Serving Alone

  • Brian Beadle, 58, is a single IMB missionary who has served in Botswana for over 16 years, first as a student minister and then as a church planter.
  • Botswana is a landlocked country in Southern Africa that is about the size of Texas. Just over 2 million people live there.
  • Beadle talks with a lady who is selling different kinds of
  • Prayers are needed for missionaries and national believers as they strive to bring the truth in the midst of darkness and spiritual warfare they are facing in Botswana.
  • Serving as a single, Beadle says:
  • Beadle has had the opportunity to have several young men from Botswana be like sons to him through the years. He has a ministry to show the Father's love by being like a father to many fatherless youth of Botswana.
  • Beadle says a verse he holds onto is Proverbs 3:5-6:
  • The advice Beadle has for singles thinking about going on the mission field is:
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photos by Nicole Clark

Posted on October 5, 2011

National friends and church members have become family for this single missionary in Botswana.

Brian Beadle, 58, is a single IMB missionary who has served in Botswana for over 16 years, first as a student minister and then as a church planter.

Botswana is a landlocked country in Southern Africa that is about the size of Texas. Just over 2 million people live there.

Beadle talks with a lady who is selling different kinds of “medicines” that she believes will get the buyer a job or put a curse on someone.

Prayers are needed for missionaries and national believers as they strive to bring the truth in the midst of darkness and spiritual warfare they are facing in Botswana.

Serving as a single, Beadle says: “The hardest part is ‘aloneness.’ There is some advantage of being alone because you tend to more readily open your home to Africa. The national people become my family.”

“I have been blessed to have such great relationship with the nationals,” Beadle says.

“Discipleship is not so much witness as it is ‘withness,’” says Beadle. “Just being with the people and growing with them.”

“We, as single people, we are allowed the privilege of sinking our whole being and our whole life into the people around us,” Beadle says. “And that is a terrific advantage.”

“This church here, the people here, are my life,” says Beadle.

“It’s not about me growing as a Christian, [though] that is part of it,” Beadle shares. “It is not about me even serving the local church. It is about glorifying God’s Name.”

Beadle has had the opportunity to have several young men from Botswana be like sons to him through the years. He has a ministry to show the Father’s love by being like a father to many fatherless youth of Botswana.

Beadle says a verse he holds onto is Proverbs 3:5-6: “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight.”

The advice Beadle has for singles thinking about going on the mission field is: “Just get out there and do it. So many of us feel like we have to wait until we are married before we can live. We need to get out and serve wherever we are or whatever status we are in life.”

     

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