Written on December 13, 2024. Dedicated to María Villanueva.
I’m writing from an airplane, thousands of feet above the ocean, somewhere between
Bogotá and Miami. Very soon I will be home! But I’m going sooner than I planned, and I’m not going to Nebraska quite yet. Me siento muy amañada en Colombia, but the tears escaping from my eyes have nothing to do with the country I am leaving and everything to do with where I am going. A plane is taking me to Austin, and a funeral is taking me to Waco.



Tomorrow I will say goodbye, for now, to María Villanueva—the dearest person I have ever called hermana. The LORD calls us to “mourn with those who mourn” (Romans 12:15), and I am only one of many, many people grieving this loss. As believers in the risen Christ, we do not mourn as those without hope, but oh, how we mourn nonetheless.
I fear I won’t actually be able to write much more about María, at least not on this
airplane surrounded by so many people, but it feels right to try anyways. May these words honor her life, keep her memory alive, and bless all who read them.
Que las palabras de mi boca y la meditación de mi corazón sean agradables a tus ojos, oh SEÑOR, mi roca y mi redentor (Salmos 19:14).
María is present with her LORD and Savior Jesus Christ, and tomorrow I will be present with the people who loved and knew her best in this world. I can’t wait to give them all a hug. More than ever in the past four years with my Waco community, I feel the need to be with them.
“Yo extraño todo de ti, pero también extraño esa parte de mí que se fue contigo”, Camilo sings through my headphones. I miss María, dearly. I also miss the people that we were when we spent time with her. “I just can’t believe she’s gone,” one of her children cries. “Our hearts are broken,” another tells me. Yes and amen. LORD, have mercy. I have no idea how we got here.
Our hearts are indeed broken, but miraculously María’s heart is finally healed. Me parece un poco irónico que falleció ella por una enfermedad que le afectaba el corazón, because the
heart beating inside her chest until late into the evening of Monday, December 9
was one of the kindest, most compassionate, dedicated, faithful and caring que he
conocido en toda mi vida.





I first had the privilege of really spending time with María in August of 2021. Having
officially joined Primera Iglesia Bautista of Waco, I was assigned to a Spanish-speaking small group that met for six weeks on Wednesday evenings, and someone asked me if I would pick up la hermana Villanueva from her home.
Considering how little time I had known her, María told me many stories of her life
during those long Wednesday night drives between Waco and Lorena. Growing up in a large Mexican family in Zacatecas. Coming to the United States as a young adult and
meeting her querido esposo. Deciding to get married, and holding the ceremony at our church some 30+ years prior. Buying and fixing up the family home. Having her first son, a second one soon after, and several years later a daughter.
After the last meeting of the small group, I remember pulling up to her home to drop
her off and María inviting me inside to meet the family dog. She’d just been
telling me all about him, of course, and had shown me a photograph of the large boxer sitting rather sheepishly on a kitchen chair at the dining table. Too shy to accept the invitation inside (and admittedly a little nervous about interacting with a dog whose protective reputation preceded him), I politely declined while thanking her for the offer and also the purple hair clips and colorful chicles she gifted me that same night, regalitos following a trip to care for her elderly mother still in Mexico.
At the time I didn’t want to impose or intrude on her personal life. Not to worry, however, the LORD most definitely chuckled at my hesitance. He knew all the days prepared for us and arranged many, many plans for our lives to overlap. I’m fully convinced He must have shared these plans directly with his faithful servant María! Once she and I were introduced, inviting me into her family’s life seemed to become one of María’s many personal missions. I had no idea back then to what extent I would be invited to “intrude on” the Villanueva family, pero ahora me queda verdaderamente imposible describir los cuatro años que he pasado en Waco sin mencionarlos a ellos cinco.
Over the past few weeks since she first entered the hospital, I have struggled a bit to describe to non-Waco people the person that María was to me. The mother of three of my closest friends? The likely mother-in-law of my best friend? An adopted tía? A beloved friend from church? She was all of that, and then she was also una madre mexicana who noticed me living far away from my own family and intentionally carved out space for me at her table, time after time. And I mean she literally invited me to sit at her table and eat more plates than I can count of the delicious food she prepared. Tacos, tostadas, pozole, arroz, frijoles. The flavor of the buttery sweet corn she roasted on the stovetop will live on in my memory forever. Just a few months ago, I tried to replicate the dish, only somewhat successfully, in my own kitchen in Colombia. I don’t have any real regrets about my friendship with María, but in retrospect, I would’ve liked to have called her or at least sent her a picture of the corn and red peppers I prepared. At her table, I always ate until I was full; then in classic Mexican mother fashion, she served me more.





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