Niger - A New Mission Field

Opening a New Mission Field – Niger

By Mark Powell, GBIM Director

Kris and Nicole Yeomans have long had a burden for Muslim evangelism and outreach. Kris spent some time in Niger, West Africa as an intern during his college days, and together he and wife Nicole had explored and prayed concerning God’s apparent call on their life to reach Muslim people. The answer they continued to receive from God was a call to reach people in the West African, French-speaking, country of Niger.

The Yeoman family approached General Baptist International Missions (GBIM) about this call after leading several Mission One teams to Niger and experiencing confirmation of God’s call on their life. But what does it look like to open any new field, especially one that is so predominantly Muslim?

Part of the attraction to Niger is that it is a Muslim nation, yet has managed to maintain a secular government with freedom of religion. In other words, it is possible for a denominational mission agency like GBIM to legally register and do ministry in Niger without the typical use of “creative access” that Christian missions must use in other Muslim nations.

The process of legal recognition and legal status as a Christian mission is not always an easy one. It certainly implies finding the right contacts and lawyers who will represent us and our interests well.

Fortunately, the oldest Christian mission in Niger is SIM International. SIM began as the Sudan Interior Mission with an original focus on mission work in the Sudan of Africa:

“Sudan Interior Mission (SIM) began in 1893. Canadians Walter Gowans, Roland Bingham, and American Thomas Kent had a vision to evangelise the 60 million least-reached communities of sub-Saharan Africa. Unable to interest established missions—most of which said reaching the Soudan was impossible—the three set out alone.

Illness overtook all three. Gowans and Kent died of complications in 1894, and Bingham returned to Canada. On his second attempt, Bingham caught malaria again and was forced to return home. Unable to return to Africa, Bingham sent out a third team. They successfully established a base 800 kilometers inland at Patigi, Nigeria in 1902. From there, the work of SIM began in Africa.” (1)

The fortunate part is that SIM has been willing to work with other Christian organizations who want to minister in areas where they are active, including Niger. This means that the Yeomans will be able to go as missionaries with GBIM, sign a memorandum of understanding with SIM, and SIM will help both the Yeomans and GBIM wade through the muddy waters of registration with the government of Niger. The arrangement will offer many benefits for all involved: SIM will gain new volunteers who will help their ministry; GBIM will have a partner to guide us through the difficulties of the registration and immigration process; the Yeomans will benefit from making many great contacts in addition to their children attending the Sahel Academy (a missionary kid school) sponsored by SIM.

But what does the future of GBIM look like in Niger? That is a difficult and complicated question. Freedom of religion does not guarantee success or growth in any country. Protestant missions began in Niger in 1924. Fifty years later, in the late 1970’s, there were 12,000 Catholic and 3,000 Protestant converts. Current estimates place the number of Christians at about 56,000 with projected growth to about 85,000 by 2025. The Joshua Project puts the Evangelical growth rate at 3.7% with Evangelicals making up on 0.19% of the population.

We do not think for one moment that this is an easy task. Christian growth in this country that is 95% Muslim is slow at best. In 2015 Muslims protesting the depiction of the prophet of Islam in the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo destroyed 72 church buildings and killed at least 10 people in attacks that began in the city of Zinder on January 16 and hit the capital of Niamey the next day.

SIM has been in Niger since 1924 and today they are represented by three independent Christian organizations with 100 congregations, 65 pastors, and over 6,000 adherents.(2) The struggle for Christian groups in Niger is very real. But the fact remains that Niger also has 15 people groups in which less than 20% of the population has any possible affiliation with a Christian church. That means the potential is as great as the call to preach the gospel to all people.

But God has not only called us to reach those who are easy to reach. Rather He has called us to go into all the world to preach the gospel. Niger will be the second ministry area for General Baptists in the 10/40 window, an area of the world between 10 and 40 degrees north of the equator where most unreached people live. We have been blessed to serve in India for several years now with two associations and nearly 100 churches in that 10/40 window country.

Our goals will be to facilitate a church planting movement with Nigerien Christian leaders through leadership development and outreach. The Yeomans already have several contacts in Niger and have worked hard to establish a base of relationships upon which we plan to build. As in all areas, discipleship and leadership development will be an essential to the success of our work in Niger.

First, we must have the Yeomans well established in Niger. That means immigration, housing, transportation, education for their children, language school, just to name a few essentials. We believe the Yeomans are up to the task. We also believe that General Baptists are up to the task, but it will take committed ministry partners to make it happen and an army of prayer warriors praying for spiritual victory in the individual lives of Nigeriens.

(1) https://www.sim.org/about
(2) http://www.simusa.org/about/where-we-work/africa/niger/

International Ministries - Honduras

For His Glory – Ministries Together

by Clint Cook, Executive Director GAGB

Since I have been Executive Director, it has been an honor to visit many of our mission fields, visit many churches abroad, and get to know many of our national pastors. It is humbling to see firsthand how training institutes at the General Baptist Bible College and the Matigsalug Bible Institute in the Philippines are making such a difference in training our Filipino pastors and church leaders.

