30 pm), and we try to be aware of who is around us and
what is going on at all times.
The bottom line for us, regarding these new statistics for
Honduras, is that they are real reflections of a very spiritually dark country. This does not make us want to pack up
and go home, but rather, this is the very reason we came.
These recent news broadcasts reveal how desperately the
people of Honduras need the truth of the gospel. Not the health and wealth gospel, but rather, the simple
truth that God loves them, right now, and right where they are. That they have a problem because they
have sinned and they live trapped in their sin. That God sent His Son (Jn 3:16) to die for them so that they
might be set free to have life and have it abundantly (Jn 10:10). JESUS IS THAT LIFE (Jn 1:4 & 14:6). Not the guarantee of more money, not
the pursuit of more stuff and not a promise that life will simply turn all
smiles if you just accept Jesus.
No, Jesus
is THE LIFE, it is He that they can have abundantly, and that will
change their whole life even if their surroundings stay the same.
We don’t think of leaving Honduras because, after prayer,
counsel, and many years of short term missions here, we truly feel the Lord has
called us here. We know that the
Lord is able to keep us from all harm (Dan 3:17-18). That does not mean we feel that the Lord will protect us
from all harm. Rather, it means that
we are confident that we are following His path for us and that in anything
that happens, ANYTHING, we can rejoice and be glad in (Mt 5:12),
because we are walking in what the Lord has laid out beforehand for us to do
(Eph 2:10). This is the best place
any of us can be as Christians.
Whether you are on the mission field, or home in the states, the safest
place to be is always where the Father leads.
1 http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/data-and-analysis/statistics/crime/global-study-on-homicide-2011.html
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