Congratulations
Dominic ( Alias Co-Domain)
March 2026
AMOM Winner• Member of Youth, Men's Mov and Ushering Team
We celebrate your faithful service and lasting impact in the house of God. Your dedication is seen and honored.
AMAZING MEMBER OF THE MONTH (AMOM)
The Apostolic Church Ghana — TAC-GH, Afrancho Central Assembly
Celebrating Dominic — "Co-Domain"
A Faithful Son of Zion · A Builder of the House of God · A Guardian of His People
Over 10 Years of Rugged, Devoted, Spirit-Fuelled Service — With His Hands, His Heart, and His Life
A Word from the Leadership
There are people who serve the church when it is convenient. And then there are people who serve the church when it is costly — when it demands something real from them, when it requires not just their Sunday mornings but their Monday afternoons, their Saturday muscles, their late-night watch, their daily proximity, their sweat, their skill, their sacrifice. Brother Dominic — known with great affection, deep respect, and a particular kind of brotherhood-forged love throughout this assembly and beyond as Co-Domain — belongs entirely and unreservedly to the second category.
For more than ten years, this man has shown up. Not occasionally. Not strategically. Not when the cameras were pointing his direction or when the applause was loudest. He has shown up in the cold mornings before anyone arrived, in the hot afternoons when the work was heavy and the recognition was absent, in the quiet evenings when the church building stood empty and someone needed to be there simply to make sure it was safe, cared for, watched over, and ready for when God's people would return. That someone — reliably, consistently, faithfully — has been Co-Domain.
"He did not just serve this church. He held it together when holding it together required everything."
The leadership of The Apostolic Church Ghana, TAC-GH, Afrancho Central Assembly, presents this recognition with hearts that are genuinely, deeply moved. We do not give this AMOM designation as a formality. We give it as a testimony. As a declaration. As a public honouring of a man whose work has largely been done in the unseen places — and whose reward, we are absolutely certain, is being held in Heaven with interest. Today, we begin to pay it out here on earth. Today, we say his name. Today, we tell his story.
Who Is Dominic — Co-Domain?
The Man, The Name, The Legend
Every community has those rare individuals who earn a name beyond their given one — a name that is not bestowed by a registry or a parent, but earned through character, through presence, through the slow accumulation of moments and contributions that make a person inseparable from the identity of the place they belong to. Co-Domain is exactly that kind of name. It did not come from nowhere. It came from people who watched this man and recognised, almost without needing to discuss it, that he was not merely present in the domain of Afrancho Central Assembly — he was part of the domain itself. A co-owner in spirit if not in deed. A man so intertwined with the life and breath of this place that to speak of the church without speaking of him would be to tell an incomplete and somewhat dishonest story.
Dominic is a building artisan by trade. His hands know metal. They know the weight of steel, the language of structure, the grammar of construction. They know what it takes to raise something from the ground, to reinforce something that is weakening, to restore something that has fallen into disrepair. These are not simply professional skills. In the story of this man's service to God and His church, they have become something sacred — the means by which God has worked through one man's ordinary professional life to accomplish extraordinary Kingdom purposes.
He is, by temperament, more likely to be found doing than talking. More likely to be found working than waiting to be noticed. More likely to be found at the back making sure everything is in order than at the front drawing attention to himself. He carries the quiet, unshakeable confidence of a man who knows exactly who he is, exactly who he belongs to, and exactly what his assignment is — and who has decided, fully and without reservation, that he is going to fulfil that assignment to the absolute best of his ability, for as long as God requires it of him.
The Gift of a Craftsman's Heart
There is something theologically profound about a man who builds things for a living choosing to give his building skills to the house of God. In the ancient narrative of Scripture, the builders of the Tabernacle and the Temple were not random volunteers. They were men specifically gifted by God — artisans and craftsmen whose skill with materials was understood to be a divine endowment, not merely a human achievement. Bezalel and Oholiab, filled with the Spirit of God, built the dwelling place of the Most High with their hands. The parallel is not lost on anyone who has watched Co-Domain work.
