Give

Stay up to date by watching our Worldwide Briefings here!

Category: Archive

How to Reach a Nation for Christ: The 7 Stages of Engagement

Bethany International sent its first missionaries to work among the unreached in the late 1940s. Seventy-two (72) years later, more than a thousand missionaries have been trained and sent and thousands of national missionaries have joined them.

Today we are helping to make disciples of Jesus Christ among 269 unreached people groups in 70 countries, and our global team of Bethany and national missionaries have adopted 239 more. It is hard work, but rewarding! These remaining places where the Church is not found are the darkest and hardest places to reach.

Through the years we have identified seven distinct stages of engagement. It is a systematic ministry cycle that begins with the adoption of an unreached people group, then the placement of missionaries, the planting of churches, and prayerfully completing with the now-reached people group being strong in the Lord and sending their own missionaries to other unreached groups

The Seven Stages of Effective Engagement come to life through transformational life stories (some names had to be changed because of the sensitive nature of the ministries that we highlight). I hope you enjoy reading about them!

Stage 1 – Adopt People Group

Prayerfully research and map unreached people groups, area by area, resulting in the ADOPTION of specific UPGs. Missionary candidates are selected, trained and readied to go.

Myanmar (Burma) is a Buddhist country of 54,773,000 people with 49 unreached people groups and some of the most inaccessible tribes in the entire region. The Burmese, with 32 million people, are the primary ethnic group with only one Christian for every 300 people. Much work remains to be done.

Missionaries into Myanmar are engaging 16 new unreached people groups in addition to the groups they are already reaching. This added commitment required much prayer, discussion, and research before the groups were finalized. Our part is helping students be trained as missionaries.

In order to engage unreached peoples, a special type of pioneer evangelist needs to be raised up – those who are able to endure hardship and are riveted in language, culture, and boldness to preach the Gospel. Graduates are sent in teams to engage UPGs as part of Engage500. New workers are beginning preparation to reach these targeted groups with the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.

 

Stage 2 – Arrive on Site

Missionaries ARRIVE on site to begin the challenge of language and culture learning, as well as the process of developing relationships with the local people.

The process of initial engagement happens in-field after momentum builds. About a thousand workers are in training throughout Bethany partner schools at any one time, and they are being deployed in record numbers to the unreached. And yet much work remains to be done if we are to engage a total of 500 UPGs by the year 2020.

One such effort is being undertaken in Muslim areas of the country of Ethiopia. In one very practical training program, workers are trained for weeks at a time and then sent back into their own unreached Muslim people group to begin work in evangelism. This cycle repeats itself severalties over the course of two years. Once graduates are cleared to become a full-time church planter, they are given support for their pioneer ministry.

In the photo below, a team of Ethiopian church planters pray in a very resistant Muslim area before being stationed there to plant a church. Pray for workers like these who are willing to endure much hardship for the sake of the Gospel. May God give them success as the fruit of their labors!

 

Stage 3 – Begin Discipling

People begin to come to Christ when the UPG and the DISCIPLESHIP process begins.

New churches among unreached people groups are seldom planted quickly and easily. Most often they come into being as the result of intense efforts over a period of several years. Spiritual warfare can be quite intense in what we call “Stage 3”, where the worker begins to reach out to the surrounding communities and people begin to come to the Lord. At first it may be only a family or two who come to Christ and there might be much resistance against those who first follow the Lord in the new area. The pioneer worker’s challenge is two-fold: first, to disciple the new believers; and second, to encourage them to reach out to others so that a church can eventually be planted.

There may be a number of new believers under the discipling care of the missionary before a church is organized. And churches in a new culture might even need to look quite different from the churches the missionary is accustomed to in his own culture, especially in areas where there is a great deal of persecution.

New believers have come to Christ and are being discipled. After several lessons, they have decided to take steps to be baptized. The church will be organized once the new believers reach a point where they understand the roles and responsibilities needed to sustain church life and ministry.

 

Stage 4 – Establish Church

An indigenous (local) CHURCH is established.

Jesus said, “Where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I with them.” (Matthew 18:20 NIV). When can we say a church is planted in the new soil of the unreached people group? The size of the church is not the only issue. According to Matthew 18:20 Jesus will be present even in the smallest of congregations! But it is important that the new church has local leadership, is able to care for one another, including taking care of its own finances, and is able to take the Gospel to others, thus growing in both depth of faith and in numbers.

