Church Planting in Senegal

Clarke wants the African-American church fired up about career mission service.

While attending an interracial nondenominational church in the early 1960s, Ruby P. Clarke sensed a call to serve in missions. She applied to United World Mission, which accepted her as its first African-American missionary and sent her to white churches to raise her support. She was ready to go after only three months. After she served for eight years in Mali with Muslim women, the mission asked her to join a church-planting team in Senegal. “The Mali and Senegal teams were all-white,” she says, “but there was no distinction whatsoever. The Muslims and Senegalese accepted me for what I was—a missionary for Jesus Christ.”It is my burden to see the African-American community [and] church get fired up for career missionary service. I believe the pastors must have a burden for career missions, and train and encourage their people toward that end.”

Wendy Murray Zoba is a senior writer for Christianity Today.

Related Elsewhere

See today’s related articles A Woman’s Place and Prison Ministry in Mozambique.

Web sites for agencies cited in this article: Southern Baptist Convention & International Mission Board: www.sbc.net & www.imb.org

Jews for Jesus:www.jewsforjesus.org

A.D. 2000:www.ad2000.org

Urbana:www.urbana.org

InterVarsity Christian Fellowship:www.ivcf.org/missions

Interserve:www.interserve.org

Frontiers:www.us.frontiers.org

SIM:www.sim.org

Latin American Mission:www.lam.org

Assemblies of God:www.ag.org

Team:www.teamworld.org

World Relief:www.worldrelief.org

Copyright © 2000 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

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A Woman's Place: Though today's trends are marginalizing women's missionary impulse, they are still finding ways to serve.

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Oberammergau Overhaul

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Joy Amid the Pain

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