A Harvest of Young Disciples

“From one response to the call, God raised a harvest—64 students chose Christ, and 49 followed Him in baptism.”

At the Karen Young Disciple Camp, held from October 28 to November 3, more than 700 campers gathered for a time of spiritual training, fellowship, and commitment. A team from Anon, together with Pastor Wong, a Hartland alumnus, helped organize and lead the program.
At first, the visible response seemed small. On the third day, only one student stood to commit to baptism. But by the fifth day, 64 students had responded to the call. On the final day, 49 campers were baptized. Fifteen more students desired baptism but were unable to move forward because of school regulations. Their tears revealed a deep longing to follow Jesus.
The impact did not end when the camp closed. In the weeks that followed, some students continued reaching out, sharing personal and family struggles as they began their new walk with Christ.
Through EMET, this work is continuing beyond one event. Students are being trained for real mission service, future mission trips, publication work, media ministry, and practical outreach. The report also shares that EMET is preparing for its first graduating class, a meaningful milestone after completing its first two-year missionary training cycle.
This is the fruit of missionary education: young people trained, souls reached, and lives redirected toward service.

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