Showing posts with label Benevolence Opportunities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Benevolence Opportunities. Show all posts

Friday, November 12, 2010

Please Pray for Registration

Dear Readers,
I would like to ask you to pray for IOI's work in Ethiopia. For almost 12 years we have supported indigenous ministries and ministers. Until now we have worked through existing churches and organizations like Operation Rescue Ethiopia (the childcare project in Mekele).

The need to register IOI as an NGO (Non Governmental Organization) became apparent a couple of years ago. As an NGO we could own property and import materials to advance the ministry. Registering as an NGO would also provide some legal protection for those involved in the ministry. Also, if you know much about IOI you know we plan to build a model village in Ethiopia where we train students in theology, agriculture, health care and vocation.

After almost two years in process we have been told by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs that our application will be rejected. This news has been disheartening, especially since we have funds, materials and volunteers committed to make this vision become a reality.

We have been told that we can be "religious" or "charitable", but not both. Ironically the word "charity" is a Christian idea. In Websters Dictionary the definition is "(Christian theology) ...love for one's fellow man". Many secular organizations have been involved in welfare projects and are even called "Charities" - in many minds charity has been divorced from Christianity. How bizarre that a government institution would try to separate Christianity from charity.

We know that when God closes one door He often opens another. We are confident that the training program will progress, most likely through the churches of Ethiopia rather than a campus. We are also exploring ways to invest in the people of Ethiopia in an effort to help the poorest of the poor work their way out of poverty.

Please pray that God will guide us through this process and that the end of the matter will be far better than the beginning has been.

Yours in Christ,
Patrick

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Missionaries Support At-Risk Child

I received word today that the missionaries supported through Indigenous Outreach (who receive and average of $60 each per month) not only support 5 indigenous ministers from within Ethiopia, they have collected amongst themselves to support an at-risk child through the TLC (True Light Childcare) project.

Asenaku Wube (center wearing blue sweater) is pictured with some of her indigenous supporters.

"What amazes me," said Patrick Beard, IOI Executive Director, "is that the missionaries did this completely on their own. It was their idea. It both humbles ad encourages me greatly."

The TLC project serves over 100 at-risk children (children who come from poverty stricken families, some of which are orphans). Supporting a child for $20 per month provides education, clothing and food assistance as well as participation in a Bible club program. Sponsors are asked to add an additional $5 to their monthly gift to help defray administrative costs of the program. "We believe in (the TLC) program so much that we will send the $20 per month at our cost so that 100% of the gift benefits the children and families served," said Patrick.

Go to www.ioiusa.org to find out how you can join with fellow believers from Ethiopian and America to support children in Ethiopia.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Tangible Ministry in Ethiopia

By Stephen Kennedy
Mission Coordinator
The emergency assistance fund was established last year as we heard of the tangible needs of some of the ministers in Ethiopia. In January we left $390 USD with Negash to use for meeting emergency needs for the missionaries. On behalf of all the ministers who received help in tangible ways, he wrote last month, thanking from his heart all who gave. Below is what all was able to be done for less than four hundred dollars.
Aid for Merkebu, Seyefu, Gelana and their wives on the occasion of them all having children born into their families. Yerga and his family received some help toward a new house. Kaleb received an MRI to see if surgery would be able to help reduce the pain in his hips as he walks. Awash Buni Church was given assistance toward buying a house church near the main road. Chaka’s wife was helped with some medical expenses. Mellese was able to go to the eye doctor and get glasses.
After all of this there is still more for Kaleb to return to the doctor and to help Matteows who will see a doctor next month.
I was amazed and very encouraged by how much was done with so little. It is a blessing to serve these dear ones in Christ not only with a little monthly support but to also come alongside of them in times of need. We continue to have the emergency assistance fund available for the brothers and sisters in Christ that He has yoked us with in love.

