London Ghana SDA Church Concludes Transformative Family Life Series

5 Mar 2026, 12:41Robert Kyei-GyauLondon, Greater London, England, United Kingdom

London Ghana SDA Church Concludes Transformative Family Life Series

The London Ghana Seventh-day Adventist Church on Sabbath, 28 February 2026, concluded a life-changing eight-day Christian Home and Family Life Series focused on transforming marital and family relationships.

The series featured Pastor Sampson Kenneth Twumasi, Head Pastor of the Columbus, Ohio, Ghanaian SDA Church, and centred on the theme: “From Good to Great – Marriage Vitamin Cs to Strengthen Marriages.” Throughout the programme, the congregation received valuable lessons and practical reminders on building stronger homes and healthier family relationships.

While Pastor Twumasi’s daily presentations deeply resonated with attendees, his Sabbath sermon on 28 February provided particularly practical marital guidance rooted in biblical principles.

He emphasised that even when a marriage is good, couples must intentionally work to make it better.

“The marriage Vitamin Cs cannot be purchased from the pharmacy or supermarket,” he explained. “They are spiritual principles that couples must intentionally cultivate.”

Pastor Twumasi noted that transforming a marriage from good to great does not happen through a single breakthrough moment.

“Moving your marriage from good to great doesn’t come by one breakthrough moment. It comes from consistent small pushes, daily effort, determination, and willingness to succeed,” he said. “Most marriages don’t collapse because of lack of love; they collapse because of resistance to change.”

Outlining the “Vitamin Cs” that sustain marriages, he stressed that Christ Himself is the “Big C,” underscoring that when Christ forms the foundation, marriages thrive. He added that conversation oxygenates the marriage, cash stabilises it, positive choices clarify it, and children gladden it.

Pastor Twumasi also urged couples to turn away from nine destructive behaviours affecting relationships today. He identified the “marriage killers” as cheating, unfaithfulness, yelling, pornography, criticism, contempt, irresponsibility, apathy, and carelessness.

Encouraging spiritual renewal, he referenced 1 Peter 1:3–4, reminding the congregation that through Christ’s resurrection, believers are given a new life filled with hope and purpose — a future that begins now.

He concluded the series with a message of reassurance and faith, affirming that, indeed, it shall be well.