Arabs take epic Sahara camel trek to spread Gospel 10/12/2006 By Erich Bridges NORTHERN AFRICA (BP)-How's this for a mission trip: Three months on camels in the scorching Sahara. No contact with family members. Beaten with metal rods. Kidnapped by renegade soldiers. All to bring Jesus to isolated oasis camps inhabited by nomads - hostile strangers who might not give you water during your journey, much less listen to your message. That's what some new Arab believers did earlier this year. They intend to do it again next year and the year after that. Why? Because they read the New Testament. "It was the Holy Spirit," says "Luke,"* the Southern Baptist worker who introduced the Arabs to stories from God's Word. "From the beginning, we told them, 'As soon as you know the stories, you need to be sharing them.' That was on their heart, and the Book of Acts had just come out in their dialect of Arabic. They began going through it and wanted to be like (the apostle) Paul. They saw that Paul went out to other places." It all started about six years ago, when Luke and his wife went to a part of Northern Africa to serve an Arab Muslim people group of about 1.5 million people. When they arrived, there were fewer than 10 known followers of Christ among the entire group. As he shared his life and the love of Christ in villages and nomad camps, Luke began making friends and showing the "JESUS" film. Some local men saw it and asked if Luke had something else to watch. "At the time the only other thing I had on video was 'The Ten Commandments' with Charlton Heston, in French," Luke recalls with a laugh. "But they watched it, and at the end 10 guys came up and said, 'We like this. We didn't really understand it because it's in French, but can we study the books of Moses?' We started with Moses, went back to Genesis and up to Jesus. From that group, just one guy believed, but he has become the main evangelist." That young Arab believer and evangelist, "Shama,"* began telling Bible stories and gathering other new believers into groups. Later, they came to Luke and said, "We need our wives and our sisters to know about this. Can your wife come out and story with the women?" Over the next several years Shama's original handful of believers expanded to nine worship groups. As they listened to Luke's teaching about church planting - and read in Scripture about