Missionary Profile - Belaynesh

Belaynesh was born in 1972 in a rural agricultural region of Ethiopia known as Eastern Gojame Mota.
While in the eighth grade, she made a profession of faith in Jesus after hearing the gospel from her older sister, who had become a believer after moving to the south of Ethiopia. Some years later, Belaynesh was baptized by a visiting evangelist who helped to start a church in her region.
Her conversion and membership in the evangelical church caused her to receive persecution from family members. Her uncle is an Orthodox priest and he threatened her to change her mind concerning faith in Christ or he would kill her.
While having many Christ-exalting traditions, some rural Orthodox priests remain ignorant of the gospel and oppose the preaching of salvation by faith in the evangelical sense. For many of the Orthodox, the church and its traditions are the means of salvation and the way that faith is received. Belaynesh was unable to remain in the Orthodox church and was forced to leave home.
She moved to Bahir Dar and the adjustment to city life was difficult. She gained employment as a teacher and joined a fellowship of believers.
“God spoke to my heart during that time in Bahir Dar,” she said, “that someday I would become a bible lady.” Two years later she moved to Addis Abeba to pursue the calling of ministry.
The first years in Addis were financially difficult. “I struggled with life,” she said. “My physical and spiritual well-being was under attack”
During this time of loneliness and desperation, she often thought of how she could have remained home and married a wealthy man. “For sure I would not have the peace that I have today,” she said. “Jesus saved me because He loves me. This I know.”
Belaynesh served several years in Addis in ladies ministry and evangelical outreach. She said during this time, “God brought me out of the darkness by using my sister as a witness. In the same way I need to be a witness to my people.”
In 2005 Belaynesh was married after years of praying for a godly husband. God sent her a husband that not only is a fellow believer but also a minister. They are now able to minister alongside each other. Belaynesh meets often with women in their home for prayer and bible study while her husband is working on a new church plant in Badessa, where they moved just over a year ago.
Belaynesh and Teferi (her husband) now have two little boys and praise God for His provision and faithfulness. Belaynesh shared that Badessa is a strongly Islamic area and is a place of great persecution and sectarian violence. Belaynesh asks for prayer that God’s Spirit would move, bring men to faith and repentance in Badessa, and also for the “ongoing fellowship, unity and love for all attached to this ministry until the end of time.”

Bread Ovens to be Provided


It is our desire to not only send enough support to help families eke out an existence. We want to minister holistically, to improve the whole economy of life for our brothers and sisters.
With this in mind, Arlene Norton has begun raising funds to purchase ovens that will allow mothers of TLCP supported children to bake local bread and sell it. This will enable these families to add to their very small income with a business that is not based on ongoing support.
Arlene has already raised $1000.00 of the $3000.00 goal which will be enough to purchase every mother in the program an oven who desires one.
Pray that Arlene can meet this goal and that God will use these ovens to feed His own.



Thursday, April 23, 2009

April Newsletter

It is both an honor and a privilege to share with you some of the news and needs associated with the ministry of Indigenous Outreach. As a supporter of this ministry I know that you are interested in how the funds you give are being used. It is my hope that you will be encouraged to share this ministry with other so that we might have the blessing of helping even more poverty stricken churches, missionaries, orphans and widows.

RUSS COOPER
We have been praying for some time now that God would raise up a co-worker to partner with us at the office here in Jackson. With proposed projects in Ethiopia and the United Kingdom, and a growing number of individuals being ministered to the need for additional ministry staff is evident. Russ Cooper has answered the call. He plans to move with his wife Meredith and their two children from Shreveport to Jackson in June. Russ has served as a pastor in three Louisiana churches and he also serves as the administrator for Calvary Baptist’s senior care facility. Russ will be the Financial Director for IOI. In addition to accounting and fund raising responsibilities Russ will be involved in discipleship both at home and abroad. Please pray for the Coopers in this time of transition.

OFFICE
Due to the addition of Russ on staff and the needs associated with ministry growth we are now in need of a larger office space in Jackson. For years we have had the privilege of utilizing donated office space. We have an opportunity to purchase an office suite for $65,000 which would meet our needs for years to come. Please join with us in prayer that God would provide.

CHILD SPONSORS NEEDED
Over 100 at risk children are being ministered to through the TLC Project. This is a project that is dear to our hearts as we have witnessed with our own eyes the transformation that is made in the entire family of the children ministered to. In addition to spiritual training children served through TLC attend school, receive food aid and clothing. We are in URGENT need of 38 sponsors who will give $25 per month to change the live of a poverty stricken child.

TRANSFER DOUBLE FREQUENT FLIER MILES—NWA & Skyteam
A unique and painless way to give to IOI is by donating your Northwest Airlines frequent flier miles. Now through May 31 you may donate your frequent flier miles from Northwest to account number 921561605 (in the name of Patrick Beard) and Northwest Airlines will double your gift! These miles will be used to purchase ministry travel. www.nwa.com

PRAYER ALERT
Are you a prayer warrior? Are you on our weekly PRAYER ALERT email list? Would you like to join with us in regular prayer and have the joy of sharing in answered prayers? Log on to www.ioiusa.org and follow the link to “Get Involved” and “Prayer Worker”. (This site currently only works with Internet Explorer - we are working on it).

