Campus Ministry

A VISION TO REACH THE WHOLE WORLD THROUGH THE UNIVERSITY CAMPUS.

Every Nation Campus Tshwane is a church-based campus ministry from Every Nation Tshwane Church for all university or college students in the Tshwane area. We are a multi-cultural, multi-ethnic campus ministry that exists to reach the lost, make disciples, and equip them to GO and be the leaders that God has called them to be.

Campus Outreach

University of Pretoria
Hatfield Campus
Prayer Meetings

Connect Groups (Small groups)

Campus Engage
University of Pretoria Prinshof
Prayer Meetings

Connect Groups
University of Pretoria
Onderstepoort 
Prayer Meetings

Connect Groups
NEW BRIDGE
Prayer meetings

Connect Groups

Campus Missionaries

Gideon Zeeman
City Wide Campus Director
Annemari Du Plessis
Campus Leader
Willows
Zach de Beer 
Campus Leader
Lynnwood
Arnold Mathapa
Campus Leader
Moot
Bianca Bornman
Campus Leader
Highveld
Mncedi Matiwane
Campus Leader
Willows
Evert Kleynhans
Campus Missionary
Moot

Why Campus

Throughout history, movements have published manifestos to encapsulate and communicate their mission. Rice Broocks penned the Campus Manifesto, stating the reasons we must reach the campus. Here’s an updated version of Every Nation’s Campus Manifesto, which has the potential to change the world.

The future leaders of society are on our campuses.

Virtually all of the world’s presidents, prime ministers, senators, members of parliaments, bankers, lawyers, judges, teachers, doctors, and business leaders have passed through the college and university system. In every critical aspect of a nation’s culture, the campus is where we find the future influencers.

Major movements, bad or good, start on the campus.

From spiritual revival to political revolution, the campus gives birth to change. Marxism, atheism, feminism, and practically every other “ism” that has spread around the world at one time started as a tiny seed on the university campus.

The majority of those who become Christians do so as students.

Countless studies continue to confirm that most people surrender to Christ before their twenty-fifth birthday. This hits close to home. Many of our current leaders responded to the gospel before their twenty-fifth birthday.

International students impact their nations.

International students represent the top one percent of the students in their home nations. Many of these students come from nations that restrict or ban the gospel. By reaching them while they’re on our campuses and sending them home with the gospel, we can broaden the gospel’s reach in the world.

The values on campus become the values in society.

The philosophy, morality, and ethics taught by professors on university campuses slowly but surely work their way into public policy, media, and education. Those ideas and values become preserved for decades through legislation, education, music, movies, literature, and media.

When we reach a student, we reach a family.

Moms, dads, brothers, and sisters are often impacted by the stories from students who return home with a changed life. The New Testament pattern of church growth showed entire families turning to Christ. That hasn’t changed. One weekend home visit from a student transformed by the gospel can start a spiritual chain reaction that impacts every member of their family.

God promised to pour out his Spirit on sons and daughters. 
(Acts 2:17)

In other words, we should anticipate and hope for an enormous awakening in the younger generations of the world. We have to be prepared to handle this abundance by sending missionaries who are equipped and empowered to make disciples to colleges and high schools.
GLOBAL CAMPUS PAGE
PODCASTS (Coming soon)
PARTNERSHIP
menu
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram