Nate Saint
Nate Saint | |
---|---|
Born | near Hershey, Pennsylvania, United States | August 30, 1923
Died | January 8, 1956 Curaray River, Ecuador | (aged 32)
Education | Wheaton College |
Occupation | Missionary pilot |
Spouse | Marjorie Saint (née Farris) (Feb. 14, 1948 – 2004) |
Children | 3, including Steve Saint |
Parent(s) | Lawrence Saint Katherine Saint |
Relatives | Rachel Saint (Sister) Sam Saint (Brother) |
Nathanael Saint (30 August 1923 – 8 January 1956) was an evangelical Christian missionary pilot who, along with four others, was killed in Ecuador while attempting to evangelize the Huaorani people through efforts known as Operation Auca.
Early life
[edit]Saint was born in 1923. When he was seven he took his first plane ride with his brother Sam, who would eventually become a commercial pilot for American Airlines. While in the airplane he discovered a love of flying. His family was somewhat unusual. His brothers made a sleeping patio on the roof of their home, and his father built a roller coaster in the backyard. When he joined the army he was stationed in Las Vegas, NV, but was transferred to several other locations over the years. A leg injury caused him some problems while he was in the army. About a year before he was discharged, he nearly died while climbing a mountain in Yosemite National Park.[1]
Becoming a missionary
[edit]When Saint was asked by a friend to fix a plane somewhere in Mexico, he agreed. After he repaired the plane, he discovered a need for his skill in the field of mission work and also a new awareness of the value of missions. After going to Wheaton College, Saint married Marjorie Farris (commonly called Marj) in 1948 and eventually moved to Shell, Ecuador. Here, Saint built his family a house which would also serve as a guesthouse and a radio center with the other missionaries.
Operation Auca
[edit]In September 1955, Saint was joined by his teammates, Jim Elliot, Ed McCully, Pete Fleming, and Roger Youderian. Saint finally found a Huaorani (also known as Auca) settlement while searching by air. To reach the tribe, Saint and the team lowered gifts to the Huaorani in a bucket tied to the plane. The team decided to try to meet the Huaorani on the ground; and, on January 3, 1956, using the beach as a landing strip, they set up camp four miles from the Huaorani settlement. Their initial contact was encouraging; however, on Sunday, January 8, 1956, the entire team was killed on the beach (known as "Palm Beach") when armed Huaorani met and speared them.[2] Saint was the third of the five missionaries to be speared to death.[3]
Saint and the other four men became famous worldwide as a result. Life magazine published a photo essay on the story,[4] which was also covered in Reader's Digest and many other publications. A small school for missionary children in Shell, Ecuador, bore Saint's name for 51 years until the school closed in 2017 due to falling enrollment.[5]
Rachel, Saint's sister, continued the mission efforts to the Huaorani. This resulted in many of these natives becoming Christians, including those who had killed Saint.[2]
In 1966, Marjorie (Marj) Farris Saint married Abe Van Der Puy, president of HCJB World Radio. Van Der Puy died in 2003, and Marj died in 2004, from cancer. She is buried in Highland Memorial Park, south of Ocala, Florida.
Saint's older son, Steve, spent time as a child visiting his missionary family members and friends and getting to know the Huaorani. Steve was baptized by Mincaye, who was the very man who killed his father but later converted. As of 2006, Steve Saint works with the Huaorani people and travels around the world, preaching the gospel, often accompanied by Mincaye.[6] A documentary based on the story, Beyond Gates of Splendor, was released in 2005. The following year, a feature film, End of the Spear, was released on January 20, a week and a half after the 50-year anniversary of the killings. Steve Saint also helped write Jungle Pilot, based on his father's diary about his time in Ecuador and work with the Huaorani Indians. Steven Curtis Chapman wrote the song "No Greater Love" from his album Declaration as a tribute to Saint and his fellow missionaries.
References
[edit]- ^ Hitt, Russell T., Jungle Pilot, The Life and Witness of Nate Saint, 'Mountaintop Encounter, Harper & Brothers, New York, 1959, pp.84-94
- ^ a b Saint, Steve (1996). "Did They Have to Die?". Christianity Today (September 16, 1996): 20–27.
- ^ Taylor, Justin (2016-01-08). "They Were No Fools: The Martyrdom of Jim Elliot and Four Other Missionaries". Retrieved 2020-01-19.
- ^ Life Magazine, January 30, 1956
- ^ Kurtenbach, Ralph (April 17, 2017). "After 5 Decades Nate Saint Memorial School Set to Close in Ecuador". Reach Beyond. Retrieved November 7, 2022.
- ^ Barnes, Rebecca (January 1, 2006). "The Rest of the Story". Christianity Today. Retrieved February 28, 2018.
Bibliography
[edit]- Biographical sketch, Anglican.
- Hitt, Russell T (1997), Jungle Pilot, ISBN 978-1-57293-022-3.
- Saint, Steve (2005), End of the Spear, ISBN 978-0-8423-6439-3.
- End of The Spear (movie), archived from the original on 2015-03-03.
- 1923 births
- 1956 deaths
- 1956 murders in Ecuador
- 20th-century evangelicals
- American Christian missionaries
- American evangelicals
- American expatriates in Ecuador
- American people murdered abroad
- Aviators from Pennsylvania
- Christian missionaries in Ecuador
- Evangelical missionaries
- Operation Auca
- People from Dauphin County, Pennsylvania
- People murdered in Ecuador
- United States Army soldiers