Tag Archives: Maasai believers
a brand new church!
I just heard that CCC has begun a church plant in Maai Mahiu (“Hot Springs” in Kikuyu). Last Sunday was there 2nd worship there.
Maai Mahiu is at the base of the Escarpment on the way to Narok at the junction of the Narok and Lower Road to Naivasha. It is on the border between Maasai and Kikuyu areas, and there are other tribes there as well. It is also a “truck stop town,” which tends to bring several sorts of unwholesome activity, so another church there to shine the light of Jesus brighter is wonderful. Maai Mahiu was also a centre of violence during the post-election crisis in 2008.
(Thanks to our teammate Lynn Cazier for sharing this news.)
2011 church growth
In 2011, there were 38 new churches planted in the CCC.
There were 23 congregations planted in Maasai land (including two, I believe, in a tribally mixed area).
There were 13 congregations in Turkana land.
There was 1 new congregation planted in the Kibera slum of Nairobi.
There was 1 new congregation planted in Samburu land.
The growth in Turkana land is particularly encouraging. In addition to the 13 new churches, there were baptisms of 1,026 new Turkana believers.
Meisisi Olaitoriani! Kuperoi Ekapolon! Bwana Safiwe!
(“May the Lord be praised / Praise the Lord” in Maa, Nga Turkana, Kiswahili)

One of thirteen baptisms in March 2011, part of a new church plant in Changamwe, just outside Mombasa on the coast; pictured are pastor Moses, new believer Rana, and our teammate Joe Cluff
Happy Epiphany
Today is January 6, the day which the Church traditionally observes as “Epiphany,” the “Revealing” of Christ to the Gentiles. So yesterday was the 12th day of Christmas and this is the day we should sing “We Three Kings” and the day when the ancient church liturgies would read the verses about the baptism of Jesus.
Today is also the day when we finally have a new update ready: click here to download a PDF of our January 2012 newsletter.
ministry summary
equipping churches, teachers, and church leaders … our strategy … what’s going well?
If you’re interested, Read our November 2011 “ministry summary” (pdf file)
August update
A new house, curriculum development, training sunday school teachers for the Maasai churches, a special visitor from America …
click here to view a PDF of our latest newsletter.
We’ve posted some new pictures of the Maasai Women’s Ministry on our photo album page.
Have you ever wondered just where we live? Take a bird’s eye view of the places we’ve lived in Kenya, together with our major ministry sites.
teaching …
I (Joshua) had a wonderful opportunity to teach a few weeks ago (28 January – 1 February). Twenty-one pastors and elders from our churches came to our training centre at Ewaso Ng’iro. They represented 19 different communities and eight different geographical regions.
I taught the Enkinosata Ororei Le Nkai curriculum that we finished just before departing for furlough on our last term. But this was also a teachers’ training course: at the end of our 35 hours together, each had been prepared to take these lessons to their home congregations, adapting them as necessary for their specific pastoral context.
Before we departed, Stephen Kereto (and elder from our “home church” in Endoinyo Erinka, who learned to read through CMF’s literacy program) stood and publicly thanked us for providing teaching materials that were prepared in their own language and which addressed their own culture. In the following weeks, John Sosio and Jim Kipees (not pictured, he is my co-worker and taught one of the ten lessons) reported to me how helpful the lessons and dramas were when they taught them in their churches.
So that was a most encouraging time for me. But let us give all praise and thanks and glory to God, to whom it is due.

L-R (bottom): Joseph Sosio, Paul Shuel, Elia Nkilapus, Sammy Pesi, Stephen Kereto (middle): Jacson Mereru, Philip Sitayo Kobaay, Johnson Ntadia, Peter Kiopiro, Peter Tamoo, Jackson Pareyio, Stephen Kutingala (top): Joshua, Paul Karia, John Sosio, Daniel Meipuki (standing), Daniel Kereto, Julius Sinke, Wilson Dapash, Edward Ololchoki, Simon Muya Olokumum (standing) (not pictured): Thomas Pesi”