Walking Epiphany: encountering Christ in Chiquila, Mexico
Welcome to the fourth annual WALKING EPIPHANY series of guest posts! This post was originally published in January 2017. I've updated some of the biographical bits to reflect the awesome reality that Amy & Adiel got married in October 2017!
Adiel & Amy Dominguez
Chiquilá, Mexico
I'm excited to share with you the second in a series of guest posts to celebrate the liturgical season of Epiphany. I've asked a few friends who live around the world to take a walk through their neighborhoods and share some of the ways they encounter and exhibit the presence of Christ. Amy and Adiel are two new friends who make me feel like we've been buddies for a very long time. Since last year's post, Amy and Adiel are married! We first met Amy at Church of the Apostles and is one of the mightiest encouragers I've ever met. Through her, we met Adiel, and together they shared with us through their stories and their work with Hands Offering Hope their great love Adiel's hometown of Chiquilá. Since our very first conversation around our kitchen table, I've been excited for the day I get to visit Chiquilá for myself.
Before I turn it over to Amy & Adiel, here's a brief summary of Epiphany, in case you're not sure.
What is Epiphany?
Throughout the daily readings in the Epiphany lectionary, we follow the early life and ministry of Jesus as He is revealed as the Son of God, appearing as light to a dark world. He is the very God shining forth, manifesting the glory of God. Oftentimes the accounts are private affairs (Transfiguration), other times public (Wedding at Cana, Baptism). All of them take place, though, in the places Jesus lived and worked, within the context of his relationships of family, friends, and followers -- the sick, possessed, poor, celebrating, drinking, seeking, religious, fearful, apathetic, discouraged neighbors.
Walking EPIPHANY blog series
Each of the friends contributing to the series this year has selected from a variety of thoughtful prompts (collected from my subscription to these excellent daily readings) to consider the ways the Light has moved into their neighborhoods.
Will you join us?
p.s., Don't miss the opportunity to engage with thought-provoking questions for your own neighborhood, listed following each prompt.
Chiquilá, Mexico is a small fishing village off of the coast of the Yucatan Peninsula. Her people are hardworking, weathered by life. Her children are vibrant, loud, alive and delight in the small pleasures of a lone wandering crab or a colorful candy from the local tienda.
Adiel calls Chiquilá home. He grew up in this small village supported by a loving family to go to college and explore the world outside. Amy calls Chiquilá home. She found this little town on service trip she took at age 15 and never stopped visiting and bringing anyone she could to see the beauty of this place.. The two of them met in 2002 and in 2016, by God’s artistic muse, fell in love. And every time they walk the dirt roads Chiquilá, these are the moments that capture them both.
Prompt: Liked so much as this place
Ma hummed softly to herself while the iron smoothed all the wrinkles out of the little dresses. All around them, to the very edge of the world, there was nothing but grasses waving in the wind. Far overhead, a few white puffs of cloud sailed in the thin blue air. Laura was very happy. The wind sang a low, rustling song in the grass. Grasshoppers' rasping quivered up from all the immense prairie. A buzzing came faintly from all the trees in the creek bottoms. But all these sounds made a great, warm, happy silence. Laura had never seen a place she liked so much as this place.
Laura Ingalls Wilder, Little House On the Prairie*
Prompt: Foreigners as Neighbors
In recent centuries, millions of people came to this land to pursue their dream of building a future in freedom. We, the people of this continent, are not fearful of foreigners, because most of us were once foreigners. I say this to you as the son of immigrants, knowing that so many of you are also descended from immigrants. Tragically, the rights of those who were here long before us were not always respected. For those peoples and their nations, from the heart of American democracy, I wish to reaffirm my highest esteem and appreciation. Those first contacts were often turbulent and violent, but it is difficult to judge the past by the criteria of the present. Nonetheless, when the stranger in our midst appeals to us, we must not repeat the sins and the errors of the past. We must resolve now to live as nobly and as justly as possible, as we educate new generations not to turn their back on our “neighbors” and everything around us. Building a nation calls us to recognize that we must constantly relate to others, rejecting a mindset of hostility in order to adopt one of reciprocal subsidiarity, in a constant effort to do our best. I am confident that we can do this.
Pope Francis, from "Pope Francis' Address to Congress" on Sep. 24, 2015
Prompt: What is important
The availability of places where we are invited to stop and enjoy our rest provides a tacit reminder of what is important. If these places invite us to stay because we are consumers or producers, we will learn to see ourselves as valuable only insofar as we contribute to the economy. If our public spaces are ugly or inconvenient, we learn tacitly that our value as human beings is minimal.
Eric Jacobsen, The Space Between*
Prompt: Homegrown economy
Losing local businesses to national chains stores is by no means inevitable. Indeed, the growth of chain stores has been aided in no small part by public policy. Land use rules have all too often ignored the needs of communities and undermined the stability of existing business districts. Development incentives frequently favor national corporations over locally owned businesses. Increasing numbers of communities are rewriting the rules around a different set of priorities that encourage a homegrown economy of humanly scaled, diverse, neighborhood-serving businesses.... Active decision making at the local level and a creative approach to zoning can provide a powerful arsenal for defending community.
Stacy Mitchell, The Home Town Advantage*
Prompt: God's household
Life, breath, food, companionship -- every good thing is a gift from the abundant providence of God. The kingdom of God, this great economy, is embodied in the world when God's people respond to God's provision with gratitude, sharing God's gifts generously with others. The word economy reminds us again that creation is God's household; we are tasked with sustaining it and keeping it in the order God intended. It should be a place where all humans and all creatures are loved and honored and where generosity is commonplace.
C. Christopher Smith and John Pattison, Slow Church*
Prompt: To suffer with
To be an American is to move on, as if we could outrun change. To attach oneself to place is to surrender to it, and to suffer with it.
Kathleen Norris, The Cloister Walk*
Adiel Dominguez Rivera is a photographer and artist living with his wife Amy in Trumbull, Connecticut. His passion is capturing the special moments in life through the lens and the brush. When he's not behind the camera, you can often find him dancing salsa, taking a long run, or being uncle to his 9 nephews and nieces.
Amy Carol Wolff loves coffee, great food and travel. She is the President of Hands Offering Hope Foundation, an organization committing to offering opportunity, hope and empowerment to youth and children around the world through a global network of experts. She lives with her husband Adiel in Trumbull, Connecticut and thoroughly enjoys hosting people at her home whenever possible.
A few WALKING EPIPHANY guest posts from previous years:
WALKING EPIPHANY in inner city Rochester, NY: neighborhood notes from Suzanne Day
WALKING EPIPHANY: encountering Christ in a D.C. suburb
WALKING EPIPHANY in Paris & Albertville: neighborhood notes from Andrea Shields
p.s. The affiliate links in this post are to help me be a good steward. When you buy something through one of these links you don't pay more money, but in some magical twist of capitalism we get a little pocket change. Thanks!