A basic definition of a church might be stated as: “people committed to Jesus, committed to each other, and committed to taking the Good News about Jesus to others. Certainly, this should be the goal of every pioneer worker, to take the Church to where it’s not.

The church photo below was planted by missionaries who cautiously nurtured the congregation, developed local leadership and helped train them in how to reach out to others around them. The church members themselves, and not the missionaries, took responsibility for the vitality of their church. They built their church building with their own hands using funds they raised for that purpose. It continues to be a thriving church today!

 

Stage 5 – Plant Other Churches

The indigenous church beings to PLANT other churches (demonstrating that the Gospel has taken firm root among the people).

The Church is a family. Like the human family, the Church is designed by God to reproduce. Churches that do not reproduce will eventually die.

The Church in the photo below is not the first church planted by the Indian missions organization that birthed it. It is not the 10th or even the 100th. The Bethany partner that planted this Church has a vision to plant many churches throughout the unreached villages of India. They have a desire to multiply and they relentlessly pursue their goal to plant many churches.

Recently, one of their leaders stated the goal that within the next year he wanted each of their churches to at least plant one additional church. This is the evidence of the vitality of this church movement! Once the indigenous (local) church begins to plant other churches, it’s a demonstration that the Word of God has taken deep root among the local people. This Church takes up offerings form each and every member that goes towards expanding their reach into the surrounding villages and even into far-flung areas in the country of India. It’s great having partners with such amazing vision and commitment!

Stage 6 – Multiply Churches

Church MULTIPLICATION becomes a reality as more and more churches are planted.

Church multiplication is taking place in some of the most inhospitable corners of the globe. The photo shoes a nomadic Gabbra man in Northern Kenya who heard the Gospel for the first time and joyfully accepted Christ at the end of the conversation! This simple way of sharing the Gospel with others and discipling them is the heart of this church planting movement.

In the year 2009 alone the disciple-making movement this evangelist is part of saw 400 new churches planted, many of them among nomads! These new churches need both spiritual and material strengthening. The area they’re planted in is semi0arid and the people are poor in many ways. The ministry is continually encouraging and training not only their new believers but also their church planters. Recently they have asked Bethany to also train them in specialized agricultural methods that work in semi-arid conditions like the one in the photo.

Church multiplication depends on several simple, replicable factors, such as a willingness to sacrifice, a commitment to intense prayer, to fervent evangelism, simple discipleship methods, and local leadership, often unpaid. It’s amazing to see this type of growth taking place in otherwise inhospitable environments!

Stage 7 – Send Missionaries

The gospel grows among this group to the extent that they begin to SEND their own missionaries to other unreached people groups around them.

The Gospel first came to the Ethiopian Kambata people in the 1920s, and the church grew tremendously during the Italian occupation of World War II. The Kambata are now 93% Christian and are very passionate about missions. Bethany’s affiliation with the Kambata, in fact, came through their desire to start a missionary training program, which they call the EKSM (Kale Heywet School of Missions).

This photo shows students from the first graduating class of the School of Missions. At one point more than 90% of all their graduates were either serving as missionaries to the unreached inside the country of Ethiopia, or serving in surrounding nations such as Sudan, Zambia, and even as far as Pakistan and China. Several graduates have served unto death, either by sickness or by suffering, and such is their passion to take God’s word to others.

God’s dream, and our dream, is that people from every nation, tribe, people and language will come to the Lord in great numbers, as the Kambata have, and will catch a vision for ministry to other unreached peoples!

Conclusion

It is one thing to ADOPT an unreached people group, but then the hard work of selecting, training, deploying and supporting missionaries begins.

On their part, the new missionary not only perseveres through training and saying goodbye to family, but then has to be planted into new, often very foreign soil. Then begins the challenging task of becoming comfortable with the language and culture of the engaged people group.

If all that a missionary wants to do is to become comfortable living among a new people group, then that missionary will far fall short of God’s plan for the expansion of his Kingdom. Once there, and ice functional in language and culture, the missionary embarked on the hardest task of all: convincing people of the Lordship of Jesus Christ, bringing them together with other new believers, discipling them, organizing the Church, and then growing the new church into a multiplying, missions-minded church that will reproduce and grow.

