• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Deep Roots at Home
  • Home
  • About
  • Podcast
  • Shop
  • Blog
    • Alternative Medicine
    • Babies & Pregnancy
    • Beauty
    • Books & Booklists
    • Brain & Gut Health
    • Children At Home
    • COVID-19
    • Detoxing & TRS
    • DIY & Crafts
    • Education & Homeschool
    • Faith & Family
    • Feel-Good Stories
    • Flourishing Marriage
    • Flourishing Womanhood
    • Food & Recipes
    • Food Additives
    • Garden & Homestead
    • Healthy Living
    • Herbs & Remedies
    • Holidays
    • Homemaking
    • My Favorite Products
    • News & Alerts
    • Parental Rights
    • Pharma & Vaccines
    • Play, Toys, & Movies
    • Raising Daughters
    • Raising Sons

The “Auca Martyrs” : Their Lives Were Like Bright, Short-Lived Flames

339.2KViews Modified: Nov 20, 2025 · Published: Jan 8, 2012
By Jacqueline 9 Comments

96.9K shares
  • 96.6K

The "Auca Martyrs": Their Lives Were Like Bright, Short-Lived Flames. jim elliott, nate saint, roger youderian, pete fleming, ed Mccully

On Oct. 28, 1949, Jim Elliot wrote in his journal a statement of faith that has inspired all who have read it in the decades since: “He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose” (The Journals of Jim Elliot).

Seven years later, Jim Elliot and four other missionaries indeed gave their lives in an attempt to share the Gospel with an unreached people group called Aucas in Ecuador.

This indigenous group called themselves “Huaorani,” meaning “people,” but their enemies called them “Aucas” because they were “savages.” They were a tribe of about 600 people known for their violence, not only against their enemies but also among themselves. Any foreigners (cowodi) encroaching upon the Aucas’ territory were killed.

Despite the Aucas’ reputation for violence, five missionary couples felt compassion for them because they had never heard the name of Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace. They were Jim and Elisabeth Elliot, Nate and Marjorie Saint, Ed and Marilou McCully, Pete and Olive Fleming, and Roger and Barbara Youderian, who, along with their children, moved to Ecuador in order to learn the language and customs of these primitive people and to establish contact with them. Nearby lived Nate’s sister Rachel, who also had a heart for the Aucas.

A breakthrough occurred when an Auca girl, Dayuma, fled from tribal violence and found refuge with Rachel. From Dayuma, the missionaries learned some phrases that they hoped would be helpful in their early contacts. Next, Nate Saint, who was a skilled pilot, discovered the Aucas’ village from the air and, using a megaphone, called out, “We like you. We are your friends.” Nate learned a technique called the “spiral line” by which he circled his plane while lowering a bucket so that he could deliver gifts, such as machetes, axes, pots, and ribbons, to the Aucas. In return, the Aucas began to place into the bucket their own gifts, which included a parrot that became the pet of Nate’s young son, Steve.

Believing that these interactions indicated friendliness, the missionaries decided it was time to make contact.

“Their lives were like bright, short-lived flames,” ~Michael Rusten, The One Year Book of Christian History

Contacting the Auca Indians

New Year’s Day 1956 was the day for the five missionaries to prepare for the upcoming attempt to contact the fierce Auca Indians of Ecuador. Nate Saint, the pilot, was going to fly them to Palm Beach, the nickname for where they had previously exchanged gifts with the primitive Auca tribe from the air.

As the men collected what they would need for their mission, Betty Elliot, Jim’s wife, wondered, Will this be the last time I help him pack?

After breakfast and prayer on the day of their departure, January 3rd, the five men sang one of their favorite hymns:

We rest on thee, our Shield and our Defender,
Thine is the battle, thine will be the praise.
When passing through the gates of pearly splendor
Victors, we rest on thee through endless days.

(to the tune of Be Still My Soul)

A visit and gifts for the Auca Indians

Once on the beach, they built a treehouse for safety and prepared to contact the Aucas. On Friday, January 6th, a visit from an Auca man and two women encouraged the missionaries. They spent several hours together and even gave the man a ride in the plane.

