Identity in Christ
In April it was 20 years since the Rwandan genocide. Nancy Lambrechts shares about two friends she meets to read the bible with. A Hutu and a Tutsi…
It’s no surprise that with our desire to reach the unreached with the gospel, much of our work involves outreach & evangelism. Methods vary from people group to ministry area, but sharing the good news of Jesus is at the heart of all we do. The way we reach out to women on an Indian Ocean island might be different to the way we seek to evangelise young Samburu men in rural Kenya but our vision remains the same; to see people turning to Jesus for their salvation.
All in Africa need to know the freedom there is in Jesus, including those caught up in witchcraft, ancestor worship & animism, as well as those who are adhering to other major world religions. We long to let all Africa’s people know that they can have life, in all its fullness, for comfort rather than living in fear of breaking taboos and working to earn favour in the eyes of their gods. We long to tell them of the joy there is to be found in Christ, and the redemption that he offers.
To do this, people who are passionate and eager to share Jesus, need to go to those who have never heard. This may mean going to some of the world’s hardest to reach places, physically and spiritually but can also mean sharing hope where there is none. Could you be part of this work?
In April it was 20 years since the Rwandan genocide. Nancy Lambrechts shares about two friends she meets to read the bible with. A Hutu and a Tutsi…
Lyn Cooke is working in Arua, Uganda, discipling, supporting and encouraging the wives of church teachers…
Stephen & Lynsey Auld left Madagascar last autumn. But God is still working in Mahajanga,
Last Christmas, Rosie McCorkell experienced a poignant, real-life illustration of “For God so loved the world that he sent his only son…” (John 3:16a)
Northern Kenya is dry and vast. For the nomadic peoples who live here, life revolves around water. There’s a spiritual thirst, too; a thirst for the living water that never runs dry.
The Sakalava and Antakarana people of Madagascar live in spiritual darkness. Yet there is hope in the gospel.