When he picks up a tool in service of this church, something of that ancient, sacred tradition is alive in the action. He is not merely fixing a structure. He is participating in the ongoing act of building a dwelling place for God among His people. He understands this. It shows in the care he takes, the thoroughness with which he approaches every task, the refusal to cut corners or do things halfway when it is the house of God that will bear the result of his labour. Whatever he builds for Afrancho Central, he builds to last — because he knows that what is done for God deserves to be done with excellence.
Ten Years of Service — The Epic Timeline
A Decade Written in Sweat, Steel, and Faithfulness
To truly understand the magnitude of what Brother Dominic has contributed to Afrancho Central Assembly over the past decade and more, one must be willing to look not just at the visible outcomes but at the invisible inputs — the hours invested, the energy expended, the days given, the personal comfort foregone, the professional expertise freely offered, and the daily, ordinary faithfulness that is, in the Kingdom of God, the most extraordinary thing of all.
Ten years is a long time. In ten years, people change churches. People grow weary of service. People calculate what they are getting out versus what they are putting in and make the rational, self-interested decision to redirect their resources elsewhere. The fact that Co-Domain has done none of these things — the fact that he is still here, still serving, still showing up, still giving, still caring, still building — is itself a profound testimony to the depth of his commitment and the genuineness of his calling.
The Early Years — Arriving and Digging In
When Dominic first became a committed part of Afrancho Central Assembly, those around him noticed quickly that this was not a man who needed to be convinced to serve. He came already oriented toward contribution. Already looking for where he could be useful. Already asking, in the way that truly great servants always ask — not "what can this church do for me?" but "what does this church need, and how can I help provide it?"
In those early years, he gave himself to the foundational work — the work that does not appear in the glamorous sections of any annual report but without which nothing else functions. He was present. He was available. He was dependable. And in a church community, as in any community, the people who simply show up consistently are worth their weight in gold, because consistency is rarer than talent and more valuable than brilliance.
He began building relationships in those early years that have deepened and strengthened with every subsequent season. The men who became his brothers in the Men's Movement. The youth who looked up at this solid, capable, quietly confident man and saw something they wanted to become. The leaders who came to know that if they needed something done and needed it done right, Co-Domain was the name they were looking for.
The Season of Trial — When the Church Needed Rebuilding
Then came the season that tested everything — the period that every church faces at some point, when circumstances demand more than routine service, when the building itself has fallen into a state that requires not just maintenance but restoration. When Afrancho Central found itself needing to be rebuilt — when the physical structure that had housed worship, prayer, fellowship, and the movement of the Holy Spirit needed to be raised up again — Brother Dominic stepped forward with everything he had.
This is not a metaphor. This is a literal, physical, documented reality. The man took his professional skills — his knowledge of metal work, his experience as a building artisan, his understanding of structure and material and construction — and he poured them into the rebuilding of this church. He did not send a bill. He did not submit a quote. He did not negotiate his terms or calculate his day rate. He gave. Freely. Generously. With the wholehearted abandon of a man who understood that what he was building was not just a structure — it was a sanctuary. Not just walls — but a home for the presence of God.
The hours he spent on that rebuilding work, counted honestly, represent a financial contribution to this assembly that exceeds what most people will ever give in monetary terms. He gave his skill — which is his livelihood, the way he feeds himself and honours his commitments — as an offering. He gave his time — which is his most non-renewable resource — without hesitation. He gave his physical strength, which construction work demands in full. And through it all, he gave with a spirit so uncomplaining and so genuinely cheerful that those who worked alongside him during that period still speak of it as one of the most faith-building seasons of their lives.
"When the church needed to be raised from its ruins, Co-Domain was already holding a tool. He didn't wait to be called. He just started building."
The Season of Consolidation — Becoming the Backbone
After the rebuilding, as the assembly settled into its renewed space and life continued to flow through the corridors and sanctuary of Afrancho Central, Brother Dominic's role evolved — not by diminishing, but by deepening. He became, in the truest sense, a backbone figure. One of those essential, load-bearing people without whom the structural integrity of an organisation quietly weakens.
