This Ain’t Guatemala!

A Piedmont Lantern Story

Preacher Dudley Fair had packed for Guatemala.

He had the khaki pants with the zipper legs, the good walking shoes he only wore for funerals and airports, and a brand-new Spanish phrasebook he’d flipped through exactly once before deciding the Lord would handle pronunciation.

The church van pulled out at dawn, loaded down with suitcases, casseroles, and righteous intention. There were prayers. There were amens. A woman was crying for reasons she didn’t fully understand.

And somehow, somewhere between the prayer circle and the departure gate, the heavenly wires got crossed in a big way.

The youth group landed in Guatemala.

Preacher Dudley Fair did not.

He stepped off the plane into heat that felt personal. The air pressed in like it had opinions. Bad opinions. The ground shimmered. Somewhere nearby, something laughed, and it wasn’t a friendly laugh.

He checked the sign above the gate.

WELCOME.

Under it, in letters that flickered just a touch too much, was the destination:

HELL.

“Well,” Preacher Fair said, adjusting his collar, “this can’t be right.”

A fellow in a black vest and cape with an unholy-lookin’ crozier appeared immediately. He had a smile that suggested he’d been waiting. Brother Fair wondered how he could be holding his head up with those enormous horns.

“Dudley Fair,” the fellow said. “Church of God. Missions-minded. Likes potlucks.”

Preacher Fair blinked. “I’m supposed to be in Guatemala.”

The fellow nodded sympathetically. “Happens all the time.”

“It does?” Preacher Fair asked.

“Oh yes,” the fellow said. “Paperwork. Intentions. Clerical error.” He gestured around. “You’ve been assigned here.”

Preacher Fair looked past him. The landscape resembled Piedmont on its worst August day, if Piedmont had given up and taken up cussing. Folks milled about, complainin’ loudly. There were no flames exactly, just an oppressive heat and a sense that nobody was listening.

“What… what is my mission?” Preacher Fair asked.

The fellow grinned. “You’re here to bring light.”

Preacher Fair straightened. “Well. I can do that.”

They sent him first to a room full of people arguing about church music. He tried to calm them with scripture. They argued louder.

Then to a line that never moved, staffed by someone who said, “Just a minute,” every time Preacher Fair asked a question.

He prayed. Nothing happened.

He sang hymns. A man nearby asked him to stop his caterwauling.

He offered pamphlets. They were immediately folded and used as fans.

By the third day, or what felt like it, Preacher Fair slumped onto a bench beside a woman who looked exhausted.

“What did you do to get here?” he asked kindly.

She looked at him. “I volunteered for everything and listened to nothing or nobody.”

Preacher Fair went quiet.

On the fourth day, he realized something important.

Hell wasn’t fire and brimstone. It was committees without purpose. Conversations without listening. Certainty without kindness.

It was people convinced they were right and utterly uninterested in listening to anybody else’s opinions.

Preacher Fair stood up, wiped his brow, and did something unexpected.

He stopped preaching.

He sat with people. He listened. He laughed at himself. He admitted confusion. He apologized when he talked too much. He shared his water.

The heat eased. Just a smidge.

A bell rang.

The fellow with the clipboard reappeared. “Time to go, Reverend.”

Preacher Fair looked around. “Already?”

“You passed,” the fellow said. “Not everybody does, you know.”

The next thing Preacher Fair knew, he was stepping off a plane in Guatemala, greeted by his confused but grateful group.

That Sunday back in Piedmont, his sermon was shorter than usual.

“I learned somethin’ on my trip,” he said. “Hell ain’t where the sinners are. It’s where folks forget how to love each other and share kindness.”

The congregation nodded, pleased.

Preacher Fair didn’t mention the crozier or horns.

But from that day on, he listened more, preached less, and when missions were discussed, he always added:

“Let’s be real careful where we’re sendin’ ourselves.”

Which folks in Piedmont agreed was just plain ol’ good sense.

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