This is Engage500. It’s a goal, it’s a process, it’s a commitment. Nothing less will bring people out of darkness into the light of God’s glorious Son. To Him be all the praise and glory.

 

This article is from the Spring 2018 Issue of coMission Magazine.

Stepping Into the Unknown

Edward Jesudhas could not believe what he was hearing! Over and over, the Lord was challenging him to leave behind his ministry of 18 years and go out in faith to start all over again. Hadn’t he already done this once before?

As a young man, he had left family and friends to become a missionary in the north of India. He had also stepped out in faith at that time, but that was when he was single and responsible for only himself. Now, he had a wife and two teenagers who relied on him for support and guidance. Would they agree to support his vision? Would they think that he was chasing the wind on a misguided venture?

Through extended prayer and discussions, every member of his family joined Edward’s new faith journey. They moved to a newer, growing part of New Delhi, which is a city of 19 million souls with large numbers of devotees of almost every religion imaginable. However, Edward and his family had one primary people group in mind to focus on: the Chamar.

The Chamar are a very large “scheduled caste” (i.e. low caste) in India of almost 50 million people, primarily Hindu. Edward’s goal was to first plant a church among the Chamar, and then, to train missionaries that would be sent to plant more churches among this unreached people group.

The first part of Edward’s vision is on the way to being fulfilled. He has filled his living room with so many people that it’s now standing room only! He spends a great deal each day visiting and praying for his flock of newly discipled members. He often calls them while stuck in traffic in Delhi’s famous gridlocked roads in order to pray and encourage them.

He has now opened his missionary training school with a very modest enrollment of 3 young men who are training in a two-bedroom apartment. They will graduate in a few months and then will be sent to pioneer the planting of new churches.

A new class of students will then be brought in. Edward is hoping for a dozen new students! As you can seek from the attached photo, the classroom is already tight with just a teacher and three students. When we asked Edward how he was going to fit 9 more students into the classroom, he smiled broadly and quipped, “This is India! We’ll figure it out.”

Edward represents the face of men and women who are stepping out in faith to help accomplish the extension of the Kingdom of God among the unreached. Bethany is involved in financially supporting the efforts of faithful and faith-filled men like Edward and his family in their efforts.

 

This article is from the Spring 2018 Issue of coMission Magazine.

A Ride with Benson

I looked at Benson who was sitting beside me as we jolted our way along the seemingly never-ending road. My hands itched on the steering wheel as my insides were being shaken by the northern Kenyan “road.” Benson, however, had a smile from ear to ear.

“How does this compare to your regular ride?” I asked. His “regular ride” to the unreached tribe he worked among was on top of a cattle truck sitting on the iron beams over the cargo bay for eight hours. “I feel like I’m flying,” he responded, with the smile firmly in place.

Benson was one of many Kenyan missionaries I had the opportunity to train in the years we served in Kenya. Our focus was on the unreached peoples, but our strategy to reach them was to prepare the African churches to send their own missionaries. Benson was not “reaching his own people.” He was, and is, truly a missionary–reaching out to a tribe that does not have the Gospel–a tribe with a completely different language and culture than his own.

That ride with Benson was 17 years ago. He and his family, and his church as a whole, are still committed and engaged in establishing the church among these people so different from themselves.

Our mission is to take the Church to where it is not–while helping others to do the same. The latter phrase is not of lesser value. It reflects our heart to see the Church around the world play its part in transforming their communities and in reaching the unreached. I see this being played out in the ministries of Bethany missionaries the world over.

  • GHANA: Jeff has had more than 3,000 pastors and church leaders in Ghana, from many denominations, go through his Awaken to the World program, showing them the need, and their responsibility, to be engaged in reaching the unreached.
  • SLOVENIA: Chris and Sabina serve faithfully in Slovenia, which has only 1,100 Evangelical believers. While pastoring in the capital city, they began to focus on bringing helming and unity to the church across the nation. They know that only a unified Church can reach the neighboring Balkan region, which remains one of the most unreached places in the world.
  • FRANCE: While visiting in France, Grayling told me, “Impact is now being felt across Marseille.” He was referencing the multiple churches who have been encouraged in their ministries and purposes through the partnership of our team.
  • MEXICO: Recently I traveled in the mountains of Mexico with Bethany missionaries, Lowell and Sheri. The van was full of Mexican believers from various churches, and we were heading for their monthly outreach among an unreached Indian people group. Lowell and Sheri have been going to this village for nine years, always taking along Mexican believers. They have literally been taking the church to where it is not… so the Mexican church can gain a vision and capacity, to play their part in the Great Commission.