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

100 for 200 for 300

Over the next 12 months we are searching for 100 churches, Sunday school classes, organizations and individuals who are willing to give $200 per month to help us raise up 300 missionaries in Ethiopia.
We have had a very encouraging beginning in the initial stages of our promotion of the Sanctuary Village project. In seven years we hope to have completed a village that is a place of ministry and a training center to send out missionaries across the Horn of Africa.
Already the Sanctuary project has been shared publicly at a banquet in Tennessee, and in meetings in Texas and Louisiana with some positive results. In addition to seeking larger one time gifts to help us meet the seven year budget for Sanctuary Village, we are simultaneously trying to increase the regular donations to the General Fund to help meet the growing needs as the ministry multiplies.
Our hope is that we will be doing ten times more ministry in seven years. For this to be possible we must increase regular monthly donations by four times current levels.
If our goal is met by August 2009, total regular giving will have doubled and we will be well on our way to seeing Sanctuary Village established and an expansion of the entire ministry in Ethiopia, Germany and Brazil.

Friday, May 23, 2008

The Video is Finished!!!


Sanctuary Village from Patrick Beard on Vimeo.

Big thanks to Julian Williamson from Bluesland Films for all his hard work on this project!

Monday, April 14, 2008

Elevate Ethiopia

A special blog has been established for our child sponsorship program that is being coordinated by Arlene Norton. She has posted videos of her recent visit with some of the families we help to support.

http://www.elevateethiopia.blogspot.com/

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Tangible Ministry to Families


by Stephen Kennedy
Missions Coordinator
Eden Maseresha has been supported through the True Light Childcare Project (formerly Repi Childcare) for the past few months. Eden, like three of the other supported children, lived in a home that was recently bulldozed down by the government. The reason for this tragic occurrence was the severe poverty that these families live in. Buying land in Ethiopia is very difficult and takes a lot of time and money. If they do not have the money to rent or to buy land from the government, many will build what they call “moon houses”. These houses are built overnight in areas of land which are condemned by the government (such as by the garbage dump or by a river bed). Eden’s family lived in one of these moon houses. Since they were there illegally, their home was finally pushed over.
Because of the lack of money, many families who go through losing their house in this way often go and build another moon house out of trash and wait for it to be demolished as well. Supporters in the States heard of these four families losing their homes and donated $75 USD for each family so that they can establish a more permanent home and not live is this cycle of fear. This money was sent to Ethiopia and Eden’s family, as well as the other three, will be getting aid from the church in a tangible demonstration of the love of Christ. This is what we do: demonstrate in deed and truth the love that our Lord has shown us.

Friday, November 02, 2007

2008 Bible Conference Funding Needed


We have planned a Bible conference for the indigenous missionary families in Ethiopia for January 2008. The expenses for this trip include renting a location for the conference, transportation to and from the location for all missionaries, food, materials, and medical supplies for family check ups. We are seeking funding for the conference and appreciate gifts of any size. For more information about what we will be doing or how you can help, call the IOI office or email Stephen.

Four Need Support


There are times when the Lord gives us the need for more supporters through bringing new missionaries. There are also times when new supporters are needed because some of those who have supported in the past discontinue their support. At this time we have both new missionaries and a couple who formerly had supporters.
Yerga Berta has been with IOI for almost seven years. He has a wife and two sons. He works in Addis Abeba doing evangelism and church planting. Kebebush Gudeta has been with IOI for almost four years and is a dear sister who is praying that God would give her a good husband. She works in Addis and in the countryside as an evangelist and has a wonderful prayer ministry. This brother and sister have been faithful ministers in Christ and are a true joy.
The other two who need support are new to IOI and working in regions that we have been praying that God would expand this work to.
The first is a Baptist congregation in the northern city of Mekele where the ORE childcare program is located. The pastor of this church is doing full time ministry but the congregation is not able to fully support him on their own.
The other church we would like to partner with is being planted in Debre Tisge which is about 40 kilometers northwest of Addis. This church was formerly opposed by many in the area. New laws in Ethiopia require local governments to give fair treatment to all religions. City officials were seeking to display their progressive thinking and gave the new congregation a plot of land approximately six acres in size which is a large lot in Ethiopia. The church planters involved have recently rented the house of a witchdoctor to use for a temporary meeting place. The church now needs support to be able to build on the land and have a full-time pastor.
You can support one of these missionary families for only $60.00 USD per month. If you are interested in supporting any of these ministries, please contact the IOI office. Please pray that God will provide supporters where there are needs for our brothers and sisters in Ethiopia.

