Voices of Hope from Cameroon

Stories, updates, and testimonies from Every Home for Christ Cameroon — sharing how the Gospel is transforming lives across the nation.

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The Kingdom Arrives as Good News for the Poor
Gospel Mission

The Kingdom Arrives as Good News for the Poor

When Jesus stood in the synagogue and spoke of good news for the poor, freedom for captives, and sight for the blind, He was not launching a vague social program. He was declaring that in His own person God was visiting His people. The kingdom is where the reign of God breaks into ordinary life and refuses to leave people where sin, fear, and shame have pinned them down. That is why Gospel preaching cannot shrink into life coaching. We announce a King who forgives rebels, restores the crushed, and gathers a new people around Himself. In communities marked by hardship, this message matters because it tells the forgotten that heaven has not forgotten them.

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Pastor Daniel Ndzi
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Sermon: Jesus Still Calms the Storm
Sermon Prayer

Sermon: Jesus Still Calms the Storm

The disciples had already seen Jesus heal, teach, and command unclean spirits, yet one night on the lake showed how shallow their confidence still was. Storms have a way of exposing what calm days can hide. We discover whether our security rests in the Lord Himself or in the fact that life seemed manageable last week. Fear tells us that because the water is rising, God must be absent. The Gospel tells a different story. Jesus was in the boat before the waves broke over it. His presence did not remove the storm at once, but it meant the storm never had the final word. Christian maturity begins when panic is no longer our first interpreter of events.

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Rev. Miriam Taku
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Bible Lecture: Reading Mark as a Manual for Mission
Lecture Discipleship

Bible Lecture: Reading Mark as a Manual for Mission

Readers often notice Mark's speed before they notice its purpose. The Gospel moves urgently because Jesus does. Crowds gather, demons flee, the sick are lifted, and the disciples are called onto the road before they have time to feel prepared. Mark will not let us admire Jesus from a safe distance. He presents the Son of God in motion and summons us into that motion. This matters for the church because we often prefer inspiration without obedience. We like conferences, summaries, and polished conclusions. Mark keeps placing us back on the road where hearing must become following. The Gospel is not information to observe from the shore. It is a call to leave the nets, take up the cross, and learn Jesus by walking with Him.

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Emmanuel Nji
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From House to House: Lessons on Evangelism from Acts
Evangelism Lecture

From House to House: Lessons on Evangelism from Acts

The book of Acts does not present mission as something reserved for formal gatherings alone. Again and again, the Gospel moves through homes, meals, hospitality, and conversation. Lydia's house becomes a center of fellowship. The jailer receives the Word with his whole household. Believers break bread together and keep opening space for prayer and teaching. This pattern should challenge churches that imagine evangelism only as a stage event. Public proclamation matters, but many people first hear the nearness of Christ when they step into a living room where Scripture is opened with patience and sincerity. A house can become a sanctuary when the Lordship of Jesus fills its speech, welcome, and rhythms of daily life.

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Grace Tchinda
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Sermon Notes: The Cross Creates a New Family
Sermon Church

Sermon Notes: The Cross Creates a New Family

Paul teaches in Ephesians that Jesus is our peace, not merely our example of peace. Through His death, Christ deals decisively with the deeper problem behind every division: our alienation from God. Once that vertical hostility is answered, horizontal hostility can no longer claim to be ultimate. This is why the church cannot be content with polite coexistence. The cross creates something stronger than tolerance. It creates reconciliation rooted in shared mercy. Every believer comes to the table as a person who needed rescue, not as a person who earned a place. When that truth sinks in, pride loosens, bitterness is challenged, and communities begin to reflect the welcome they themselves received.

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Pastor Isaac Bella
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When Grace Reaches the Marketplace
Gospel Work

When Grace Reaches the Marketplace

Many believers separate Sunday faith from weekday labor as if Christ rules worship but not schedules, prices, tools, deadlines, and speech at work. Scripture does not allow that division. The risen Jesus claims every square of life, including the places where we earn a living and meet pressure. Work becomes holy not because every task feels spiritual, but because it is offered under the authority of the Savior. A market stall, taxi route, classroom, or office desk can become a place of obedience. The Christian asks not only, "How do I succeed here?" but also, "How do I honor Christ here?" That question changes the way we make promises, keep accounts, treat customers, and respond when conditions are unfair.

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Ruth Kamga
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