Honoring Christ Through Alfombras

Reading time: 1 minute

Published
April 8, 2026
Tags
Academics
Faith
High School

Upper School Spanish students worked hard to create beautiful, model alfombras (carpets) in honor of Holy Week (Palm Sunday–Easter Sunday).

Every year during Holy Week, families and neighbors across Antigua, Guatemala spend hours meticulously pouring dyed sawdust, flower petals, and more into intricate alfombras that then stretch across the city to honor Jesus and His sacrifice.

Traditional alfombras—made from natural materials—are meant to represent the palm branches, rugs, and robes that were laid at Jesus' feet during the triumphal entry into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday.

Large, hand-carved wooden floats depicting images of Jesus on the cross, the tomb, Mary, and other scenes from Holy Week are then paraded throughout the city that are so massive in size that they require dozens of people to carry them at once.

The colorful alfombras are walked across throughout the parade, therefore being destroyed in the celebration since they are made of such temporary materials.

The reason for all this? A man from Antigua summarized it perfectly when he said, "We spend hours making these alfombras knowing that they will be ruined, because, just as this life is temporary, we should put our full effort to make the temporary things beautiful for God."

Related Stories

Read more stories

Big Smiles, Big Plans

Reading time: 2 minutes

Read story

The Winning Machine

Reading time: 4 minutes

Read story

Serve Day 2026

Reading time: 1 minute

Read story

Honoring Christ Through Alfombras

Reading time: 1 minute

Read story

The Art of the Leap

Reading time: 4 minutes

Read story

A New Chapter

Reading time: 1 minute

Read story

To Spain and Back Again

Reading time: 4 minutes

Read story

Finding Purpose in the Unexpected

Reading time: 3 minutes

Read story

The Man Who Never Met a Stranger

Reading time: 6 minutes

Read story
georgestewart

Learning to Invest

Reading time: 1 minute

Read story

Faith in Action

Reading time: 2 minutes

Read story

Crafting the Impossible

Reading time: 3 minutes

Read story

The Many Worlds of Julie Raines

Reading time: 3 minutes

Read story

Leading by Example

Reading time: 3 minutes

Read story

Faith, Perseverance, and a 1940 Ford Coupe

Reading time: 5 minutes

Read story

Integrating Faith in Learning

Reading time: 2 minutes

Read story

Your story begins here.

Every student has a Maranatha story-a story of a transformative class, a helpful mentor, a lasting friendship. What will your Maranatha story be?