An Addis Ababa City soccer player heads the ball during a practice match.
An Addis Ababa City soccer player heads the ball during a practice match.
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The crowd is captivated by what’s unfolding on the field in front of them at a soccer tournament in Adama, Ethiopia. A player in the middle of the field flights a ball upfield to a player who nimbly adjusts his body to knock the ball down with his chest. Then, the forward chips the ball past the opponents’ goalie, adding a point for his team.
A young Ethiopian watching this moment could be surprised to discover that local churches are behind the teams playing in this tournament. In the city of Adama, 20 churches support soccer teams.
Amaha Demssia, a chicken farmer, organizes the soccer tournaments in Adama. He owns more than 1,000 chickens and, alongside two employees, delivers about 800 eggs a day to local stores. Although his is a full-time job, his family of five still struggles to make ends meet. While this remains a challenge, Amaha feels purpose beyond his job.
Even though he grew up Eastern Orthodox, Amaha hadn’t made a connection between Jesus and a personal relationship with God. But 20 years ago, through an Ethiopian Christian song, Amaha trusted Christ.
Today he knows first hand what can happen when the gospel and culture come together, specifically through athletics. As an avid gymnast and soccer player, Amaha develops relationships with church leaders across the city of Adama, a transportation hub located near Central Ethiopia. Today, thanks in part to Amaha’s leadership, 20 churches in Adama sponsor a team with coaches and chaplains. Five of the teams meet regularly for Bible study.
Along with the regular games, each year Amaha organizes the church teams into a 38-game tournament, welcoming an average of 300 fans per game. There, church volunteers seek to share the gospel among the fans and players. A pastor opens each match with a prayer in front of the crowd, and church members socialize with the fans, beginning spiritual conversations and handing out evangelistic materials.
An hour away from Adama, Amaha meets twice a week with Tsegaye Mamo, the Ethiopian director for Athletes in Action®. Tsegaye mentors Amaha through the ups and downs of sports ministry and talks with him about Amaha’s walk with Christ. Tsegaye trains Amaha how to approach churches, cast a vision of sports outreach, and begin and maintain Bible studies.
AIA, Cru®’s sports ministry, serves in more than 60 countries, on over 200 college campuses and in 40 professional sports teams. Ultimately, AIA desires to see Christ-followers on every team, in every sport, in every nation. That vision is catching on in Ethiopia.
And while Amaha concentrates on chicken farming and church partnership, Tsegaye — Ethiopia’s only AIA staff member — teaches chaplains to lead life skills classes for their teams of professional, amateur and youth athletes. These classes lead naturally into Bible studies and wed chaplains’ passion for sport with their passion for Christ.
AIA plans for sports chaplaincy to spread across Ethiopia and grow into a ministry model for other African nations. But this goal is not without its challenges. For Amaha, finances are tight and time is limited. And for Tsegaye, gaining credibility with professional teams proves no easy task.
So Amaha focuses his precious time on developing church leaders, and for the past two years, Tsegaye has offered a two-week soccer camp for chaplains and coaches.
Tsegaye dedicates a weekend to volunteer chaplaincy training with AIA volunteers. Current chaplains that Tsegaye has mentored teach local Christian leaders from around Ethiopia. These leaders learn how to begin and run chaplaincies among their professional and local clubs. In his first year of hosting the training, Tsegaye met Amaha.
Today, after a morning talk, given by a chaplain, coaches laugh and chatter as they gather in a circle, juggling a ball and getting the blood flowing into their skillful feet.
Throughout the remainder of the week, coaches come from all over Ethiopia for skills clinics. In conjunction with the soccer federation, the clinics are hosted by AIA coaches from abroad, whose expertise and training appeal to many Ethiopian coaches.
This professional coaching helps open the door with Ethiopian sports federations, causing the federations to look favorably on AIA chaplaincy and character-based training. While the coaches grow in knowledge, chaplains offer talks that run the coaches through samples of life-coaching courses they can provide to their teams.
Tim Pitcher, an AIA staff member with professional soccer, sees this strategy — training local volunteers in sports chaplaincy, while also exposing coaches to the role of a chaplain and their importance for teams — as the way forward worldwide. “[The camps] are working really well in opening doors in these countries with the federations and teams,” Tim says. “If I just went there, I could do some stuff. But now that I bring in these [professional] athletes, I have 50 coaches and the federation officials coming to us.”
The children flock to the soccer clinic as well, not only excited to play soccer, but also to play with the pros that Tim has gathered. The week of chaplaincy training equips Christian volunteers to replicate what Amaha is doing, reaching Ethiopia’s youth through vibrant sport and church partnerships.
“I got training from Tsegaye and Athletes in Action on how to teach sportsmanship,” says Amaha, “how to support athletes psychologically and spiritually, how to organize clubs and show how Christianity meets competition. I then went back to Adama and taught that to volunteers from the churches.”
Seeing Christ through soccer, Amaha says, enriches and restores what he calls “the beautiful game.”
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