He was now known. Trusted. Proven. His word was reliable. His presence was dependable. His contributions had been tested under pressure and found not wanting. And so the scope of his influence naturally expanded — into the Men's Movement, where his character and consistency made him a natural pillar; into the Youth Ministry, where his passion for the next generation was beginning to find full expression; into the Ushering Team, where his gifts for order, welcome, and calm authority were perfectly deployed.
The Men's Movement — Iron Sharpening Iron
A Brother Among Brothers
There is a particular kind of respect that men give to other men — a respect that is not easily manufactured, not quickly awarded, and not lightly maintained. It is the respect of people who have watched each other under pressure, who have seen how a man responds when things are hard, who know not just the public face but the private character. The respect that the men of Afrancho Central Assembly have for Brother Dominic is this kind — earned, genuine, bone-deep.
He has been a pillar of the Men's Movement not because he sought a title or a position within it, but because he embodied, with remarkable consistency, the virtues that the Men's Movement is trying to cultivate. He showed what it looks like to be a man of integrity — a man whose word and whose action occupy the same address, whose private life is not a contradiction of his public profession. He showed what it looks like to serve without ego — to do hard work without needing it acknowledged, to give generously without keeping score, to lead by example rather than by instruction.
The Brotherhood He Built
Co-Domain is a man who builds things. And one of the things he has built — perhaps less visibly than the metal frameworks and physical structures, but no less durably — is brotherhood. The bonds between the men of this assembly that he has helped forge, strengthen, and maintain are real, living, meaningful connections. He has been the man who checks in. The one who follows up. The one who notices when a brother has been absent too long and makes the call, or shows up at the door, or creates the space for a conversation that needed to happen.
The Men's Movement of Afrancho Central has been stronger because Co-Domain was in it. More accountable. More practically grounded. More willing to do the unglamorous work that keeps a community of men honest and functional and growing. He has never been content with the Men's Movement being a social club or a collection of church-going males who share pews on Sunday. He has pushed, gently but persistently, for it to be what it is supposed to be — a brotherhood of men who are genuinely becoming better men, better fathers, better husbands, better leaders, better servants of God.
"He showed us that being a man of God isn't a title you claim. It's a life you build, one day at a time, one choice at a time, one act of faithfulness at a time."
The Youth Ministry — His Burning Fire
A Man Who Cannot Leave the Youth Alone
If there is one area of ministry where Brother Dominic's passion crosses the threshold from committed to genuinely, almost urgently fervent — it is the Youth Ministry. This is not a polite interest or a dutiful involvement. This is a burning conviction that the young people of Afrancho Central Assembly deserve more, need more, and are capable of far more than they are sometimes given credit for — and that someone needs to fight for that on their behalf.
Co-Domain is that someone. He has been that someone for years. And his particular quality of fight for the youth is worth understanding carefully, because it is not the kind of fight that looks impressive from a distance. It is not the fight of stirring speeches and grand vision announcements. It is the fight of showing up. Of being present at youth gatherings not because someone put him on a programme but because he genuinely wants to be there, because he genuinely cares about what happens to these young people, because he has looked into the faces of the youth of this assembly and seen both the potential they carry and the pressures they face — and has decided that he is not willing to stand at a comfortable distance while that battle plays out without him.
Fastening the Youth Back to Strength
There is a phrase that perfectly captures what Co-Domain has been doing in the Youth Ministry for years: fastening. Like a craftsman securing a joint, like a metalworker binding two pieces that need to hold together under pressure — he has been fastening. Fastening young people back to the faith when drift began. Fastening them back to community when isolation crept in. Fastening them back to purpose when the voices of the world grew louder than the voice of God in their lives.
He has done this through relationship. Through presence. Through the remarkably simple but powerfully effective act of being a trustworthy, consistent, genuinely interested adult man in the lives of young people who need exactly that. He has been the mentor who does not use that word — who just shows up, invests time, shares wisdom in the natural flow of conversation, models integrity in the ordinary moments, and lets young people draw their own conclusions about what kind of life is worth living.