Childcare Sponsorship


IOI has partnered with two childcare programs in Ethiopia: Operation Rescue in Mekele and the Repi Childcare Project in Addis. These two programs seek to take the poorest children and those who have lost their parents to a place where they and their families are able to have their basic needs provided for. The children in the programs are placed in school and receive weekly Bible lessons. Our hope is to care for the physical needs of the poor and orphaned as well as point them to Christ who alone can care for their spiritual needs.
Tom Spencer and Arlene Norton were at the recent IOI board meeting where they gave updates on the work in Ethiopia. Tom is the founder of Jabez Children’s Ministry, which is now the umbrella organization for the Repi Childcare project. Arlene is the new volunteer coordinator for IOI Child Sponsorship.
Recently we have learned that Habatamu, a child supported at Repi, and his whole family have received faith in Christ. They thank the Lord for this program where they heard the gospel and witnessed God’s love in action.
Thanks to the efforts of Arlene, forty new sponsors have recently joined with IOI to provide for children like Habatamu.
If you are interested in supporting a child at $20 per month, or if you would like more information, contact Arlene at (662)610-4056 or call the IOI office.

Missionary Profile - Fikadu

In 1970 Fikadu was born in a military compound. His parents divorced when he was only two. He was kidnapped by his father and taken to Addis. Life with his father and stepmother was very difficult.
At seven Fikadu began attending an Orthodox church and desired to enter the priesthood. Because of his stepmother he could not go to church. Seeking revenge against his stepmother, Fikadu began to learn witchcraft but it didn't work. Stopped twice from going down a path of his own choosing, he began to feel God’s leading.
When Fikadu was twelve he saw a vision of injera (Ethiopian bread) coming down from heaven for him to eat. Years later a cousin shared Christ with him, and he believed.
Fikadu was fifteen when his father died, and he began working as a laborer. After high-school he worked odd jobs for food. Soon Fikadu began serving the Lord full time although he did not receive any compensation. “Once all I had for an offering was a pencil, so I gave it to the Lord. I spent much time in prayer because of my needs and eventually IOI support became available,” Fikadu shared. Now Fikadu is physically and spiritually healthy. He praises the Lord for IOI’s support so that he has the food he needs. His extended family still does not support him but God has given him a family in the church and with the fellow ministers of IOI.
Fikadu has been working in children’s ministry for several years but recently he is spending the majority of his time church planting.
Fikadu works closely with Negash who has said, “He is my right hand man.” He has been very instrumental in starting at least half a dozen churches in the Oromo region and in Addis.
Fikadu finished Bible Theological School this summer and has proven to be an able teacher of Scripture. He said that he has been thankful for good teaching from IOI and has been using Dr. Padelford’s booklet “The Mystery of Christ” for teaching and discipleship.
Fikadu often works behind the scenes as a vital member of a church planting team. He has seen many come to Christ in the last two years. He is also thankful for the great peace that God has given him in the ministry.
Fikadu is 37 now and has been praying for a godly wife for many years. He asks that we join him in this prayer and also asks for prayer that he would do what God shows him to do with youth and in the countryside.
Fekadu is a member at Repi KHC, along with Negash and Matteous. He has been faithfully serving Christ for many years and has been with IOI since September 1999.

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Church Aids In Lema’s Need


In the July newsletter the missionary profile was on a dear brother, Lema Kasaye who has been going through a very difficult time recently with the death of his wife and health problems of his own. After telling the story of Lema, we received a response from a Sunday School class in Jackson, TN asking how they could aid Lema in his time of need. The class took up an offering of $450 on the Sunday morning that Patrick left for Ethiopia and delivered the money to him just before his departure. We were not sure of all the needs that Lema had, but Patrick visited with him and, unbeknownst to Lema, left the money with Negash to be exchanged for birr (Ethiopian currency) . After giving Lema the gift, Negash learned that, at the death of his wife, Lema incurred a 2000 birr debt which weighed heavily on him. With this gift Lema was able to pay the debt off the next day and still have 2176 birr to help his family through this hard time. This was such a blessing to our brother and for us to watch unfold. Praise the Lord for His caring for His children even in the needs that no one but they and God know about. Please pray for Lema that he can have the peace of Christ in this time. He has struggled with worry about what would happen to his sons should he die. Patrick has offered assurance to him that they will be cared for, but still remember him when you come before our Lord.

