20 March 2026

2 Priests Die Saving Altar Boy in Ecuador

Please pray for the souls of Fathers Avilés and Anzoátegui. 

Give rest, O Christ, to thy servants with thy saints: where sorrow and pain are no more; neither sighing but life everlasting. Thou only art immortal, the creator and maker of man: and we are mortal formed from the dust of the earth, and unto earth shall we return: for so thou didst ordain, when thou created me, saying: “Dust thou art and unto dust shalt thou return.” All we go down to the dust; and weeping o’er the grave we make our song:

Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia.


From Aleteia

By Daniel Esparza

Fr Alfonso Avilés and Fr Pedro Anzoátegui died after rescuing a boy swept away by strong waves in Ecuador.

The coastal province of Guayas, Ecuador, has witnessed a farewell marked by grief and gratitude after two priests died while rescuing a young altar server from dangerous waters.

The tragedy unfolded on Friday in General Villamil Playas, where the priests had traveled for a spiritual retreat. Amid strong waves, a young altar boy was pulled out to sea. Without hesitation, Fr. Avilés and fellow priest Fr. Pedro Anzoátegui entered the water to save him. Their intervention succeeded: the boy survived. The priests, however, were overtaken by the current and lost their lives.

Rescue teams recovered Fr. Avilés’ body the same day. Fr. Anzoátegui was found the following day, according to the Archdiocese of Guayaquil.

Over the weekend, hundreds of faithful gathered at San Alberto Magno parish in Daule to bid farewell to Fr. Avilés, who had served the community for nine years. For many, he was more than a parish priest. He was a familiar presence, a builder of both church and community, remembered for his humor, warmth, and steady pastoral care.

The funeral Mass took place in the very church he helped establish from the ground up. According to COPE, parishioners recalled his dedication to forming a vibrant local parish, one that became a spiritual home for generations. “He built this parish from nothing,” one attendee said, “with wisdom, generosity, and joy.”

Yet it was his final act that defined the moment. A parishioner expressed what many felt: “Even in his last moments, he gave his life to save another.” That testimony echoed throughout the liturgy, transforming grief into something closer to reverence.

Fr. Avilés was later laid to rest in the metropolitan mausoleum, accompanied by visible signs of affection and respect. A separate Eucharistic celebration honored Fr. Anzoátegui, whose death has also deeply shaken the local Church.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that “there is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends” (cf. CCC 609, echoing John 15:13). In this case, that teaching was not merely proclaimed, but lived — in the open sea, in a moment of urgency, without calculation.

For the faithful in Ecuador and beyond, the memory of these two priests now carries a quiet clarity. Their lives were given in service. Their deaths, in the eyes of many, were a final homily — one spoken not in words, but in action.

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