Video: Our Stories
Posted on April 29, 2011
In South Africa nearly 200 babies are abandoned monthly between Johannesburg and neighboring community Soweto; typically only 60 are found alive. It is unknown how many more are disposed of in the river. The Door of Hope children’s mission saves abandoned babies who are often rescued from plastic bags, sewers, toilets or rubbish bins. “We’re doing this as a ministry to Jesus so that we can share the Gospel,” says Door of Hope founder Cheryl Allen.
“The hunger just eats away at your body,” says a grandmother in the Horn of Africa, where 13.3 million are at risk because of the worst drought in 60 years. “You can’t work. All you can do is sleep. The children don’t even have energy to cry.”
A joyful African Christmas song, set to accompanying artwork, proclaims what the prophets foretold long ago – the promised child is Jesus. Let’s celebrate the Savior of all nations!
Abstinence causes insanity; you can’t get AIDS if the Holy Spirit lives in you; having sex with a virgin will cure the disease. Myths like these led Swaziland to have the highest adult HIV prevalence in the world, around 26 percent.
Truck drivers in West Africa face death each day. They fear that they will not make it home to their families. Retirement? Insurance? They don’t exist. Temptations? Hardships? They abound. Christians in the region have a vision to share the Gospel with drivers, hoping the Good News will spread along the truck routes.
Centuries ago the Songhai were one of the world’s great empires, second only to the Mongolian empire in size. Today most Songhai live hand-to-mouth, eking out an existence in the harsh deserts of western Africa. But now a new kingdom is building among them – the kingdom of God.
“So many of us feel like we have to wait until we’re married before we can live just like the Lord wants us to live,” says a single missionary in Botswana who encourages other singles to get involved in missions. “I think we need to get out and serve wherever we are, whatever status we are in life.”
A young missionary had a worthy dream – to provide clean water for the people of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. But when a gruesome accident split his face in two, it seemed the dream might be lost.
The sight of kids fighting over a pot of food inspires a widow with two kids to settle in an unfamiliar country, find a partner, and start a ministry feeding and educating children affected by HIV/AIDS.
A civil war forced Pastor Samuel Sesay and his family to flee their home. As refugees in a neighboring nation, they worked alongside missionaries sharing the Gospel with a Muslim people group. Now they’ve crossed back over the border to continue sharing Christ among the people group at home.
Young adults from the United States and South Africa find family in each other while partnering on an International World Changers mission project in South Africa.
It’s tough to run a hospital without consistent electricity and water. Yet for decades people have flocked to this rural hospital in Zimbabwe, knowing they’ll receive good care and won’t be turned away if they can’t pay. A die-hard doctor and his family want to preserve the legacy.
In the tension surrounding Ivory Coast’s presidential stand-off (and the years of civil war leading up to it), people were victims of intimidation, curfews and stray bullets. Now, Christians give thanks to God and pursue reconciliation as life slowly returns to normal.
A spirit of excitement resonates among residents of South Sudan, poised to become the world’s newest nation on July 9, 2011. As independence day approaches, Christians anticipate more opportunities to share the Gospel and worship freely.
It’s not often a family of four drops everything to disappear off the grid for three months. But that’s exactly what this small-town, Idaho-native family did, crossing coastlines and cultures to share God’s word in a small village in Senegal.
Many college students stop going to church and ignore the things of God. “Those are a lot of wasted years,” says an advocate for Fusion, a program that combines discipleship and missions. “… Fusion was designed to … catch them in that very critical time in their lives…”
In Rwanda’s genocide, thousands were hacked to death by machete, women were violently and repeatedly raped, and children’s heads were smashed into brick walls. Today, survivors are choosing to forgive those who mistreated them and killed their families.
“It doesn’t matter how much I sweat,” says a worker with the Hands On program in Senegal. “It doesn’t matter how many days I go without taking a shower. It doesn’t matter if I have to eat something I don’t like. … All that matters is the Gospel.”
“I murdered people, and I raped women, and I enjoyed it,” says a former rebel solder in eastern Congo. With the help of local pastors, he and hundreds of other soldiers found forgiveness in Christ. But they, and their victims, still struggle with what they’ve done.