He has also been a fierce advocate for the Youth Ministry having the resources, the structure, the support, and the seriousness that it deserves. He has been vocal — in the respectful, constructive, Kingdom-motivated way of a man who genuinely loves the church — about the importance of investing in the youth. Not just financially, though that matters. But in terms of attention, leadership, intentionality, and the willingness of the wider congregation to treat the youth as full members of the body of Christ rather than members-in-waiting.
What He Sees in Every Young Person
One of the most remarkable things about Co-Domain's relationship with the youth is his capacity to see what is not yet visible. He has an eye for potential — the kind of eye that a craftsman develops for raw material, for the quality hidden in unfinished work, for what something could become in the right hands with the right investment of time and skill. He looks at a young person who has not yet found their footing and he sees not the struggle but the possibility. He looks at a young man or woman who is drifting and he does not see a lost cause — he sees someone who has not yet been properly anchored, and he begins, quietly and persistently, the work of anchoring.
Young people know this about him. They know that he sees them differently from how they sometimes see themselves. And the experience of being truly seen — of having someone look at you not with disappointment at what you are not yet but with genuine excitement about what you could become — is one of the most transformative experiences available to a human being. Co-Domain has given that experience to more young people in this assembly than any record has been able to capture.
"He never looked at us and saw problems. He looked at us and saw projects. The best kind — the kind he was already excited to work on."
The Ushering Team — Order, Dignity, and Welcome
The Ministry of the Threshold
Ushering is one of the most theologically loaded acts in the life of a worshipping community, and it is one of the most consistently underestimated. The usher stands at the threshold — literally at the boundary between the outside world and the space set apart for the encounter with God. What happens in that threshold moment matters enormously. The quality of welcome experienced there, the sense of order and dignity communicated there, the feeling of safety and reverence established there — these things shape everything that follows for the person entering.
Brother Dominic has understood this with an instinctive clarity that many formally trained ushers never fully develop. His approach to ushering is not mechanical or procedural. It is genuinely ministerial. He is not simply directing traffic or managing seating logistics. He is participating in the sacred act of making space for people to encounter God — and he takes that responsibility with the seriousness it deserves.
The Authority of Calm
What makes Co-Domain particularly effective as part of the Ushering Team is a quality that is impossible to fake and difficult to teach: the authority of calm. In a busy gathering, in the organised controlled energy of a service coming to life, in the moments of logistical challenge that inevitably arise when large numbers of people are moving through a space — he is unruffled. Steady. Clear-eyed. Present. The kind of calm that does not come from indifference but from confidence — from the deep, settled assurance of a man who knows his role, trusts God with the rest, and is not easily thrown off by the friction that is a normal part of any large gathering.
People notice this. Not consciously, perhaps, but at the level where it actually matters — the level where anxiety is managed or amplified, where the tone of a gathering is established before a single song is sung or a single word of Scripture is read. The calm that Co-Domain brings to the threshold of Afrancho Central's services has contributed, in ways that are real but difficult to measure, to the atmosphere of order, dignity, and reverence that characterises worship at this assembly.
His physical presence also matters here. He is a man who carries himself with the quiet confidence of someone who knows who he is and who he serves — and this communicates something important to everyone who enters under his watch. This is a place of order. This is a place of respect. You are welcome here, and you are safe here, and the things of God are taken seriously here.
The Guardian — Staying When Everyone Else Has Gone
Living Next Door to the House of God
Perhaps the most unique, most quietly extraordinary, and most profoundly Kingdom-significant dimension of Brother Dominic's service to Afrancho Central Assembly is also the one that is least visible to most of the congregation: the fact that he lives by the church. That he is the one who is there when no one else is there. That he has made himself, by the providence of God and by his own willing choice, the guardian and the keeper of this physical space that belongs to the Most High.
This is not a small thing. Let us be absolutely clear about what this means in practical terms. It means that the church building of Afrancho Central — the physical structure that houses the worship, the prayer, the fellowship, the weeping and the rejoicing and the encountering of God that happens among this people — has a watchman. It has someone who notices when something is wrong with the building. Someone who hears the unusual sound in the night and investigates. Someone who ensures that this space, set apart for sacred purposes, is treated with the dignity and the security it deserves even in the hours when the congregation is dispersed.
