Native American sees connection between his culture and Christianity
Mike Peters, pastor of 4Fires Ministry in Grand Rapids, Mich., and a member of the Odawa tribe, says the Bible is his plumb line.
“When I consider the sacred ways of the Native American peoples, I can find many of them within its pages,” he said.
Peters, who helped organize a recent powwow in the park, sees parallels in his people’s spiritual traditions and Christianity.
“For instance, Native Americans ‘smoke’ prayers in a sacred ceremony,” he said. “They use special blends of natural plant materials, which give off a beautiful perfume when burned, and the perfume takes the prayers to God.” He finds that an “incredibly similar image” to the reference in Revelation to an angel sending sweet-smelling incense and prayers to God.
Few Native Americans in the United States are Christian, he said, largely because missionaries refused to take native beliefs seriously.
“If you weren’t prepared to accept the full European picture, the clothes, the hair . . . then you were not even considered human,” he said.
Peters has nonetheless become a Christian and works with Native American youths through his church.
“I was an urban Indian, like 72 percent of Native Americans. When I was a kid I used to run to school. Not because I wanted to get there quickly, but because if I was caught by the other kids, I would be beaten, my clothes torn.”
By the time he was 19 he was an alcoholic and trying drugs. One night, he was about to smoke marijuana when he thought of his father, who was an alcoholic.
“I just realized I didn’t want a future like that. . . . I just knew I had to begin praying for help. . . . That very night I flushed my drugs, and the desire to drink alcohol was taken away. I haven’t drunk since. God set me free that night.”
Soon after, he began studying Native American culture, fascinated by its spirituality, seeing many aspects in common with Christianity.
This article was written by Jackie Macadam and provided by Worldwide Faith News.