The Gospel is spreading like wildfire in rural Zimbabwe, where 700 people accepted Christ and six new churches started in the past year. A church planter says it’s the first time he’s “seen local community take ownership for the Gospel and understand their responsibility to share the Gospel.”
As uprisings in Africa escalate, Christians are seeing God make Himself known in the midst of chaos. “We who are outside of the situation pray for and are partners with people inside the situation, and God is working through both of us to make Himself known,” says a seminary professor. Learn how you can pray.
A pastor adopts a troubled street kid. A couple stays pure till marriage. A smiling AIDS victim encourages patients at the clinic where she now works. Step by step, believers in Zambia are changing the makeup of a country with one of the world’s worst HIV/AIDS pandemics.
President vs. president. Muslim vs. Christian. North vs. south. Throughout Africa political, religious and ethnic conflicts are dividing nations, and believers are calling on the global Christian community to pray for their countries.
Celebrate Christmas Africa style with this thoughtful rendition of a holiday classic. The drummer boy gladly offered what little he had to honor the newborn King. This holiday season, what gift will you give Him?
Amid towering trash piles and open sewage, a small, tin-framed church is bringing hope to a Nairobi community. First Eastleigh Baptist Church trains former prostitutes and impoverished community members to start small businesses, and is seeking to share God’s love with Muslim neighbors.
Life’s not so sweet in Sweetwaters, a rural South African community where seemingly every yard is filled with graves. Many adults have died of AIDS, and children are left to care for their households. December 1 is a day to remember those suffering and learn ways we can help.
Four thousand participants from 198 countries gather in Cape Town, South Africa, for perhaps the widest and most diverse gathering in the history of the church: the Third Lausanne Congress on World Evangelization.
Centuries ago, Arab traders traveling by dhow brought Islam to Africa’s eastern coast. Now missionaries in Mozambique are using a dhow to spread the Gospel along those same shorelines.
“Adventure evangelists” trek the rainforest of Madagascar, searching for hidden villages and assessing villagers’ challenges. Later, they’ll return to meet human needs while sharing the Gospel.
Semester missionaries in “the great thirst land” of Botswana eagerly return the following year to pick up where they left off: planting new churches, encouraging young believers, and starting work in new areas.
In Johannesburg’s squatter camps, AIDS is killing off a generation, and orphans are growing up virtually on the streets. Meet two women providing, love, care, counseling and provision of physical needs for these children.
For centuries women in Africa, Asia and the Middle East have used henna, a temporary tattoo drawn onto hands, arms and legs, to beautify themselves. In east Africa, henna is used to illustrate and tell Bible stories — symbols in the drawings remind women of stories they’ve heard and help them tell others.
Throughout Africa, missionaries are planting their lives among unique people groups and demonstrating what it means to be a follower of Jesus. Here, in their own words, they share the joys and challenges of cross-cultural work.
“Ends of the earth” is sometimes overused in mission circles, but eastern Niger really does feel like the most remote location on the planet. “The Gospel hasn’t made it here yet. That’s why we have to be here,” says a missionary. “…“Not everyone gets that opportunity, to be the first person to tell someone about Jesus.”
The prayer of IMB urban missionaries in South Africa is that God would use the soccer World Cup to draw attention to the lost people of the nation’s cities. IMB missionaries minister in five cities that were hosts of the 2010 World Cup: Johannesburg, Pretoria, Cape Town, Durban and Port Elizabeth.
South Africa is the first African nation to host the 2010 FIFA World Cup, a soccer tournament that many deem the most anticipated sporting event on earth. Christians are taking advantage of this to share Christ in local communities through soccer clinics, big screen showings, and more.
South Africa is the first African nation to host the 2010 FIFA World Cup, a soccer tournament that many deem the most anticipated sporting event on earth. Christians are taking advantage of this to share Christ in local communities through soccer clinics, big screen showings, and more.
Franklin and Paula Kilpatrick worked among Zambian Christians as publishers of Christian literature, as teachers, as church planters and as leaders, friends and counselors for forty years. They retire next year and feel like they could keep doing what they are doing another forty years.
Ibrahima Dieng has heard the Gospel many times, he is no closer now to being a Christian than he was ten years ago. He is typical of many residents of Dakar, Senegal, a city that is 96 percent Muslim.