The Ministry of Watchfulness
In the ancient texts of the Hebrew prophets, the watchman on the wall is one of the most powerful images of faithful, responsible service. The watchman's job is not glamorous. It does not come with applause or with a prominent position in the religious ceremonies. It comes with loneliness and vigilance — with long hours of attentive, patient, eyes-open watching that requires a particular kind of character and a particular depth of commitment. Not everyone is cut out for it. Not everyone is willing to do it. The watchman who remains at his post when remaining is costly is doing something of immense value to the community he protects — even when, especially when, that community is asleep and unaware.
Co-Domain is Afrancho Central's watchman. He is the one who sees to it that the church is there when we arrive on Sunday morning. He is the one whose proximity means that the building is never truly unattended, never truly without a human presence who cares for it and is willing to stand for it. He oversees the property not as a caretaker fulfilling a duty but as a man who loves this place, who understands what it represents, who takes its protection seriously because he understands what would be lost if it were harmed.
"Every time we walk through those doors on a Sunday morning and find everything in order, there is a man we should thank. His name is Dominic. He was here when we were not."
The Continuity He Provides
There is a profound continuity in Co-Domain's role as the man who lives by the church. He is the thread that connects one service to the next. He is the living link between the Sunday we just had and the Sunday that is coming. While the congregation disperses into the week — into jobs and families and the ordinary business of their individual lives — he remains. Proximate to the space. Attentive to its condition. Ready to act if anything is needed.
This continuity is spiritually significant in ways that may not be immediately apparent. A church is not just a building — but a building matters. The physical space in which a community worships acquires, over time, a particular significance. It becomes associated in the memories and the hearts of its people with encounters with God, with pivotal moments of personal and communal spiritual life, with the accumulated weight of prayer and worship and word and sacrament. Protecting that space is not a trivial act. It is an act of deep faithfulness to everything that space represents.
His Hands — The Theology of Building
What It Means When a Craftsman Gives His Craft to God
Brother Dominic is a building artisan. His professional life is organised around the knowledge, the skill, and the practice of working with materials — particularly metal — to build things that are useful, functional, safe, and durable. He understands structure. He understands how things are held together. He understands the difference between work that is done well and work that merely appears well done on the surface. And he understands, in the way that only true craftsmen understand, the quiet satisfaction of completing something that will stand.
When this man brings these skills to the service of his church, something extraordinary happens at the intersection of the professional and the sacred. He is not doing church work with building skills as a side application. He is bringing the full weight of his professional identity — all of his training, all of his experience, all of his craftsman's instinct for quality — into the service of the Kingdom. The result is work that reflects both the technical excellence of a skilled tradesman and the devotional commitment of a man who understands that the quality of his work is itself an act of worship.
The Rebuilding — A Chapter That Deserves Its Own Monument
The season in which Co-Domain contributed to the physical rebuilding of Afrancho Central Assembly's church structure deserves to be recorded, remembered, and honoured in terms that match the scale of what he actually did. This was not a minor contribution. This was not a few weekend hours of volunteer work. This was the extended, sustained, professional-grade application of a trained artisan's skills to the restoration of a sacred building — given freely, given cheerfully, given with the spirit of a man who understood exactly what he was doing and why it mattered.
He worked on the structure of this building with the same care and the same standard that he would apply to any professional commission — arguably more, because the building he was working on was the house of God. He brought expertise to problems that would otherwise have required hiring tradespeople who would need to be paid. He brought his knowledge of metal works to the reinforcement and construction elements that required that particular skill set. He brought his craftsman's eye for quality to every aspect of the work he undertook, ensuring that what was built would hold, would last, would serve the congregation well for years to come.
The financial value of what he gave — calculated at the market rate for his skills and his hours — is significant. But the monetary dimension is, in some ways, the least interesting part of the story. What he gave was more than money. He gave his expertise — the accumulated knowledge of years of professional practice, which is not replaceable by payment alone. He gave his attention — the particular, focused, problem-solving attentiveness of a craftsman who takes pride in his work. He gave his identity — the decision to bring his professional self, his trade self, the part of him that knows and does and builds, into the service of God and God's people.