Across the world, Bethany workers engage unreached people groups but also work closely with the local Church to see them become committed to and effective in reaching unreached peoples. The Great Commission will only be completed if we, as the Church globally, do it together.

 

This article is from the Spring 2018 Issue of coMission Magazine.

The Furnace

If you’ve never experienced a Minnesota winter, you might not completely understand how brutally cold it is! It is no wonder that in the early days of Bethany, those who met to pray daily gathered in a furnace room to keep warm. This furnace room became a place of encounter and intercession.

Any lasting move of God starts in the place of prayer. From the desperate cry for holiness in 1956 that prompted all nights of prayer to the desire to see 24/7 prayer established for power and protection for ministry around the world – Bethany’s history is rich with the desire to commune with Jesus and seek His face.

As John Piper wrote, “Missions exists because worship doesn’t.” At Bethany, the mission ahead of us is not an easy task. We need the power of the Holy Spirit to take the church to where it is not.

Like the furnace of our early days, the embers of our hearts are fueled when we meet with God in the place of prayer and worship.

The Furnace Prayer Room goes back to the fire and culture of prayer that fueled dedication to seeing Jesus being worshipped in every tribe, tongue, and nation. Through that culture and commitment, we will see the Gospel go forth in power to reach the unreached.

Let’s go back to the furnace.

 

This article comes from the Spring 2018 Issue of coMission Magazine.

Prayer, A Necessity.

Prayer is a privilege purchased for us but the blood of Christ, a privilege, strangely enough that we greatly neglect. We have many privileges which God in His mercy gives us, but if we examine our privileges we will find that they are necessary as well. However, the privilege is secondary to the necessity. So it is with prayer: it is a necessity, pure and simple.

The need of prayer is very clearly presented in the experience of Israel at Rephidim. This was God’s opportunity to teach the young nation their dependence on Him. Moses sent Joshua and his men to fight the battle in the valley against Amalek, while Moses held his hand up toward heaven until Israel prevailed and gained the victory. The enemy was not defeated by manpower or human weapons only, but by the power of God through the intercession of Moses.

This was written for the church – that ‘we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, powers’ (Eph. 6:12). Israel discovered that they were in conflict with spiritual powers far superior to their own natural powers.

Joshua and his men in the valley with swords fighting, Moses together with Aaron and Hur on the mount with uplifted hands speaks of the two phases of the gospel ministry, the outward ministry and the upward ministry. The outward ministry is the sword of God’s Word and the upward ministry is intercessory prayer. Both were necessary in winning the battle and in going forward in God’s purpose. A man of God once said, ‘Prayer is not everything, but everything is by prayer!’

Notice Exodus 17:11, ‘It came to pass, when Moses held his hands, Israel prevailed.’ What does this teach us? That Victory hinged on the intercession of Moses, Aaron, and Hur. What can call for an army of soldiers for Christ to preach the Gospel and great is this need.

But, we can settle it in our hearts that the missionary army will not prevail in its mission unless God’s people lift up holy hands in constant believing prayer – the two or three who will feel the burden and responsibility of the battle in which missionaries are engaged. Satan doesn’t care if the saints are sincere and confident as long as they are weary in prayer.

God needs praying men who sense that they are at the very core of the success or the failure of the Gospel in the world. Such men as these, like Moses and his supporters, will have the thrill of being co-workers together with God in the furtherance of the Gospel. They will see Satan defeated and Christ exalted!

This article is from the Spring 2018 Issue of coMission Magazine.

What, Me, Reaching…Buddhists?

Dale Teal is a financial advisor in Minneapolis and has been a Bethany Donor for some years. Dale’s faith is in action every week through teaching in BSF (Bible Study Fellowship), hosting a small group in his local church, and through living out Kingdom values in his workplace. He loves to travel and has done three overseas trips: twice to Asia and once to Africa. Dale says, “These trips help keep my vision for missions alive and growing.”

In December Dale accompanied Bethany’s Executive VP, Tim Freeman, to Myanmar. This was Dale’s first trip to a Buddhist country. For 10 days, Dale, Tim, and two other American friends worked with vibrant in-country partners for the engagement of unreached peoples there. One of our key partners, Bishop Chin, has a missionary training school to help prepare and launch new missionaries into the harvest field. Bishop Chin has a focused desire to impact several unreached people groups in the country and welcomed our visit with open arms.

