One God - One Day - One Africa – 31st May 2020
A significant number of major outreaches are planned simultaneously in every country possible within Africa with many international ministries involved such as Christ for All Nations, Luis Palau, Heidi Baker, Joyce Meyer, African Enterprises, Global Outreach Day (G.O.D) and TBN Africa on 31st May 2020 (provisional date).
During the last weekend of May they have planned to have an outreach in every country of Africa where it’s possible.
Together with many international ministries, churches and African denominations who have already committed to "adopt" a country.
During May, many churches will be mobilized to go out and witness and with about 5,000 evangelists to be trained they will cast a Gospel net, including live TV.
There will be broadcasts and live streaming over the whole continent of Africa.
The project has been initiated by Evangelist Jennifer Wilde (CA) and CEO Rev. Siegfried Tomazsewski.
Event Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Website link: www.1gda.org
The Send
For the past eighteen years, the ministry of The Call has filled stadiums with a message of prayer and fasting, believing that America would turn back to Jesus. Then God spoke to its leaders, saying that a shift was coming that would give birth to a new sending movement. The shift began as 70,000 people raised their shoes in response to a call to go anywhere for the gospel. This gathering, called Azusa Now, catalysed a grassroots movement activating believers to evangelism and mobilising missionaries all over the world. In response to Azusa Now, national ministries gathered together in Florida to seek the Lord, believing that the momentum must become a national movement. The Send was born. On 23 February 60,000 youths were mobilised into mission! Believing now is a tipping point of action to reach this generation in five mission fields: schools, universities, colleges, friends, and neighbourhoods.
Jesus appears in a dream
Mostafa travelled to Cairo with the intention of killing his cousin Mohammad for converting from Islam to Christianity. He found him in a worship service and waited to make his move. The songs and prayers he heard in that service appealed to him. He approached Mohammad with tears in his eyes, ‘I came from our village to spy on you and see if you had become a Christian. I should tell your family what I saw, but I just can’t. I think the choice you made might have been the right one. Can you tell me more? Why did you leave Islam for Christianity?’ The cousins spent hours discussing the Gospel, and that night Mostafa dreamt of Jesus on the cross looking at him and saying, ‘I did this because I love you, and I want you to be free from your sins.’ Mostafa told Mohammad his dream. The following month he was baptised, with Mohammad standing next to him.
Insight: what would Jesus do?
A shooting range which provides ‘family fun’ for adults and children aged six and over announced a new target in a tweet. ‘Hot off the press’ showed an image of Shamima Begum and the hashtag ‘no remorse’. 19-year-old Shamima is in a refugee camp, asking to return to the UK after living with IS terrorists for four years. The home secretary removed her British citizenship for the public good, and suggested she apply for Bangladeshi nationality as her mother is a Bangladeshi. There are questions around citizenship, justice and reconciliation in the aftermath of the most brutal conflict so far this century. Our moral reasoning and response to those complicit in IS evil will be debated in the law courts. Our government has responsibilities to protect citizens, administer justice and look after those who have suffered. What would Jesus do? For background, see
(Linda Digby - Prayer Alert team)