Nate Saint and George

Saturday, no Aucas appeared, but Sunday morning when Nate flew over the site, he spotted some Auca men walking toward their beach. At 12:30 PM Nate made his prearranged radio call to his wife Marj back at the mission station: “Looks like they’ll be here for the early afternoon service. Pray for us! This is the day! Will contact you at 4:30.”

When 4:30 came, the missionary wives switched on their radios.

Silence.

Five minutes went by and then ten.

Sundown came, and still no word.

The five wives slept little that night.

Monday morning, January 9th, 1956, Johnny Keenan, another missionary pilot flew to the beach. As Betty Elliot awaited his report, Isaiah 43:2 ran through her mind: “When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee; and through the rivers they shall not overflow thee.”

She prayed, “Lord, let not the waters overflow.”

“No sign of the fellows”

At 9:30 AM, the pilot’s report came in. Marj Saint shared it with the other wives: “Johnny has found the plane on the beach. All the fabric is stripped off. There is no sign of the fellows.”

The "Auca Martyrs": Their Lives Were Like Bright, Short-Lived Flames, the men and a parrot

Another pilot immediately contacted Lieutenant General William K. Harrison, commander in chief of the Carribean Command, himself a Christian. Radio station HCJB in Ecuador flashed the news to the rest of the world: “Five men missing in Auca territory.”

By noon a ground party was organized to go to the site.

On Wednesday, Johnny Keenan made his fourth flight over the beach. Marj Saint, who had hardly left her radio since Sunday, called the other wives, and as soon as she was able to speak, she said, “They found one body.” Johnny had seen one body floating face down in the river.

Marge Saint

In the afternoon, Johnny radioed in again, “Another body sighted about two hundred feet below Palm Beach.”

The five wives had no idea whose bodies they were.

The search party located four of the five bodies, but Ed McCully’s had been swept away by the river. The other four were buried on Palm Beach.

George and the yellow plane
An actual photo taken by one of the five missionaries.

What happened to the Auca People?

By the end of 1958, Betty Elliot and Rachel Saint, Nate’s Sister, were living among them, and one by one the Auca warriors and wives put their faith in Jesus Christ.

Betty and Valerie
Betty Elliot went back to minister to the very tribe which killed her husband and took their daughter Valerie with her.

The five Auca men who murdered the missionaries became not only Christians but also spiritual leaders among their people. After they believed, they shared how on that fateful day they heard singing from above the trees. Looking up, they saw what appeared to be a canopy of bright lights. God was welcoming his children home.

Nine years later, in June 1965, two of Nate Saint’s children, Kathy and Stephen were baptized at Palm Beach by two of the men who had killed their father.”

baptism

In 1948, Jim Elliot wrote in his journal, “Saturate me with the oil of the Spirit that I may be a flame. But flame is often short-lived. Can thou bear this, my soul?”

Jamie Saint, grandson of Nate, offers a startling analysis: ‘God did not allow those killings to take place. He actually orchestrated them.’

Learn more about the complex tribal politics, only understood years after the fact, that led to the murder of Nate Saint and the 4 others. The missionaries unwittingly became involved in a bloody family vendetta that had been taking place at the time of their arrival. Such killings were not unusual in the Waodani tribe, where there was a 60 per cent homicide rate.

To read more about the ongoing ministry of the Saint family, visit their website here.

All text taken from pages 18 and 19 of E. Michael and Sharon Rusten’s chronicle titled, The One Year Book of Christian History.

“Lord, I put my life in your hands.
   I trust in you, my God,
and I will not be disappointed.” ~Psalm 25:1-2a

***For the Full Spike Protein Protocol to protect from transmission from the “V” and to help those who took the “V”, go here.

***If you found value in this writing, please share it, discuss it, and subscribe to my FREE newsletter. Independent, ad-free work like this spreads because of readers like you.

Also, please consider supporting my work by using my Amazon affiliate link when purchasing from there.

Help For Kids' ADHD, Dyspraxia, or Dyslexia Without Drugs? Yes!, printable or PDF

Censorship is real, so my Pinterest account was suspended; thankfully, a big part of my main board is still alive through this link!

