MOVE 2026: Stories from the Field
The International Mission Director of GlobeServe Ministries reminds his team regularly that “evangelism is not terminated until it results in people coming to place their faith in Jesus Christ, the gathering of believers into house churches, and the making of disciples.” In March 2026, 15 field workers across northern Ghana took that mandate to heart.
Namiyela and Kayonga: Two Communities, One Week
In the final days of March, two separate Fulani community outreaches were conducted at Namiyela and Kayonga. Teams moved from village to village, sharing the Gospel with people who live as nomadic or semi-nomadic pastoralists, communities that are often overlooked by formal church structures and urban-focused ministry models.
Reaching Fulani communities requires cultural sensitivity, language preparation, and a willingness to travel to where people are rather than waiting for them to come. MOVE 2026 workers do exactly that, building relationships over time and presenting the message of Jesus Christ in ways that connect with Fulani life and worldview.
Sorbelle Settlement: The Community Came with Joy
At the Sorbelle Fulani Settlement, something beautiful happened when the MOVE 2026 team arrived for a follow-up discipleship fellowship on March 31. There was a great turnout. The community came with visible joy.
That phrase, simple as it is, says a great deal. Joy is not manufactured. It is the fruit of the Holy Spirit at work in human hearts. When a Fulani community gathers with joy to receive teaching from the Word of God, it is evidence that something real has taken root. The team has reported ongoing spiritual receptivity in Sorbelle, and follow-up plans are in place.
Three Days on Motorbikes: Vamboi, Nwanduono, and Dunduorijan
One of the most compelling stories from March is the three-day mission trip undertaken by a team travelling by motorbike through the dry-season heat of northern Ghana. Their itinerary covered three communities across three days.
Day 1: Vamboi
On arrival night, the team hosted a Youth Empowerment Service at Vamboi, gathering young people from the community and engaging them with the Gospel. Youth-focused ministry is not a side feature of MOVE 2026. It is a strategic priority. The generation being reached today will shape the church of tomorrow.
Day 2: Nwanduono
The second day brought the team to Nwanduono, where a Jesus Film show was conducted. The Jesus Film, available in hundreds of local languages and dialects, has proven to be one of the most effective tools for Gospel proclamation in communities where literacy is limited and oral tradition is strong. The community was exposed to the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ through the film. The programme was completed successfully, and the team continued to pray for the community.
Day 3: Dunduorijan
The final day of the trip took the team to Dunduorijan for an early morning church service with new believers. This was not the first time MOVE 2026 workers had visited this community. A congregation was planted here last month. What happened on Day 3 was the first-ever formal church service of that newly planted congregation.
The elders of the community did not permit photographs to be taken. That restriction is a reminder that ministry in some of these communities requires a kind of transparency that social media cannot capture. What can be said is this: new believers gathered, they worshipped, and they heard the Word of God. Keep Dunduorijan in your prayers.
Walembelle: Many Came to the Lord
At Walembelle, an outreach programme was held with what the team described simply as “many people coming to the Lord.” The team immediately continued to the Nwanduono community the same evening, demonstrating the kind of urgency and momentum that characterises MOVE 2026 at its best.
A Father’s Testimony
Perhaps the most quietly powerful moment shared from March came in a single sentence from one of the field workers: “Going with family to visit one of the new churches started through MOVE 2026 last Sunday.”
This worker did not just reach a community. He returned to it, with his family, on a Sunday, to worship with the people whose lives had been changed. That is what it looks like when a planted church begins to grow.
Pastor James Nakoja also officially joined the MOVE 2026 team this quarter and has been assigned 40 communities to reach throughout 2026. The network is growing, the workers are moving, and the harvest is real.
To support MOVE 2026 and help send workers into unreached communities, visit globeserveministries.org.