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 and 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.

Please visit Set Free in Christ Institute to learn more.

Speaking Appointments

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

Frontier Stories

Our Young Ambassadors

How do missionary children support their parents in the family business? Can they help make disciples for Jesus? How can they play a proactive role in outreach?

By: Michée Badé
May 01 2009, 9:30 am | Comments 0

Posession Troupe

The procession usually ends in front of the mayor’s office, and the ritual begins. Dressed in white, the priestesses begin to communicate with the spirits, invoking and coercing them to intervene on behalf of supplicants, or appeasing them so they leave them alone.

By: Michée Badé
March 01 2009, 9:28 am | Comments 0

House Sitter

His friendship and willingness to stay in our house had helped refute some of the criticism leveled at us. Elmire and I prayed that the Lord would help us find someone like Sosse.

By: Michée Badé
February 01 2009, 9:22 am | Comments 0

Ousame

Animism is rarely far beneath the surface in African culture, and Ousmane’s family inevitably sought help from native spirit doctors, but they could not help either.

By: Michée Badé
January 01 2009, 5:19 pm | Comments 0

Rodrigue

Working with me, Rodrigue faces less family and community pressure than Amadou did. Rodrigue is generally thought of as a member of the Dendi Muslim community, though everyone knows his parents are immigrants from the south.

By: Michée Badé
December 01 2008, 5:20 pm | Comments 0

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