In India, Prakash and Jemima Pamu oversee the Dorcas Sewing Centers and assist local pastors in ministry on the eastern coast. In the central region, Jesse and Brittany Vemula work with local pastors and oversee the Lydia Sewing Centers. Who would have ever imagined that a simple tool like a sewing machine could be used as a pathway to spread the gospel? The local pastors make sure these women are not just taught how to sew. The sewing lessons include the clear presentation of the gospel. As a result, scores of Hindu and Muslim women have stepped over the line of faith and accepted Christ, changing the eternal course of precious families!

Our churches in Jamaica are on fire for Jesus! They are working diligently to gather funds to build an administration center and daycare so the gospel can be shared with families by caring for their children. In Honduras, Faith Home is thriving despite political tension. The local pastors are excited because they are now receiving essential leadership and pastoral training from our California Hispanic coordinator, Rene Rodriguez.

As I saw these ministries in action and dreamed of the potential our fields hold, I became overwhelmed with joy, and then immediately burdened with the need to do more! Can you imagine the number of souls that could be won if every General Baptist church partnered financially with our international work?

There are so many opportunities for you and your church to get connected with our international work. Have you ever sponsored a student at GBBC or MBI? We have scores of young people in the Philippines that need sponsors so they can receive training in ministry to pastor, lead worship, teach and plant churches. They have the passion and call, but not the means.

Would you like to make sure that the children at Faith Home receive the best care and education possible? You can do so through child sponsorship! Would you like to partner with our work in India and provide funds to buy more sewing machines and resources for the children and pastors there? Would your church contribute to the campaign in Jamaica to help a community hear the gospel through a daycare? There are ongoing needs in Mexico, Saipan, Guam, and Niger as well.

Please get involved today with International Ministries. Our Unified Giving provides general support for International Ministries. Special project support by your church, a Sunday School class, a small group, or a youth/children’s ministry could make an eternal investment in the Kingdom by sponsoring a child at Faith Home, a student at GBBC or MBI, or funding one of our other ministries throughout the world. We can do far more together than we could ever do alone.

When I stand before God one day I do not plan on standing there with my personal bank statement displaying a lot of zeros behind a dollar sign. I want to meet Him with a harvest of souls – many that I have never laid eyes on or met, but touched through my financial gifts. How will you and your church stand before Him one day? I pray it will be surrounded by souls.

Turnaround 2020 - 7 Steps to Turnaround in a Rural or Small Town Setting

Turnaround 2020 – 7 Steps to Turnaround in a Rural or Small Town Setting

1. Bloom where you are planted.

Understand your community and your potential.  This potential may be defined by seating capacity or parking capacity but is most often defined by relational capacity.  The potential in many rural, small town settings is tied to relationships not to geographic location.

2. Teach and model relentlessly inviting people to church.

Capitalize on the relationships folks already have with friends, family members or co-workers by teaching and encouraging them to invite.  The key to developing a culture of invitation is relentless, on-going, never-ending, personal invitations to “come with me.”

3. Improve your hospitality.

More than offering coffee and pastries, learn to welcome people.  Avoid the holy huddles of close friends who carry on animated conversations among themselves but who exclude newcomers.  The greatest strength of a smaller church is the depth of friendship and relationship that is shared.  The greatest weakness of a smaller church is that we are so close to one another that we unintentionally exclude new folks from our circle of friendship.

4. Review your worship services from the perspective of the first-time guest.

Can a first-time guest understand what we are doing and why?  Be user-friendly.  In one congregation the keyboardist was excellent and the worship leader had a clear baritone voice that was easy to follow.  Nevertheless worship was frustrated by his habit of only announcing page numbers just as he began the first line leaving little time to find the page before the first lines were already past.  In another setting with hymnals in use but with no printed order of service, the worship leader only announced page numbers once.  This did encourage congregational interaction, however, since everyone who missed the number turned to the people around them for follow up information.

5. Review sermon content and communication idiosyncrasies.

Sermon content should be developed so that the first-time, unchurched guest can clearly comprehend the message.  Avoid church code language and theological terms that are not defined in simple, conversational terms.  Deal with real life application of the Scripture.  First time guests are ready to deal with the deep, hard questions of life if they are developed with real life language and illustration.

Have someone you trust help you find consistent grammar errors, nuisance habits that detract from the message and any tendencies to stray from the message to explore tangents that come from stream of consciousness not from the discipline of Spirit led study and preparation.

6. Proof read everything and update/correct regularly.

The most notorious offenders here are bulletin files and PowerPoint slides that are saved and reused.  Often once an error makes it into these templates it is never corrected but is instead copied forward.

Printed communication must give attention to spelling names correctly, presenting locations accurately and using code language rarely.  For example you could write:

VBS planning at Linda’s on Monday

Or you could re-write:

Vacation Bible School planning will meet at Linda Jones’ home (123 Any Street) at 7 p.m. on Monday the 15th.

7. Invest in missionary causes out of commitment to the Great Commission not out of tradition or denominational loyalty.

Partner with the Lord to reach people in other settings as well as reaching people in your own setting.

Jumpstart Turnaround 2020JUMPSTART YOUR MINISTRY:  Identify one of these steps that warrants attention first.

Establish a timeline to work on it in the next 4-6 weeks.
I will address step number______ and will begin to work on it _______________, 2017.