"He didn't just fix the building. He poured himself into it. And now, every time we worship in this space, we are worshipping in a place that his hands helped raise."
The Mystery of Co-Domain
A Name That Contains a Truth
The name Co-Domain carries within it, perhaps unintentionally, a remarkable theological freight. In mathematics, the co-domain of a function is the set that contains all possible outputs — the full space of what is possible. It is the territory that a function is defined to reach into, the full range of its potential effect. And there is something fitting, even prophetic, about this name being attached to a man whose contribution to this assembly has been precisely about expanding what is possible — about refusing to accept diminished versions of what the church, the youth ministry, the men's brotherhood, and the physical building could be.
Co-Domain operates as though he believes — deeply, practically, daily — that more is possible. More than the youth are currently experiencing. More than the Men's Movement has yet reached. More than the building in its current state is yet expressing. He is always leaning forward, always oriented toward the fuller realisation of what God has placed in his care, always in the posture of the craftsman who is not yet done — not because the work is bad but because he can see what it could still become.
The Man Who Does Not Need the Spotlight
One of the most genuinely beautiful things about Co-Domain is his complete absence of any need for the spotlight. In a world that has become increasingly saturated with performance — with the curated presentation of service, with the social-media documentation of good works, with the subtle but pervasive tendency to do visible things visibly — this man is a radical countercultural statement. He does the work. He does it well. He does it consistently. And then he goes home and comes back the next day and does it again.
He is not building a personal brand. He is not accumulating spiritual capital to spend on influence or recognition. He is simply, stubbornly, beautifully faithful — to God, to this church, to the people entrusted to his care, to the building under his watch, to the young people whose potential he refuses to stop believing in. And this faithfulness, conducted almost entirely outside the range of any spotlight, is one of the most powerful witnesses to the reality of genuine, Kingdom-motivated service that this assembly has ever seen.
The Weight He Carries Without Complaint
Living next to the church. Watching over it daily. Being the first port of call when something goes wrong with the building. Being the one who sees the needs that others drive past. Being the one who is always there — this is not a burden-free existence. It is a significant, ongoing, daily commitment that asks something real from a person. There are days when it would be easier to be somewhere else. There are moments when the weight of being the watchman is heavier than it appears from the outside.
And yet, from Co-Domain, the congregation of Afrancho Central has never heard a word of complaint. Never a suggestion that the load is too heavy or the commitment too demanding. Never a calculation of what he is owed or a presentation of what has been asked of him. He carries what he carries with the quiet, undemonstrative grace of a man who has made his peace with his calling — who has looked at what God has asked of him and said yes, fully and without reservation, and who renews that yes every single ordinary day.
Voices from the Assembly — Living Testimonies
The following testimonies are drawn from the hearts of those who have walked closest to Brother Dominic's ministry over the years. Each one is a window into a different dimension of the extraordinary story of this man's faithful service.
From a Fellow Member of the Men's Movement:
"Dominic showed me what it actually means to be consistent. Not consistent when it's comfortable or convenient — actually consistent. The kind where you show up even when you don't feel like it, even when no one is watching, even when there is no reward in sight. Watching him has changed the standard I hold myself to. I am a better man because this man chose to be faithful."
From a Youth Ministry Member:
"He was the first adult in this church who treated me like my opinion actually mattered. Not like a kid who needed to be managed. Like a person with something real to contribute. He kept asking me what I thought, what I wanted to see happen, what I believed God was saying. And slowly I started to believe that maybe God actually was saying something through me. Co-Domain is the reason I stayed."
From a Member Who Witnessed the Rebuilding:
"I watched him during the rebuilding season. I don't think people fully understand what he did. He was there every day. Working. Problem-solving. Bringing his professional knowledge to every challenge that came up. He never made it about himself. He just kept building. The church standing right now — the physical space we worship in — has his fingerprints on it. Literally. And I will never forget that."
