Christmas Outreach Testimonies

We are amazed by the way our Lord is using young believers in the villages for His Glory. They don’t have any theological background; they have simply experienced the power of the Gospel. Because they have experienced transformation in their lives, they gladly share their experiences with others, with passion and boldness, without thinking of any negative effect or what people might think. Here are some of their stories.

Hindu Drug Addict Now A Preacher

Vijay is a 38-year-old man born into a Hindu priestly family. His family wanted him to be the next priest in the family-owned temple, where thousands of people come to worship every day. He was sent to a prestigious Hindu university to study all the Hindu religious books, and to be trained. While doing his research there, he moved in with some Hindu monks and there he became a drug addict. After his research ended he came back from the university, but now he was a full-blown drug addict who was completely out of control. He wandered homeless for 11 years, and just like the prodigal son in the Bible, he lost everything.

Finally, someone found him dying in a railway station, and he ended up in a hospital, still without any hope, no one to care for him. His family and friends rejected him. It was in this hospital bed last April, during our Easter outreach, when some young people shared the Gospel with him and prayed with him. He was given a New Testament and introduced to the Gospel. He was touched by this message of hope, and wanted to know more about Jesus. The Holy Spirit began to move in his life. Our brothers regularly visited him, prayed with him, and shared the Gospel with him. Within two months he was delivered and transformed by the power of the Gospel.

During our last Christmas outreach Vijay joined the outreach team in the state of Rajasthan. He and his team were sent to an unreached people group called “Dhakad.” They are a population of 700,000 people without a single known Christian among them. In their society, drug addiction, alcoholism, gambling, and abuse are all very normal. Vijay, along with 78 other men and women, reached the tribal villages of the Dhakad community and shared the Gospel. During the outreach, Regi attended 2 public meetings, where 350-400 people attended each meeting. Since we were the first people to reach those tribal villages with the Gospel, this was the first time in their lives they had ever come to a Christian meeting.

In one of the meetings, most of the men in attendance were drunk, but God still moved in this meeting. Last week Regi was in these villages, attending some meetings arranged by our brothers among the Dhakad community. He said he could clearly see the light of the Gospel shining there. He attended three different meetings. According to our minister in charge of the outreach, they have started regular prayer groups in over 31 villages. Brother Vijay has been ministering among the young people who are addicted, and God is using him in a powerful way, delivering and healing people. One thing Regi noticed is that lots of young people attended last week’s meetings and responded to the Gospel call.

Young Women Minister Freedom

During the Christmas outreach three of our young women who attended the outreach were sharing and distributing the literature in the village. During this time, some women came and, very politely, invited them to pray for a young girl who was ill. Without knowing the full situation, our sisters followed them to a large house. They were led into a dark room where, suddenly, the women attacked them and began to abuse them. They forcefully took their literature bags and other belongings, and the sisters were locked in that room. Our sisters were pleading with them to let them go but the other women were members of the women’s wing of a Hindu radical group.

After the initial shock, the three young women knelt down and started to pray. While they were praying in the dark room, they heard a growling from the nearby room. Groping for the light switch and turning it on, they saw a young woman in terrible condition, laying chained to her bed. By her appearance they realized she was mentally ill and had been locked in the room for a long time. They were afraid and didn’t know what to do. They tried to talk to her, but all she did was beg them for food. In tears, our sisters knelt down, crying out to the Lord to save them from that room.

After some time, one of them started to sing a song, and one by one the others started singing with her. While they were singing, the woman in chains sat up in her bed, and began to shout and curse. The young women just continued singing and praying in the spirit.

In their own words, “while we were praying and worshiping the Lord, the woman who was mentally ill stopped shouting and cursing us, and began to cry. At the same time, we felt great boldness and comfort. As our fear turned to great comfort, we went to her bedside and stood around her worshiping the Lord. How long? We don’t know. The woman who was chained was calm and peaceful, smiling at us. Outside the room we heard shouting, and after some time two men came looking for us and opened the door to our room. We were in the other room where they had locked the young woman. To their amazement, they found us sitting with her and she sitting peacefully. She was delivered – completely healed. Later we came to know she had been chained up in that room for seven years, and to preserve her family’s honor, they had never taken her to any doctors.”