Patrick's Paragraphs - Prophet of the Poor

“He has told you what is good; and what the LORD requires of you to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?”
Micah 6:8

I was reading from the book of Micah recently. Some scholars call Micah the “Prophet of the Poor” because of his emphasis on injustice, and God’s word to the downtrodden. It is fitting that we named our benevolent fund the Micah Fund, but it was named after a little boy who died from complications associated with malnutrition.
I heard an economist on the radio today. He said that poverty would virtually be a memory in about 50 years from now. He sited South Korea and other developed nations that were considered “Third World” countries just 50 years ago. “Industry and technology have made it possible to overcome poverty,” he said.
I hate to be the prophet of bad news, but Jesus said, “the poor you will always have with you.” The sad fact is that the world is not getting better. It is true that there is more wealth and prosperity than any other time in history, and the wealth is being spread around to more people. But it is also true that greed is prevalent and sin is in the flesh of men.
We have seen in recent years that democracy nor wealth bring peace. The most miserable people on the planet are some of the most free and affluent. Granted, to be poor in America is considered rich in many nations, but every city in America has neighborhoods where people seem not to be able to afford what many have come to see as necessities.
The Good News is that there is a day of peace coming. There is a day when all suffering will cease. Until that day, we have been commanded to bind up the brokenhearted and set captives free. We have been told to practice true religion and care for widows and orphans. We have received the word from God to love our brothers and our enemies. In doing these things, we will see His kingdom come and His will being done. Those who have been faithful in these small things will see the day of resurrection with great joy.

Monday, April 30, 2007

Proposed Support Increase

The Board of Directors recently decided to increase the support given to missionaries in Ethiopia from $50 US to $60 per month. This is the first increase since the founding of IOI over eight years ago.
The increase is necessary due to inflation and a desire on our part to be a greater blessing to our brothers and sisters in Ethiopia. It is hoped that the increase will ease some financial pressure.
The price of teff, the staple of Ethiopian diet that is consumed at most every meal, has increased over 100% in the past eight years. This increase has had a trickle down effect on the cost of other goods. Housing costs have also risen dramatically.
Donors are being asked to consider an increase in giving from $50 to $60 per month. We are also seeking additional supporters who can help to make up the difference for those who are unable to increase their monthly giving. Donors will now have the option to provide “half-support” of $30 per month and share their missionary with another supporter.
This change is scheduled to be fully implemented by the end of the year. v

Sponsor Visits Child in Ethiopia

by Arlene Norton

A little over four years ago I decided to help support an orphan in Mekele, Ethiopia at an orphanage called Operation Rescue. The amount was only $15 dollars a month.

Patrick told me that he would personally pick me a girl to sponsor while he was there on a visit. I really didn’t know much more than a name, age and small photo at the time.

Her name was Emebet and she was twelve and had never been to school. We exchanged letters and I sent her packages of candy, clothes and books. I was amazed at how well she was doing in school and hoped to see her one day. In Ethiopia you have to pay to go to a government school. The cost is out of reach for most. The average Ethiopian makes only a dollar a day. With this in mind you can see how the cycle of poverty keeps repeating. If you’re an orphan, because of AIDS, war, sickness, death, or abandonment - then you have to survive by living in the streets and begging or worse.

Emebet’s father left when Emebet’s mother died of tuberculosis. Her grandmother took her and her sister in when they were just small children. The grandmother could not afford to send them to school and she prayed and cried about it often.

The grandmother cannot physically work, but she does rent out two small rooms about the size of a walk-in closet. With her windfall of $40 a month she has to feed, clothe, and take care of two granddaughters and an aging mother.

