Equipping Pastors for Mission

This year, with your help and by God’s grace, African Enterprise is committed to reaching 1.6 million people across Africa, with the big goal of seeing 100,000 people make a personal commitment for Christ.

Through your financial support and prayers, you can be part of seeing Mission 2020 – 100,000 commitments achieved – by addressing one big area of need … training leaders to powerfully share God’s truth!

Africa is home to 1.2 billion people, yet there are few trained ministers of the Gospel.

Esther R. Erusa shared; “I am now able to interpret the Bible within the context. The promise to fulfilment unit was one of the units that had a great transformation in my ministry”

Your partnership with us to empower evangelists, pastors, volunteers and churches through online training will enable us to take the Gospel to every strata of society through AE’s unique stratified evangelism and social action approach.

Justus Mitingi, a pastor in Malindi town ministering with Kenya Assemblies of God says. “The great wealth of spiritual knowledge in the Bible has been unlocked by the knowledge received.”

There are so many church leaders like Esther and Justus who are yearning to preach the truth to their congregations. With your gift, you can empower these church leaders to enhance their ministry.

 

Equip Pastors for Mission

Training, and being trained by, African Christian leaders

Ministry in Africa really was a two-way street!

From 2003–14 I had the privilege of helping to run a Pastor Training Program in South East Africa – a joint initiative between African Enterprise and the Moore College External Studies Department (as it was then known). The aim was to provide high-quality, low-cost, short-term theological education to untrained African church leaders – of whom there are many.

Sub-Saharan Africa is full of fine Christian men and women who, for reasons of lack of money and opportunity, have not been able to receive much (if any) formal theological training. The idea of the program was to use Moore College’s very good Preliminary Theological Certificate materials (appropriately adapted to the cultural context) to better equip these leaders. It was the “teach the teacher” principle.

We put on a regular program two week Australian-taught intensive courses, with a view to putting the students through six or more PTC subjects over a one to three year period. I travelled to Africa on eight occasions, teaching in Kenya, Uganda and Malawi … and LOVED it.

Local African leaders were very enthusiastic about the initiative. I recall one prominent Kenyan pastor describing the church in Africa as being ‘a mile wide and an inch deep’. This training we offered was a strategic and greatly valued way of addressing that.

But … the benefits were not one-way! In terms of Christian learning and encouragement, it
really was a two-way street. The African believers I met and became friends with had a LOT to teach me, too!

In my very humble opinion, we in Australia had something to contribute to the growth of the church in Africa in terms of theological training, organisation, finances and prayer. But I found that I learned so much from my African friends in the areas of evangelism, prayer, a concern for the spiritual and social needs of people, and hospitality.

Many Africans I met felt at ease in sharing their faith evangelistically almost anywhere. A lot of African churches seemed to prioritise prayer and prayer meetings – often overnight. Christians were flat out evangelising and pastoring AND helping with development and aid work. And African hospitality was a pleasure to experience. In each of these areas I was greatly encouraged and inspired!

It’s been about six years since my last trip to Africa, but I am still in contact with a number of former African students and co-workers. I am sure that the capacity for Australian Christians to help African Christians, and African Christians to help Australian Christians is just as great as ever.

It has been truly great to be part of God’s transnational purposes on this planet

Written by Stephen Liggings

Stephen Liggins is a minister at Anglican Churches Springwood, and guest lecture at the Sydney Missionary and Bible College.