Missionary profile – Omphemetse Kepuyamore
By Mercy Kambura
Omphemetse Kepuyamore , Botswana
Missionary to the Khoisan
I didn’t know my father; I was told he rejected me before my birth. But now I’m a missionary among the Khoisan in Botswana, telling them about the good Father in Heaven who sent His Son to save them. I’m the least likely candidate for such a hefty assignment.
I grew up in a single-parent family in my grandparent’s house with about 16 people in one homestead. The whole family was deep in a cult, belonging to a ‘church’ that claimed to believe in the Lord, but did not use the Bible.
When I was seven, my cousin failed in her junior school and was treated meanly. Frustrated, she went to speak to a pastor. He prayed for her and she became the first true Christian in the family. She took me with her to church. I loved the transformation in her, so I, too, became a Christian. We were taught about salvation, our fallen nature, and the need for a Saviour.
Before long, my uncles and aunties dispersed. I was left, a lone teenager in a huge compound. I resorted to sleeping in a neighbour’s house, hungry and heartbroken.
In school, I was the leader of Scripture Union, and I evangelized every chance I got. I finished secondary school and went to college for business management, but I dropped out after the first year. I was still preaching.
Then I met a Christian brother who had attended the CAPRO School of Mission and thought I was a good candidate, too. I didn’t know anything about cross-cultural missions; I just knew about evangelizing in my village.
I enrolled and was trained on cross-cultural missions and went on faith trips where they took everything from us and encouraged us to trust the Lord. I grew in my conviction about missions. We went to the Khoisan for a one month, and I was moved by their need for the gospel.
I’ve been a missionary among the Khoisan, and I have also taken short mission trips to people groups in South Africa, Zambia and Botswana. I work with my church, the Apostolic Faith Mission.
I want the Batswana to know that they, too, can be missionaries. Most people here think missionaries are only Westerners, and I’m the unlikely example of God’s grace.
I encourage the church to pray for the Lord give them a vision and burden for world missions — the heartbeat of God, not an initiative of any organization. Jesus Himself was a missionary — he crossed many barriers to reach us. If we love God, we should take part in missions.
- For the church to be taught missions and understand the need to support missionaries in the field.
- For the Lord to soften people’s hearts to hear the gospel.
- For financial support to help me stay in the field for a long time. I’m forced to retreat every once in a while to earn some upkeep.
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