I decided to go to ORE in January of this year and meet Emebet. It took a precise series of miracles to get me there. My husband would have to get 10 days off in a row, and they had to be a certain 10 days. I would have get out of the U.S. before my flight was cancelled by a storm. I had an impossible 5-minute connection in Detroit. Patrick and I would have to get the last two tickets to Mekele on the major Ethiopian holiday weekend. We would also have to secure the last two rooms in the last hotel in town. I would not suggest to travel like this unless God is your “Plan A” and “Plan B.” Everything went eerily smoothly.

Meeting Emebet and her extended family was the highlight of my trip. She and her sister live in a two-room stucco tin-roof hut. They have no running water, sporadic electricity, and no kitchen. The two living rooms convert into bedrooms at night where Emebet, her sister, her grandmother and great-grandmother sleep.

I have never felt so welcomed as I did that day. I met her uncles, an aunt and nephews and friends. We had coffee, popcorn and a lot to talk about. The great-grandmother told me she had prayed that she would live long enough to see me. She was frail and almost blind, she walked with a cane over many boulders to meet me at the front gate because she wanted to be the first to see me. I don’t think that the Queen of England could compete with that.

I didn’t realize that going to ORE had helped so many people. ORE helped Emebet’s older sister start a small roadside business with her aunt. ORE gives the children an education, and a hot meal everyday, in addition to a family to live with. All grandparents, aunts, uncles, brothers or sisters who are willing to take in an orphan are given a part of the $15 a month and free business classes, job skills and financial advice.

Emebet went from being a 12-year-old uneducated street child to an educated young lady heading for pharmacy school this fall. She completed all her classes at ORE and took computer classes at the Nile college in Mekele.

Emebet hopes to be a pharmacist in three years. Pharmacy school will cost about $3,000 total for books and everything! I told her we could pay for it and her whole family cried. I would suggest that you get involved with ORE on a personal level. Do write them and encourage them.

Emebet is well on her way out of poverty and of course I looked around for a new orphan to sponsor while I was there. I have a new girl, Blean. She is six and completely charming. Her father died of AIDS and her mother is very sick and is expected to die. She is being raised by a grandmother. Blean gave me a small bead bracelet while I was there and I will wear it as a prayer for her. I hope each day that these children can grow into their full potential .

Praise God.

Monday, February 26, 2007

Stateside Ministry News

Electronic Funds Transfer
Regular donors now have the option of having their monthly, quarterly or annual giving deducted directly from their checking or savings account electronically through our EFT service.
Simply fill out and sign a simple form, attach a void check and mail it to IOI. The donation will be deducted from the specified account as designated and instructed on the form until given notice to discontinue the service.
If you are interested in this new form of giving download the form from the www.IndigenousOureach.net website. We can also mail or fax the form to you. For more information contact Patrick at (731) 217-0750. v

Tax Receipts Change
In the past IOI has mailed receipts for giving on a quarterly basis. In an effort to reduce paperwork and be good stewards we will now only mail receipts twice per year (January and July). Donors may receive receipts on a more regular basis, or at anytime by simply contacting the IOI office at (731)664-9960. v

Concert and Banquet
Plans are being made for this year’s Robin Mark concert to be held in Tennessee on August 16. There is also an awareness banquet to be held in Mississippi on Thursday, September 6 (Corrected Date from date first published in newsletter). To volunteer or for more information please call Patrick at (731)217-0750. v

Building Up the Church

by Patrick Beard

Often in America we talk about “building” a church. More often than not our conversations involve brick and mortar, rather than the edification of individuals within the church. Our terminology reveals our error in that we call building a “church” rather than the congregation that has covenanted to follow Christ together.

As Christ ascended from the earth He promised to stay with us by sending His Holy Spirit. His Spirit now lives in the heart of those whom He gives faith in His gospel. He resides within both to comfort and empower all believers as we anticipate the return of Christ, make disciples and edify each other. Our brothers and sisters in Ethiopia are certainly no exception to this promise.
Each week in Ethiopia minister from eleven denominations gather to pray at the IOI prayer meeting. These meetings have led to many deep relationships. Often the diverse ministers gather around a common table to share meals and exchange their joys and sorrows. Each minister, and indeed each believer, has been specially gifted by God to fulfill a unique role in the Kingdom of God. Frequently the ministers will call on one another as they have become interdependent within the greater Body of Christ. This fellowship is just one way that God has used IOI to build His Church.

Our Bible conference this year focused on Following Christ. This following is done as individual parts within a greater body. It is our ambition as an organization to build up the Church as God gives us the resources and ability. Please consider joining with us in 2007 in the way that God directs. v