Texas

….and His Body Mutilated; Missionary-Pastor Martyred in West Africa

By Michael Ireland | Wednesday, December 1, 2010
Chief Correspondent, ASSIST News Service

GUINEA, WEST AFRICA (ANS) — Missionary-pastor Michel Loua, 47, of Jacksonville, Texas, was executed on Sunday night, Nov. 14, in a prison in Guinea, West Africa. Church leaders are calling his death a modern-day martyrdom in this predominantly (85 percent) Muslim nation.  According to an article by Charles Johnson in the Gilmer Mirror newspaper (www.gilmermirror.com),  Loua and his family had come to the United States four years ago for him to attend seminary in preparation to evangelize his native Guinea with the Christian Gospel.

In his report, Johnson says Loua graduated in 2009 with a master’s degree from Baptist Missionary Association Theological Seminary in

Michel Loua

Jacksonville. He was the first person from Guinea to obtain such an educational level in theology.

Johnson says that Loua had made at least four trips back to Guinea to check on the status of his established church work, and to make preparations to return his family to their homeland.

On one of these trips, he constructed a house with quarters to house and teach local missionaries in their outreach endeavors, Johnson writes.

Johnson reports that Loua was no stranger to Upshur County. He and his family joined Rosewood Baptist Church in December of 2008. He preached numerous times at Rosewood and held a revival there earlier in 2008.

Loua also preached in several other churches of Liberty Baptist Association, composed of BMA churches in Upshur and surrounding counties. Some of these churches helped him to finance his house building in Guinea and supported him while he was a seminary student. Other churches purchased a tractor for Loua to use in raising food to help supply the needs of native Guinea missionaries.

Johnson states that Loua last returned to Guinea in June of this year. He apparently became caught up in the politics of the presidential election which took place in Guinea the week before his execution. There had been several ethnic struggles, particularly between the Christian and Muslim groups. He was arrested three weeks before his death and placed in chains at a prison in Guinea’s capital.

Johnson cites at least two African news service reports which states the president of Guinea sent soldiers to the prison to offer Michel Loua as a human sacrifice to enhance the leadership of Guinea’s president.

He writes that according to Guinea Muslim beliefs, it was necessary to kill an infidel (non-Muslim) to insure the new leadership’s success. Loua was reportedly tortured, shot through the heart, and his body mutilated.

Johnson adds that Loua was born and raised a Muslim. He converted to Christ at the age of 22. After accepting Jesus Christ as his Savior, he faced immediate persecution from even his own family. His head bore a deep scar from an initial stoning from relatives after his Christian conversion. There had been numerous death threats on Pastor Loua since 1985.

Johnson goes on to say that Loua began to evangelize other Muslims in Guinea and was instrumental in helping to establish at least a dozen churches in his nation. Even before he owned a Bible, he led fellow Guineans to Christ using verses from the Koran which spoke of Jesus.

Michel Loua and family

Loua’s survivors include his wife of 15 years, Elisabeth; a son, Joal, 14; two daughters: Debora, 12, and Mary, age 4. Elisabeth is also expecting the birth of their fourth child in about three weeks. She plans to name this child Michel.

A memorial service for Michel Loua was held on Tuesday, Nov. 23, at Woodland Heights Baptist Church in Jacksonville. Several people from the area were in attendance at the service.

At least two funds have been established to help assist the Loua Family. One is at Austin Bank in Jacksonville. The other is through the benevolence fund at BMAAT Seminary, Attention: Dr. Charley Holmes, P.O. Box 670, Jacksonville, TX 75766.

Michael Ireland

** Michael Ireland, Chief Correspondent of ANS, is an international British freelance journalist who was formerly a reporter with a London (United Kingdom) newspaper and has been a frequent contributor to UCB UK, a British Christian radio station. While in the UK, Michael traveled to Canada and the United States, Albania,Yugoslavia, Holland, Germany,and Czechoslovakia. He has reported for ANS from Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China,and Russia. Michael’s volunteer involvement with ASSIST News Service is a sponsored ministry department

– ‘Michael Ireland Media Missionary’ (MIMM) — of A.C.T. International of P.O.Box 1649, Brentwood, TN 37024-1649, at: Artists in Christian Testimony (A.C.T.) International where you can donate online to support his stated mission of ‘Truth Through Christian Journalism.’ If you have a news or feature story idea for Michael, please contact him at: ANS Chief Reporter   ** You may republish this story with proper attribution.

Staff Writer, George Henson for the Texas Baptist Standard | Thursday, October 21st, 2010

DALLAS (ABP) — Helping a team of amputee soccer players get to their World Cup venue might not seem like disaster relief, but Dick Talley with Texas Baptist Men said that is exactly what it is.

