Michée Badé

Career Missionary since 2006, serving the Dendi people of Northern Benin. Now serving the Set Free In Christ Project.

Originally from Côte d’Ivoire, Dr. Michée B. Badé is an ordained minister who has served as a frontline worker for Adventist Frontier Missions for 16 years in West Africa and North Africa. Michée served together with his wife Elmire and two children, Eliora and Elie-Dana, helping to raise church-planting movements in both regions. He holds a BA in Theology from Andrews University and an MA in Missiology and a Ph.D. in Missiology from the University of the Free State in South Africa, where he is a research fellow. He currently serves as director for the Set Free In Christ Institute, operated by AFM.

Speaking Appointments

To see if Michée and Elmire Badé are coming to a church near you, visit the Speaking Appointment Calendar.

Frontier Stories

Sabila Nyaa

Like nearly all Dendi, she is Muslim. She got married six years ago and has two children. According to Islamic custom, her children have Arabic names. The first child, a boy of five years, is named Mafaza, meaning “those who put their confidence in Allah will go to heaven.” and the second child, a baby girl eleven months old, is named Sabilatou (or Sabila for short), which means “upon Allah’s path.”

By: Michée Badé
November 01 2007, 6:24 pm | Comments 0

Meeting the Kandi Chief

And God did not stop there. Thrilled by our initiative, the chief began to speak about my family background. He explained to his noblemen that, as he looked at me and observed my manners, he thought I might be from a royal background.

By: Michée Badé
October 01 2007, 6:16 pm | Comments 0

Our Zakat

Last Friday, we decided to begin practicing an aspect of Isaiah 58:6, 7 similar to the zakat: “Is not this the fast that I choose: . . . to share your bread with the hungry . . .” Elmire and I decided to find needy families and individuals in our neighborhood and give them the resources we save when we fast.

By: Michée Badé
September 01 2007, 6:13 pm | Comments 0

Solidarity

An African proverb says, “Solidarity is the medication for wants.” I know this as an African.

By: Michée Badé
August 01 2007, 6:06 pm | Comments 0

Finding a Language Helper

An African proverb says, “It is better for a man to break his leg than to break his words.”

By: Michée Badé
July 01 2007, 6:05 pm | Comments 0

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