From a Church Elder:
"There is a particular kind of peace that comes from knowing Co-Domain is there. Knowing that the building is watched. Knowing that if something needs to be done, this man has probably already noticed it and is already thinking about how to address it. He has given this leadership team a gift that is difficult to fully quantify — the gift of being able to trust that things are in hand. That the physical home of this congregation is in the care of someone who genuinely loves it."
From a Young Man He Mentored:
"He told me once that a man's character is built in the moments when no one is watching. He said the choices you make when there is no audience — those are your real choices. Those are the ones that determine who you actually are. I think about that constantly. And every time I make a choice in private that I'd be proud of in public, I think of him. He taught me that by living it."
The Formal Recognition
The Apostolic Church Ghana Declares
The Apostolic Church Ghana, through the local assembly of TAC-GH, Afrancho Central, in full, joyful, and heartfelt recognition of the extraordinary decade of service rendered by Brother Dominic — Co-Domain — hereby formally confers upon him the designation of AMAZING MEMBER OF THE MONTH, with the full understanding that this designation, while given in time, represents a truth that has been evident for years and will continue to be evident for many more.
We recognise him as a builder — of physical structures and of human ones. We recognise him as a guardian — of this building, of this community, of the youth who need watchmen of their own. We recognise him as a brother — to the men of this assembly who have been sharpened by his character. We recognise him as a servant — in the most biblical, most countercultural, most Christ-like sense of that word. He has not served for recognition. But today, recognition finds him.
Let it be recorded in the life of this assembly that there was a man named Dominic, called Co-Domain, who gave his hands, his skills, his time, his daily proximity, his professional expertise, his burning passion for the youth, his steady presence in the Men's Movement, his calm authority in the Ushering Team, and his watchman's vigilance in the night hours — all of it, freely and cheerfully, to the God he loves and the church family he has chosen as his own.
The Apostolic Church Ghana is richer for his presence. Afrancho Central Assembly is stronger because of his service. And the Kingdom of God has been advanced, in this corner of Afrancho, in no small part through the faithful, consistent, tool-in-hand, eyes-open, heart-fully-given ministry of this remarkable man.
A Word of Blessing
Spoken Over a Builder, a Guardian, a Brother
Brother Dominic — Co-Domain — we speak blessing over your life with full hearts and grateful voices. We speak it in the name of the God whose house you have helped build, whose people you have helped protect, whose youth you have refused to give up on.
May the God who sees in secret reward you openly. May the hands that have built for His house be blessed in everything they touch. May the skills that you have offered as worship be multiplied back to you in provision, in opportunity, in the deep satisfaction of work that truly matters. May your metalwork skill bring you favour in every professional arena. May every structure you raise stand long and stand strong, and may the Builder of all things consider your craftsmanship as an act of praise.
May the young people whose lives you have poured into become everything you saw in them when they could not yet see it in themselves. May they rise up and call you blessed. May you live long enough to see the full harvest of what you have planted in the next generation — and may that harvest overwhelm you with joy.
May the men who have called you brother be faithful to you in return. May you know the deep satisfaction of brotherhood — of being known and trusted and covered by men who have seen you at your most human and have chosen to stand with you anyway.
May the church you have guarded — the building you have watched over, the space you have protected in the quiet and the dark — be filled again and again with the glory of God. May every service held within its walls bear fruit that outlasts the structure itself. And may you know, in the deepest part of you, that your watchfulness has mattered — that Heaven has recorded every night you stood guard, and that not one of them has been forgotten.
And when the day comes — as it will come for all of us — when you stand before the One who designed you, gifted you, placed you in this assembly, and watched you choose faithfulness day after day after day — may you hear the words that are the ultimate reward, the only reward that truly lasts:
"Well done, good and faithful servant. You were faithful over a little; I will set you over much. Enter into the joy of your Master." — Matthew 25:23
With Brotherhood, Honour, Gratitude, and Unending Respect
THE APOSTOLIC CHURCH GHANA TAC-GH · Afrancho Central Assembly
✟ To God Be the Glory — For the Work He Does Through Willing Hands ✟
