
Conservation Agriculture, Discipleship, and the Church’s Call to Restore Creation
The Bible opens in a garden.
A gardener. A calling. Work it. Keep it.
And somewhere along the way, many ministry leaders were taught that discipleship is mostly about words. Preaching. Teaching. Programs. What happens inside a sanctuary.
But what if discipleship also includes soil? Food. Dignity. Stewardship. What if caring for creation is not a distraction from the gospel, but one of its visible fruits?
That is the vision behind Equipping Farmers International (EFI) and the work of Michael Cooley. What began as a personal conviction around sustainable agriculture has become a fast-growing, church-centered movement helping farmers across the Global South grow food, restore land, and follow Jesus with their hands in the dirt.
This is a story about conservation agriculture. But it is also a story about discipleship, mission, and the church rediscovering its calling to restore what sin has broken.
Table of Contents
From Finance to Farming: A Call That Took Root
Michael Cooley did not begin his career in ministry or agriculture. He spent years in finance and hospital administration. Stable. Successful. Predictable.
But alongside that career grew a quieter interest. Sustainable farming. Homesteading. Growing food instead of depending entirely on systems beyond your control.
That interest became conviction when Michael realized how many people in the world do not know where their next meal will come from.
For millions of families, especially smallholder farmers in the Global South, agriculture is not a hobby. It is survival. When crops fail, people do not eat.
That realization eventually led Michael into missionary work and, in time, to partnering with church leaders across Africa, Asia, and Latin America. In 2023, after rapid growth made informal coordination impossible, Equipping Farmers International was formally established.
Its mission is clear:
- Improve food security
- Strengthen livelihoods
- Build church sustainability
- Do it all through the local church, in Jesus’ name
What Is Conservation Agriculture, and Why Does It Matter?
At the center of EFI’s work is a farming approach called conservation agriculture. While the term may sound modern, the principles are old. Ancient, even.
Conservation agriculture is built on three core practices:
1. Minimal Soil Disturbance
Plowing destroys soil structure. When soil is repeatedly turned, it loses its ability to hold water, air, and nutrients. Conservation agriculture minimizes disturbance so the soil can function as God designed it.
2. Year-Round Soil Cover
Bare ground bakes in the sun and erodes in the rain. Keeping soil covered with crop residue or living plants protects moisture, feeds microorganisms, and prevents erosion.
3. Crop Diversity
Monoculture depletes soil. Rotation restores it. By alternating crops, especially grains and legumes, nutrients are replenished naturally.
These principles are endorsed by global institutions like the FAO, but EFI teaches them through a different lens: creation reflects God’s wisdom, and stewardship is discipleship.
Why Conventional Farming Fails the World’s Poor
In many parts of the Global South, farming depends entirely on rainfall. There is no irrigation infrastructure. No safety net.
A typical pattern looks like this:
- Rains begin.
- Seeds are planted.
- Crops grow strong.
- Rain suddenly stops for weeks.
- Crops die.
- Families go hungry.
When land is degraded by plowing and left uncovered, soil becomes hard and lifeless. Water runs off instead of soaking in. Even short dry spells can destroy an entire harvest.
Michael explains it this way: growing food for these farmers is not like planting tomatoes for a summer sandwich. It is the only food they will eat.
EFI trains farmers to rebuild soil biology so that moisture stays in the ground longer. The result is resilience. Even during drought breaks, crops survive.
In some cases, yields increase dramatically. Sometimes by 50 percent. Sometimes several times over. Always with improvement year after year as the soil heals.
Discipleship That Restores What Sin Has Broken
EFI’s approach is not only agricultural. It is theological.
Michael frames their work around four broken relationships caused by sin:
- Our relationship with God
- Our relationship with ourselves
- Our relationship with one another
- Our relationship with creation
In Christ, God is restoring all things. Conservation agriculture becomes one way the church participates in that restoration.
Scripture supports this vision. Humanity’s first calling was to “work and keep” the garden (Genesis 2:15, ESV). The word “keep” carries the idea of guarding, nurturing, and protecting.
