Infant church is a faith based book, genre ,spiritual growth and Christian living. In a world full of deception, many doctrines ,many churches, one can be lost in the midst of the confusion. Infant church aims at equipping believers to spiritual growth, as the only way to outgrow deception. Drawing its examples from biblical truth with simple guides into maturity.
About the Author

Celestine Ajiambo is a passionate reader and lover of Christian history and literature. Having served as bible study coordinator in Christian fellowships from teen class, I realized that as much as many believers go to church a few mature spiritually. Providing a conducive environment for deception especially in this age. Providing a conducive environment for deceivers and consequent loss of lives. Having the pulpit and social media as a platforms, I encourage believers to gain enough knowledge, equipped to deal with deceivers.
Apart from writing and reading, am a production technician dealing with automated machines.




1 review for Infant Church – (Christian Living / Spiritual Growth (Non-Fiction)
Doreen –
This is one of those books that feels less like a read and more like a quiet conversation with someone who has genuinely wrestled with their faith and come out clearer on the other side.
Infant Church takes a structured, methodical approach to the Christian walk – moving through salvation, abiding, spiritual infancy, overcoming, ministry, and maturity — and what strikes you is how practical it remains throughout. The author isn’t interested in lofty theology for its own sake. The concern is always: where are you on this journey, and what do you do next?
The early chapters on the foundations of faith and what it means to truly abide in Christ are the book’s strongest.
There’s real clarity here. The warnings about spiritual infancy, particularly how an immature church becomes vulnerable to deception, watered-down doctrine, and sign-chasing — feel urgent and timely, especially given the African context the author clearly writes from.
Where the book occasionally strains is in its density. Scripture is layered upon scripture at a pace that can feel relentless, and some arguments could breathe a little more. The reader sometimes needs space to sit with an idea before the next one arrives.
But the heart behind it is unmistakable — a genuine pastoral concern for believers who have heard about Jesus but not yet truly encountered him.