Dale had no plans to just come along “for the ride.” He was prepared to actively share his faith as opportunities arose. Opportunities did arise and in spades!

Two of the days were spent helping Bishop Chin with Christmas evangelism programs. It is not easy to do open-air preaching in this Buddhist country. In fact, it was forbidden for years. Recently, the government has allowed Christians to share their faith in selected public meetings, but primarily this is only allowed at Christmas. Hundreds of Buddhists turned out in curiosity to hear the Gospel. Dale shared his faith through a translator both times. 

The American was quite a “draw” for the event and Dale connected very well! He kept it simple and relatable and showed how Christ transformed his life. After he spoke, Bishop Chin shared the Gospel extensively in Burmese, and as a result, several people came forward to receive Christ during the two evenings we held these meetings. Our local partners will ensure that those who have newly come to Christ will be discipled!

 

At the end of the trip, Dale expressed his desire to do it again! These trips are a balance of ministry and fellowship with local leaders and believers. We also experience the magnificent scenery and the amazing hospitality of the local people. When we come alongside partners like Bishop Chin, fulfilling the Great Commission becomes a reality. Raising up workers to bring the Gospel to those who have never heard is the first step in completing the Matthew 28 Great Commission Mandate – make disciples of all nations!

Myanmar Country Facts

  • Continent: Asia
  • Population: 54,773,000
  • Unreached People Groups: 49 (Less than 2% Evangelical Christian)
  • % Evangelical Christian: 5.09%
  • Largest Religion: Buddhism

 

This article is from the Spring 2018 Issue of coMission Magazine.

A Brazilian Restaurant in Africa Making a Big Impact

Twenty years ago, Bethany missionaries from Brazil began a Churrascaria in a country in West Africa. After much perseverance and hard work, the restaurant is thriving and generates revenue to bless many ministries both inside Africa and more recently in South Asia.

Today, inside that West African country, the restaurant’s profits fully contribute towards the following:

  • It funds a Christian elementary school in an impoverished area with 270 students and staff of 15 locals. This includes providing breakfast and lunch daily.
  • It supports two missionaries and a home for 16 young homeless women in a nearby city.
  • It rents buildings for churches in 4 different locations and towns, and provides a portion of support for several pastors including housing.
  • In a city located on the other end of the country, the restaurant contributes the rent of a food dispensary, which daily attend the needs of 60 underprivileged children, sharing with them in a very tangible way, the love of Christ.
  • In the interior of the country, it sponsors a sports center that that reaches out to the young people of the community.

Seeing this restaurant become a multiplier for missions has led the founders of the Brazilian restaurant to move to a country in Southwest Asia. They have begun a second restaurant. The first restaurant is blessing multiple ministries and now is pioneering a new mission enterprise in Central Asia!

“God our God shall bless us! God will bless us, and all the ends of the earth will fear Him” Psalm 67:6-7

 

This article is from the Fall 2017 Issue of CoMission Magazine.

Helping Others Do the Same

Bethany seeks to effectively partner worldwide to accelerate the spread of the gospel. We identify specific challenges and opportunities that warrant collaborative efforts and address root causes rather than just symptoms. The measure is that the Lord Jesus is made known and that His Body is empowered to take the church to where it is not.

Bethany is blessed to work with more than 100 international mission partners serving in 96 countries. This past year the fruit of these united efforts has seen the increase of thousands of new believers and new churches.

  • 37,800 new followers of Jesus
  • 1,260 churches started

Progress in preparing workers for the harvest field in 2016

  • 303 pioneer missionary training schools
  • 2,340 national workers trained
  • 282 Unreached People Groups with Workers
  • 106 Unreached People Groups adopted by Bethany and international partners

96 countries with Bethany workers and partners including

  • 21 of the 50 predominately Muslim countries
  • Both India and Nepal (95% of all Hindus in India)
  • All 9 predominately Buddhist countries
  • 28 of 30 countries with the largest numbers of Unreached people groups

“Therefore pray earnestly to the Lord of the Harvest to send out laborers into His harvest.” Matthew 9:37

“Unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone but if it dies, it bears much fruit.” John 12:24

This article is from the Fall 2017 Issue of coMission Magazine.