Paul reminds us that God’s invisible attributes are visible in creation (Romans 1:20, ESV). How we treat the land reflects what we believe about its Creator.
EFI teaches farmers that erosion is not neutral. Burning crop residue is not harmless. Allowing soil to wash into rivers is not inevitable. These practices matter because stewardship matters.
Discipleship, in this context, looks like obedience with a hoe in hand.
Training Through the Church, Not Around It
One of EFI’s most distinctive commitments is its insistence on working through the local church.
Many development organizations avoid churches. EFI does the opposite.
Why?
Because the church is God’s plan A.
EFI trains church-based agricultural leaders who then train others. Trainers train trainers. Farmers train farmers. In some regions, the training chain is already five generations deep.
This model creates accountability, community, prayer, and shared learning. Farmers gather. They compare crops. They encourage one another. They hold each other to standard.
The results speak for themselves. While many programs see adoption rates around 15 percent, EFI consistently sees rates over 60 percent.
The difference is not technique alone. It is trust. Relationship. Church-based discipleship lived out together.
Dignity, Not Dependency
EFI is intentionally asset-based, not needs-based.
Instead of importing food, they help farmers steward what they already have. Land. Labor. Knowledge. Community.
The result is dignity.
A father feeds his family from his own field. He sells surplus. He pays school fees. He tithes to his church. The church becomes sustainable instead of dependent.
In some regions, pastors have asked supporting organizations to reduce financial aid because agricultural income now meets their needs.
That is transformation. Not charity, but restoration.
Why This Matters for Western Ministry Leaders
Many Western churches understand evangelism. Many understand discipleship as Bible study.
Fewer understand biblical wholism.
Jesus fed hungry people before preaching to them. He healed bodies and souls. He called his followers to care for “the least of these” (Matthew 25:40, ESV), not as a side project, but as a mark of kingdom life.
Caring for creation and meeting physical needs is not a replacement for the gospel. It is evidence of it.
For ministry leaders asking where to begin, the invitation is simple:
Start seeing mission holistically.
Start telling better stories about what God is restoring.
Start helping your people connect belief with practice.
One Clear Next Step
Stories like this do not spread on their own.
They need clarity. Craft. Structure. A message that honors the people involved and invites others into the work without guilt or hype.
That is where Reliant Creative serves.
FAQ
How can churches participate in global food security and poverty alleviation efforts?
Churches can engage in food security initiatives by partnering with ministries that equip local leaders rather than importing aid. Training farmers through church networks strengthens communities, supports sustainable livelihoods, and integrates discipleship with practical daily work.
What is conservation agriculture, and why should ministry leaders care about it?
Conservation agriculture is a farming approach built on minimal soil disturbance, year-round soil cover, and crop diversity. Ministry leaders should care because healthy land directly impacts food security, economic stability, and long-term discipleship in vulnerable communities.
Is caring for creation part of biblical discipleship?
Yes. Scripture teaches that humanity was called to “work and keep” creation (Genesis 2:15, ESV). Stewardship of land, resources, and communities reflects obedience to Christ and demonstrates the visible fruit of gospel transformation.
Why do church-based development programs often succeed where aid programs fail?
Church-based models build trust, accountability, and long-term relationships. When training happens through local congregations, adoption rates increase because learning occurs within existing spiritual and community structures rather than outside them.
What can Western ministry leaders learn from agricultural discipleship movements?
Western leaders can rediscover holistic mission—connecting evangelism, discipleship, and physical restoration. These movements demonstrate that gospel ministry addresses spiritual formation alongside real human needs such as food, dignity, and sustainable livelihoods.
👉 Ready to tell your ministry’s story with clarity and dignity?
Reliant Creative helps ministries:
- Clarify their message
- Shape long-form content and podcasts
- Build donor trust through honest storytelling
- Connect theology, mission, and real-world impact
If your ministry is doing meaningful work but struggling to communicate it clearly, book a confidential strategy call with Reliant Creative. We will help you craft stories that reflect what God is truly doing, without exaggeration, without pressure, and without noise.
Tell the story well. Let faithfulness speak.