
The baby is supplied, and God has been glorified. The family welcomed the child and the church collected: clothes, diapers, hygiene products, special milk, and a baby stroller.

Seed projects In Brazil, have provided for a 3-day-old baby who was rejected by the mother. I praise God for the teaching that has transformed my way of thinking and working.” In Guinea more than 30 local pastors started incorporating the training in their ministries. Pastor Benoit stated: “I started the Mission “God’s Mercy”, but I had no idea of how I could help the community until I went through Samaritan Strategy Training. He is not only running the school for the community, but he is also training men and women to become agents of community transformation. He started in 2018 with 15 children but now in 2021 the number has increased to 150. Among the disciplines of love and seed projects that they completed, Pastor Benoit started a School in order to help children from poor families and orphans who weren’t going to school due to lack of public schools working close to their villages. This led to trainings for more than 54 church leaders.

In 2016 Jean Baptiste and Chris Ampadu contacted pastors from Guinea to share the vision of Samaritan Strategy. The chart below shows the breakdown of our activities.īut how do these figures translate into serving others and glorifying God’s name? 317 trainers have equipped 1052 churches to make disciples of Christ, helping them to witness about God’s purposes in all areas of life. This year 24,092 participants served their communities through 3,836 seed projects, in 20 countries around the world.

So, with the pandemic and restrictions that it has placed on all of us, is there any good news to report? Yes, and in many ways! Whilst social distancing and travel restrictions have reduced the number of events we have held, and the number of people being trained, the mission is alive and well. Hurricanes, wars, and civil unrest have plagued nations and yet it is often in such dark times that we see God’s light powerfully shine through, often in small, simple, heartfelt, acts of love.Īt Harvest we call these acts “seed projects” in the Bible it is called loving your neighbor, believers living out God’s Word, demonstrating God’s love to those outside the church. Establishing self-sustaining Samaritan Strategy teams in new areasĪs we are all very aware, 2020 brought a global pandemic that has brought hardship and pain not to a city, nation or continent but to the whole world.