Entire Village Responds to the Gospel

For nearly 75 years, Bethany, along with our alumni and partners, has been obeying Jesus’ command to “GO” into all nations and share the Good News.

In 2015, God led Bethany to focus on the unreached – those without the chance of attending a church, reading the Bible, or even ever meeting a believer. We committed to a specific goal of engaging 500 unreached people groups by the end of 2020. Today, by God’s grace and power, we have been able to engage 461 unreached people groups (UPGs).

Watch this Rare Moment in West Africa

One of our partners, Sam Dunya, presents the Gospel to an unreached village in Burkina Faso (West Africa). As a result, there is an astounding reaction to the message:

Four months prior to when this video was taken, Enoch, one of Sam’s missionaries, began working with this village. In short, Enoch will continue to follow-up with and disciple the new believers as well as help to establish their first church.

We invite you to join us in prayer and to consider giving to this goal to take the church to where it’s not!

Video subtitles:

“So today, if you receive Jesus Christ, and you’ve said:

‘Lord I believe that Jesus is your son and I receive him as my Lord and my Savior,’

you will be saved. It means your sins will be forgiven of you, and today you will become a child of God, and you will not be condemned, but you will be saved. So, how many of you today, right now, before I leave here – how many of you here would like to receive this gift of God? And to say:

‘Yes Lord, I won’t be scared.’

If you are here right now, and you want to receive Jesus Christ, you want to receive God’s gift– raise up your hand for me. Don’t be shy. Don’t look at somebody next to you. Just raise up your hand. And I want you to say this after me (Lift up your hands, don’t be shy! Don’t look at somebody standing next to you.):

‘Lord Jesus,’ (say it loud) – ‘Today, I believe that you are the Son of God, and it is because of me God sent you. And so today, I receive you today as my Lord and my priceless Savior. I will follow you the rest of my life, amen.’”

How the ENGAGE500 Initiative Works

HIDDEN PEOPLES

There are thousands of people groups worldwide with no Christian witness. These are real people, with real faces and real names. Engaging them is no easy task. It requires working together to identify, adopt, and mobilize workers.

1. Trapped in Need

Unreached people groups often have significant health, educational and community development needs where outside intervention is still necessary. As well, according to joshuaproject.net, more than 2,000 people groups have less than 0.5% Christians. And, there is intense spiritual darkness with little hope of change unless the Gospel is both demonstrated and proclaimed.

2. Limited Resources

Too often, efforts to reach these hard places are not sustainable and are under-resourced. The challenge could be a small remote tribal group of 500 people in West Africa, of which no known believers yet exist, or number into the millions with a history of being highly resistant to the Gospel. The hardest challenges require that God’s people work together in new ways. Workers with geographic and cultural proximity are desperately needed.

3. Culturally Inaccessible

How will they hear? Christian workers have not been prepared to enter these remote, needy, and often dangerous environments. The average person could not walk into a village and even expect to be heard, let alone accepted. There is much skepticism, fear, and distrust.

BRINGING HOPE

There is nothing more exciting for strategic than training and discipling first generations believers to reach their own people and establish the church for the first time, and then to see a new generation of believers commit to reaching their own people with the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

1. Researching Needs

Research builds understanding of practical and spiritual needs, gives a basis for establishing relationships, and sheds light on how to serve and make a difference. Research identifies people groups with less than 0.5% Christian presence in a country. Responding to practical needs opens the door to bring the light of the Gospel to new people groups. In light of this, the Bethany Institute for Missionary Research has been developed.

2. Working Together

When we assess needs, understand the on-the-ground physical, social and spiritual dynamics, and combine resources and abilities under the leadership of the Holy Spirit, the walls of resistance begin to come down. Collaboration creates breakthrough and grows as we work together with national partners to see sustainable movements toward Christ. Bethany partners with churches, denominations, and national mission initiatives.

3. Distributed Training

Bringing training to where the workers are, rather than bringing them to a centralized training facility, multiplies the number and effectiveness of workers. Bethany partners have started more than 300 missionary schools strategically placed at the front lines to prepare missionaries as close as possible to where these workers and the people they serve live. This plays a key part to raising up leadership and multiplying believers and churches.

 

This article comes from the Fall 2017 Issue of coMission Magazine.

Give