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Showing posts from March, 2021

MAKING DISCIPLES IN NIGER

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Yurani has been serving in Niger Africa since October 2019.   Most of the few missionaries serving in Niger returned to their home country during the pandemic but Yurani persisted in her calling to this country.  She is serving alongside a Korean missionary who founded a girl’s boarding school and Bible school.   Yurani’s main ministry is discipling teenagers who were born in a Muslim context.  Over Christmas, Yurani went to the city to relax but while there, she contracted malaria .  It was a difficult battle but she has mostly recovered.  Please keep her in prayer for full recovery and the strength to continue to minister and share God’s love in an isolated part of the world.

LEADER TRAINING IN BURKINA FASO, AFRICA

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Yubeli – As you know, our motto is that "forming leaders isn’t what we do, it is who we are".  Yubeli is a great example of a leader who forms other leaders.  Born in a poverty-stricken part of Colombia, Yubeli surpassed all expectations and learned healthy leadership principles, learned English and later French in preparation for her call to Burkina Faso, Africa.   Through missions donations, she has purchased land and developed a leadership school in a small village, she has brought unity through Christ to two competing tribes,  she cultivated a farm project to feed the villagers and provide work for the youth.  Now, through the pandemic, she and her Burkinabe husband continue to do Christian leadership and entrepreneurship training. At first, virtually, and now traveling to small communities, they are giving conferences and seminars throughout the country.  NEWS!   On Nov. 23, Yubeli and her husband, Utonio, welcomed their first child, Yohan Samuel into this world.  Plea

ENCOUNTER WITH THE WITCHDOCTOR

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  Next week the Bible school is sending a student team to an indigenous village that, according to the Joshua Project, is still an "unreached people group".  We actually visited them once before.  Here is what happened in that first encounter! ------------------------- 2 years ago one of our missions teams decided to go into the jungle to reach an unreached Indigenous Indian village called  “La Po” home of the Embera-Chami Indians. The team traveled all day and finally arrived around sundown.  After meeting the village leaders and getting something to eat, they found a flat spot to set up their tents. But no one expected what was about to happen…   Around 2:00 AM several of the students on the team woke up feeling a strong oppression and could hear footsteps walking around outside their tents.... Even though they tried to see who it was with flashlights, they couldn’t actually see anyone. The students got real scared and started waking up the rest of the team.  They found out