You can also find me on Facebook, Gab, MeWe, X (Twitter), and Instagram.

The "Auca Martyrs": Their Lives Were Like Bright, Short-Lived Flames. jim elliott, nate saint, roger youderian, pete fleming, ed Mccully

©2026 Deep Roots at Home • All Rights Reserved

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
« The Best Ever Resolution of a Lifetime and It Starts Today!
Longing for The Good Ol’ Days: When Life Was Simpler »
96.9K shares
  • 96.6K

Related

Hi! I’m Jacqueline!

Thanks for being part of this journey with me.
Welcome to my own little place on the internet! Home is where I love to be. I feel there is no greater place to incubate souls. These days you’ll find me using my experiences here to write about herbal remedies and natural health research — a big passion of mine. But being a wife and mother is not easy. It is challenging and potentially lonely. I get that. I wanted to create a place to connect with and support other moms for creating a natural, healthy, and fulfilling home life.
Join the newsletter:

Sent in accordance with our Privacy Policy.

Get new posts texted directly to your phone:

Footer

About Deep Roots at Home

What is Deep Roots at Home?
Jacqueline’s Story
Article Archives
Contact
Stay Updated

Weekly updates on the topics that matter the most to you!

Sent in accordance with our Privacy Policy.

Get Phone Texting Updates

Popular Posts This Week
  • 764: The Internet’s Most Disturbing Cult: Every Parent’s Nightmare
  • Dr. Bryan Ardis: Reversing Just About Any Disease with Nicotine
  • No Additive Kool-Aid Recipe: Kid-Approved, Happy Mom!
  • Joe Tippins’s Fenbendazole Protocol For Cancer

Affiliate Disclosure  •  Medical Disclosure  •  Privacy Policy  •  Cookie Policy

The information on this website has not been evaluated by the FDA and is not intended to diagnose, treat, prevent, or cure any disease. By accessing or using this website, you agree to abide by the Terms of Service, Full Disclaimer, Privacy Policy, Affiliate Disclosure, and Comment Policy. Content may not be reproduced in any form. Website by Imperative Co.


© 2006–2026 Deep Roots at Home • All Rights Reserved

Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}

Get New Posts Texted Directly to Your Phone!

Get New Posts Texted Directly to Your Phone!

Get your free printable guide!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “5 Easy + Healthy Lifestyle Drinks” printable PDF.

Get your free printable guide!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “5 Easy, Homemade Remedies to Beat Coughs & Colds” printable PDF.

Subscribe to Email Updates

By adding your email address below, you agree to receive email updates from Deep Roots at Home. You’ll get 2-6 emails per month with info that we can’t share on social media and important updates. We may send occasional marketing / sales emails.

Get your free printable guide!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “Treasured Old Books” printable guide.

Praying for newlyweds is perhaps the best gift we can give them! Receive this printable PDF: “31 Days of Praying Scripture for Newlyweds.” 

Prayers for Husbands

View our privacy policy.

The PDF will arrive in your inbox! You’ll also get about 1-2 emails a month (including the seasonal freebies!) and can unsubscribe at any time.

Get your free printable guide!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “31 Days of Praying Scripture for Newlyweds” printable guide.

Get your free ebook!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “Vital Vaccine Info” printable e-book.

Get your free printable guide!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “Make Your Own Elderberry Syrup — with Easy Recipes!” printable PDF.

¡Nos gustaría mantener en contacto! Y usted recibirá un obsequio importante de la temporada: “Cerebros Ambrientes y Escasa Atención En Los Niños” PDF imprimible.

Spanish Boys Attention Spans

Ver nuestra política de privacidad.


¡El PDF llegará a su buzón de entrada! ¡Usted recibirá 1 – 2 correos electrónicos al mes (incluyendo los regalos de temporada!) y puede cancelar su suscripción en cualquier momento. 

Get the freebie of the season!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “100 Wholehearted Books to Take Back the Culture” printable guide.

Get the printable ebook!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “Dyslexia Tips” ebook from Sarah J. Brown.

Get your free printable guide!

Fill in your email address to receive the free “Starving Brains & Poor Attention Spans in Boys: 30 Tips for Parents” printable PDF.