“We see this as an extension of our disaster-relief ministry,” Talley said. “In Haiti, if you have [a choice between feeding] a dog and a handicapped person, you feed the dog because it has value.

“How do we change the way the people of Haiti look at an amputee or handicapped person? We’re trying to do that through sport. In the eyes of the people of Haiti, we are elevating the value of these people.”

Fred Sorrells of First Baptist Church in Kingsland, Texas, worked with handicapped people in Haiti even before the Jan. 12 earthquake there

Members of a Haitian amputee soccer team proudly display a shirt bearing both the Texas Baptist Men Disaster Relief insignia and their team logo. TBM will train the team members in water purification techniques and basic disaster relief before they return to Haiti.

swelled their numbers.

“In Haiti, to be disabled is to be castoff. The general feeling is, ‘Why don’t you just go off somewhere and die?’” he said.

Recognizing the importance of sports in Haiti, he began searching the Internet for a viable sport for people with disabilities and came across the World Amputee Soccer Association. As he began to inquire about it, Sorrells said, he essentially was told there was no way he could get a team together in time for the association’s World Cup.

Along about that time, Sorrells learned that Haiti’s national soccer team was in Texas, and he went there to see if he could enlist some help.

“I just showed up and asked if there were any Christians on the team and learned their captain was a very devout Christian,” he recalled.

Team Captain Pierre Bruny immediately was interested. Upon his return to Haiti, Bruny began visiting hospitals to invite amputees to try out for the team.

Texas Baptist Men Executive Director Leo Smith (2nd from right) enjoys time with (left to right) Dick Talley of TBM, Fred Sorrells of First Baptist Church in Kingsland, a Haitian pastor and the soccer team captain.

After several days of tryouts, the Haitian national amputee soccer team was selected Aug. 14.

The next major hurdle involved securing birth certificates, passports and visas in a country were so many records had been destroyed, but eventually all were obtained.

Texas Baptist Men paid for the air transport of the team from Haiti to Dallas. FC Dallas, the city’s professional soccer team, put them up in hotel accommodations and provided meals and transportation.

Local media reported on the team, and donations began to come in, but still the team did not have the funds necessary to fly to Crespo, Argentina, for the World Cup where they would play teams from Argentina, Japan, France and Ukraine in their opening pool. In all, 14 teams are competing for the title.

Texas Baptist Men agreed to step in again when the team did not have the money for the flight.

“People are starting to donate, but not fast enough to get them to Argentina, so we are guaranteeing the tickets, and then we will reimburse as the money becomes available,” Talley said.

But he was quick to not take all the credit for the team’s getting the opportunity to play. While TBM had handled this hurdle, others had helped at other points along the way.

“There are several groups that are helping, we’re just a spoke in the wheel,” Talley said.

Sorrells said he expects TBM to be fully reimbursed.

Members of an amputee soccer team from Haiti practice in Frisco before journeying to international competition in Argentina.

“We’re doing it as a step of faith that people will hear about this team and make a donation. We really believe we’ll be able to pay every penny of what they’ve given us back,” he said.

In amputee soccer, players can only use a non-amputated limb to strike the ball. Field players must be missing some portion of a leg, and goalies must be missing some portion of an arm.

“Because some may only be missing a hand or foot while others may have lost much more of the limb, only the whole arm or leg can be used to touch the ball,” Sorrells explained.

Field players use crutches that wrap around their forearms for their mobility. For more information and video of the game, see here. There also are opportunities to contribute on the site.

“We know we are the David among the Goliaths, because we have not played an official game yet,” he said.

Sorrells’ organization, International Institute of Sport, focuses on helping the handicapped be as involved in athletic competition as they wish. He particularly is involved in the Paralympic Games and Veterans Wheelchair Games.

Sorrells believes the Great Commission is not only in Matthew 28. It also is in Luke 14:21-23: “The servant came back and reported this to his master. Then the owner of the house became angry and ordered his servant, ‘Go out quickly into the streets and alleys of the town and bring in the poor, the crippled, the blind and the lame.’ ‘Sir,’ the servant said, ‘what you ordered has been done, but there is still room.’ Then the master told his servant, ‘Go out to the roads and country lanes and make them come in, so that my house will be full.’”

“That’s what I’m trying to do — help the poor, crippled, blind and lame to know Jesus Christ,” Sorrells said.

Seven of the Haitian amputee team now are Christians. Once their World Cup experience is completed, Talley said they will be trained in water purification so that they can help in future disaster-relief efforts.

“The first casualty of a disaster is hope,” Talley said. “They’re going to be able to tell other earthquake survivors that there is hope, that there is life after an earthquake, and they are proof of it.”

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