IMB missionary Alan Locke and his team have started various ministries to build relationships and community with Sowetans. From coaching boys’ soccer teams and teaching girls’ clubs to leading abstinence and Christian living trainings, the missionaries are making an impact with the Gospel.
Kenyan pastor Michael Kabochi’s life is regularly threatened by Mungiki, a quasi-religious sect that’s synonymous with machete killings, rape and organized crime. But, Kobochi bravely shares the Gospel with Mungiki, claiming, “The blood of Jesus was shed for them as much as it was for me.”
Chronic conflicts in Sudan have led to food shortages, a damaged economy and a lack of access to basic health services, education and jobs. Young IMB missionaries are using HIV/AIDS awareness, hygiene projects and other methods to share the Gospel and meet community needs.
Raped and kicked out of home, “Lisha” turned to a boyfriend who eventually forced her into prostitution. Transferred to another pimp and coerced into moving, she’s far from home and desperate for a way out. But with the coming of the World Cup, human trafficking will only increase in South Africa.
Over the past several years, churches in Jos, Nigeria, have been shaken by violent outbreaks in which both Christians and Muslims were killed. Over 500 are dead after the most recent attacks in March, 2010. Pastors struggle to know how to encourage suffering congregations.
Students spend a semester in southern Sudan putting into practice the previous semesters classroom learning of sharing about Jesus in harsh environment.
Baptist Global Response helps to relieve difficulties in obtaining potable water through pumping and filtering projects.
All over the world, Christians use a variety of means to share the Gospel of Christ and reach the lost. For First Baptist Church of Alexander City, Alabama, hosting medical clinics opens the door to minister to both physical and spiritual needs.
The entire town, including the market area, was looted. All the food supplies were burned. In the end more than 10,000 people ran from Akot, Sudan, and the surrounding areas to seek shelter in 13 nearby villages.
Kate Ncube hand makes and sells dolls of 17 southern Africa tribes, or people groups. “I enjoy learning about other cultures,” Kate said. “It gives me a lot of insight and helps me understand a person. To understand them, I must understand their culture!”
Weeks without a bath. Blizzard conditions with only a coal stove for warmth. Layers of clothing that just get changed around every couple of days. Life is rough for three short-term missionaries in the mountains of Lesotho, but it’s worth it for the chance to share Christ’s love.
Broadview Church is a pioneer — one of the first African-American congregations to tackle the challenge of taking the Gospel to an unreached people group in western Africa. “AfricaStories” will chronicle their journey, beginning here with their first vision trip.
An interschool soccer tournament in a South African township provides missionaries with opportunities to build relationships, impact a community and share the Gospel.
If things don’t change, the Basotho people of Lesotho may cease to exist in less than 26 years. They’re dying of AIDS — some by choice, since contracting HIV entitles them to government help. In this impoverished mountain area, AIDS is just one more way to die.
About 20 boys sleep on the streets of Nairobi’s Riverside. Some are orphans, some were abused, some were kicked out. Walk alongside Oscar, who’s beaten and tortured by the other boys. And meet Eunice, who’s burdened to help the boys despite some hateful actions.
President Barak Obama challenges citizens of Ghana to take responsibility for building a better future. Hear Ghanaian Christians’ reactions to the speech, and explore the faith of this nation’s God-centered business people.
Ghana’s Cape Coast Castle is a haunting relic of the slave trade, but it’s also a beacon of light in a bustling tourist town. Here, reflections on evil turning to good, not only for the castle but also for a slave ship captain who penned the hymn “Amazing Grace.”
African Americans have a strong and proud history in international missions. But in the last century that’s often what it’s been – history. Missionary Troy Lewis challenges the African American church to consider its heritage and continue embracing the task of taking the Gospel to the ends of the earth.
Political and economic turmoil have resulted in hunger and hopelessness for many Zimbabweans. But a food distribution project spurred a cycle of giving that brought comfort and hope to some widows, a Christian publishing house and a school.
The map below pinpoints locations featured in our stories, along with a summary of the stories told from there. (Please note the markers are not of specific locations but just general representations of where stories took place.)
Genocide survivors in Rwanda choose to forgive those who murdered their families.
Rwandans continue to deal with the trauma, but many are finding healing and even forgiveness.
Georgina lost most of her family. Ntaganda helped liberate Rwanda. In 1994, their paths crossed.
Posted on April 29, 2011
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