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Enoch Mission Media Launched to Preserve, Amplify Works of Founder


Accra: Enoch Mission Media, a new media arm of Enoch Missions established to preserve, amplify, and extend the ministry of Mr. Enoch Immanuel Amanor Agbozo, has been launched. The initiative, described as both a legacy-preservation project and a forward-looking evangelistic tool, will digitise decades of sermons, talks, and written material; publish books and periodicals based on the teachings of Mr. Agbozo, affectionately called ‘Brother’. It will also establish online broadcast facilities to deepen and widen the reach of his end-time message.



According to Ghana News Agency, Reverend Henry Agbozo, son of the founder, said the creation of Enoch Mission Media grew out of a dual burden: to protect priceless archives from loss, and to harness modern communication tools to carry the ministry’s vision to a new generation. “Today is a day of joy and celebration, and at the same time it is also a day of sober reflection on the scale of the task before us and the awesome responsibility God has placed on our shoulders.” He further stated, “However we are strengthened in the awareness that when God calls, He equips and grants all the necessary graces for His purposes to be accomplished in His time.”



A central component of the launch was the unveiling of the ministry’s official website, enochmissions.com, to serve as a primary resource centre for the global Church. The site will host digitised audio and video sermons, transcribed messages, downloadable teaching notes, and information on upcoming publications and broadcasts.



Enoch Mission Media outlined a phased plan of activities for the next three years. Between 2025 and 2027, the team will prioritise converting analog recordings to digital formats and prepare audio-visual packages for online viewing and listening. The ministry also plans to publish the first of several books drawn from Bro. Agbozo’s sermons in 2026, and to establish an online TV studio by 2027 for regular talk-shows, panel discussions, and teaching series.



Rev Agbozo said the media effort was more than archival but rather a continuation and expansion of the work started by Papa Enoch by using modern channels to re-examine, apply and contextualise his teachings for today’s church. He said Enoch Missions Media would use online media tools to revive the Vision of at least one Bible Training College, train and equip ministers, church leaders, and evangelists in sound Kingdom doctrine and practical ministry.



Rev Henry Agbozo linked the media project to a broader end-time urgency that has characterised his father’s ministry – a call to prepare the Church, the nations, and creation for Christ’s return. Quoting Habakkuk 2:2 and Revelation 11:15, he affirmed the media arm’s spiritual mandate: to write the vision plainly, and to declare the coming reign of God in the affairs of nations. “By God’s grace, we will do the writing and placement on tablets, not tablets of stone, but on electronic digital tablets and paper, and also on tablets of the hearts of men, so that the church may read, learn and run with the vision,” he added.



He invited believers and institutions to partner with Enoch Mission Media through prayer, financial support, and practical collaboration. Bro. Enoch Immanuel Amanor Agbozo, the founder of Enoch Missions and the Ghana Evangelical Society (GES), is recognised as a pivotal figure in the rise of charismatic and revival movements in Ghana from the 1970s. He is widely credited with mobilising evangelistic campaigns, planting churches, and discipling ministers across Africa and beyond.



Before full-time ministry, ‘Brother’ worked as an economist and investment executive. As a University of Ghana alumnus, he served in senior roles in Ghana’s investment sector before answering a call to ministry in 1977. Under his leadership, the GES became instrumental in promoting church unity, evangelism, and the training of gospel workers. Those at the launch reflected on Bro. Agbozo’s reputation as a prophetic voice and a teacher who pressed the Church toward holiness, revival, and preparedness for the Second Coming of Christ.