La Voix de l’Évangile, Québec is a vital part of the extensive radio work of MissionGO
which reaches into many French-speaking countries of the world. The broadcasts are recorded in the studio of the radio follow-up office in Châteauguay.
The ministry began in 1955 in the Back to the Bible Broadcast studios in Lincoln, Nebraska through a staff member who spoke French fluently and had a burden for the French-speaking people of the world. An office was soon established in Aix-en-Provence in France.
In 1974, an office was opened in Châteauguay, Québec, under the direction of MissionGO representatives, Clarence and Pearl Shelly. At the present time, the broadcasts are aired on one station in Montreal and one in Champlain, NY. Stephen Frank became the director of La Voix de l’Évangile, Québec in 2006. His wife, Karen, is also a representative of MissionGO.
The weekly French-language 15-minute broadcast features Pastor Michel Martel, a Québec evangelist who faithfully teaches the Word of God. Audio messages (in French only) are available on CDs at a reasonable cost as well as approximately 40 books in French on the Christian life.
Action Mondiale d’Évangélisation (Québec) Inc is the name of the Québec incorporation of MissionGO
1. WE BELIEVE the Bible to be verbally inspired, the only infallible, authoritative Word of God.
Kindly send your donation in Canadian or U.S. currency to:
Action Mondiale d’Évangélisation
Tax-deductible receipts for donations will be sent to Canadian residents.
The thoughtful man therefore thinks of the afterlife, but only one throughout the history of mankind has triumphed over death; one who spoke with authority and simplicity of eternal life – Jesus Christ.
Aches and Praise Five Hundred & Ninety Six
Thank you to everyone who has reached out to me in the past week, as I await further medical tests. In the list of prayer items in our church, there are many who have health concerns and we can encourage one another in prayer.
In “A Small Book for the Anxious Heart” Edward T. Welch writes: “Worries can leave you spiritually vulnerable. Jesus warns us about this in His story of a sower and seeds.
A sower scattered his seeds, and the seeds fell on different types of soils. One soil was a bit thorny. ‘The cares of the world’ are your worries. These are not potent enough to drag you away from Jesus, but they can leave you stagnant and unfruitful. Notice how our worries tend to imagine a future without God in it. Without God we have to prepare for those future threats on our own. Life gradually gets smaller. Our mission to trust Jesus and love other people gets temporarily lost amid our future preparations.”
How can we ensure that anxiety does not overpower us? Welch observes: “The threats of life leave two options. We can either turn in on ourselves, be paralyzed by them, have minds racing with the worst scenarios, or we can simply cry out to the Lord.
When I am afraid, I put my trust in You. Psalm 56:3
Trust in Him at all times, O people; pour out your heart before Him. Psalm 62:8
The most basic version of this trust, when spoken to the Lord, is ‘Help me.’ ‘Jesus, help.’ ‘Father, help.’ ‘Spirit, help.’ ‘My mind is reeling. I feel like I can hardly function.’ Simply speak this to the One who listens and speaks to you.”
By God’s grace, we can rest in the promises of His Word and live victoriously over anxiety and sin.
Scripture for the weekend: “When I remember You on my bed, I meditate on You in the night watches.” Psalm 63:6 (NKJV)
Thought for the weekend: “A person who has the habit of hope also has the habit of remembering. Hope needs memories the way a writer needs notes. This is partly because hope depends so much on imagination. Our images of the future are sweepings from our remembrances of things past. If we expect to keep hope alive, we need to keep memory alive. Happy memories of good things we hoped for that were fulfilled, and grateful memories of bad things we survived.” – Lewis B. Smedes (from “Keeping Hope Alive” quoted in “The Jeremiah Study Bible”)