Returning Home

  • 2011145RWH525
  • 2011145RWH469
  • 2011145RWH386-Edit
  • 2011145RWH384
  • 2011145RWH380
  • 2011145RWH369
  • 2011145RWH365
  • 2011145RWH320
  • 2011145RWH319
  • 2011145RWH269
  • Reverend Sam Sesay and Steve Babcock worship in the newly constructed building of a church Sesay planted and Babcock's church in Tennessee nurtured over the past few years. Photo courtesy of First Baptist Church of Humboldt, Tenn.
  • 2010April-baptism-014
  • In 2010 a group from Humboldt Baptist Church partnered with Rev. Sam Sesay to minister to students. Photo courtesy of First Baptist Church of Humboldt, Tenn.
Click the images above to launch the slide show

Photo Gallery

photos by Max Power

Posted August 24, 2011

Believers worship through flashlight services, Scripture readings in their own language, and school ministries.

Rev. Sam Sesay greets pastor Mohammed Kamara in one of the villages where he planted a church. Kamara, a convert from Islam, moved to the predominantly-Muslim village to lead the young church.

A family dries out beans harvested from their fields. The majority of this West African people group live through subsistence farming in remote villages without running water or electricity.

A church started under Sam Sesay’s ministry and partnership with First Baptist Church of Humboldt, Tenn.* *Image edited for security reasons

A young student listens attentively to the school’s headmaster, an active member of the village’s church, as he shares a devotional.

The church handles management and instruction for the village school, which had been severely neglected. This outreach has opened many doors for sharing the Good News with students and their families.

A Muslim village elder in the community where Rev. Sam Sesay ministers.

Sesay holds a copy of the New Testament in the language of the people group he works with. The availability of Scripture in their native tongue is opening countless doors to the Gospel.

As the early morning light begins to show, Christians study Scripture in their native language by flashlight in the church building.

Every day at 6 a.m., Christians meet to worship the Lord and pray for their community. A few hundred meters away, on the other side of the village, Muslims do their daily prayers at the mosque.

Rev. Sam Sesay has been working in his homeland for 10 years among a predominantly Muslim, minority ethnic group that is not his own.

Reverend Sam Sesay and Steve Babcock worship in the newly constructed building of a church Sesay planted and Babcock’s church in Tennessee nurtured over the past few years. Photo courtesy of First Baptist Church of Humboldt, Tenn.

Pastor Mohammed Kamara baptizes a new believer in April 2010 in the village’s nearby river. Photo courtesy of First Baptist Church of Humboldt, Tenn.

In 2010 a group from Humboldt Baptist Church partnered with Rev. Sam Sesay to minister to students. Photo courtesy of First Baptist Church of Humboldt, Tenn.

     

Leave a Comment

AfricaStories Resources

AfricaStories T-shirts are now available for only $7! You can also order free stickers, magnets, and print copies of our tabloid magazine.

Visit imbresources.org/africa

Related Sites

Asia Stories Commission Stories

Follow Us Online!