The young woman’s name is Anita. The other women in her family were trying to teach our sisters a lesson for daring to come and share the Gospel in their village, but our Lord had other plans! The One who saw the tears and heard the cry of the people wanted to save Anita from her sufferings. In the second week of February, we had a public meeting in that village. Anita was there, and she is now completely normal. In her home we started a regular prayer meeting. Our God is an amazing God who does amazing things through His children!

Help Us Share the Gospel

We want to thank you for every one of your prayers. Without your prayers we would not be able to harvest this harvest. To read more inspiring and exciting testimonies of what God is doing among the unreached people groups of India, click the links on the right, and keep reading!

Proclaiming the Gospel…

…until He comes

February 2024 Partner Letter

Do you ever find yourself at a loss for words, searching for the right thing to say? This can happen to all of us, and at various times. Maybe you just experienced a wonderful blessing, and you can’t find any words to express your happiness. Maybe it was a time of intense grief or shock, and the words just don’t come. Jesus encourages us in all situations that He will give us the words to express ourselves.

When I first experienced the Presence of God, when I knew without a doubt that He was with me, I had no words to express the joy I felt. Thoughts flashed through my mind and emotions flooded my heart so rapidly that there were no words that could possibly express everything I wanted to say, nor could I speak the words fast enough to keep up with my heart and mind. That was the moment I received the gift of tongues, and it seemed to fit perfectly with the moment.

Today, as I hear the testimonies of miracles and deliverance in India, I find myself speechless again. How can it be, that God loves us so much, that he pours out His Spirit and His Presence on us when we least deserve it? We are lost in sin and disease, and He pours out His salvation, His forgiveness, His peace, and His grace on us. Then He empowers and equips us to do the same for others. When we can’t find the words to share the Gospel, the Psalmist says “open your mouth wide, and I will fill it.” (Psalm 81:10 MEV)

Then there are times when our faith is challenged, and the world wants to test us and trap us with our words. Like the women in this month’s newsletter, sometimes all we can do is pray and cry out to the Lord. Even then His promises are sure. Jesus tells us “Do not be anxious how you will answer or what you will say. For the Holy Spirit will teach you at that time what you should say.” (Luke 12:11-12 MEV)

Finally, there are times when we should just be quiet and pray. As it says in Proverbs, “Even fools are thought wise when they keep silent; with their mouths shut, they seem intelligent.” (Proverbs 17:28 NLT)

Blessings in the Wonderful Name of Jesus,

Thomas

January 2024 Partner Letter

As the year 2023 recedes behind us into history, and 2024 has now begun, we have entered a season of reflection. Old things have passed away, and new things are here. We have said goodbye to dear friends who have transitioned into their final reward, and we have said hello to tiny new lives who are just beginning to notice the world around them. It’s like a giant relay race, where one group of runners passes the baton to the next. We all want to run the race with endurance and make it to the end.

How do we accomplish this? Is it by pushing ourselves to run as hard and fast as we possibly can? Is it by putting our focus on our own needs and wants? After all, who else has our best interest at heart? And how can we possibly accomplish our goals if we aren’t relentlessly pursuing them? Who else is going to care enough to help make that happen?

Perhaps we are asking the wrong questions. Jesus said “For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world and loses his own soul? Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?” (Matthew 16:26) In the verses just prior to this, Jesus tries to reorient our thinking away from selfishness and toward selflessness. He wants us to think of others more than ourselves. And he promises us that His Father will take care of our every need.

As believers in Christ, and followers of His Gospel, we know that we are saved by grace through faith. But do we realize that Christ intended for us to also live by faith? So, every action we take, every thought we have, should be carried out from that perspective. If God says He loves us, we can be certain of that. If He says we are forgiven, we should act like it. If God says “by His stripes we are healed” then we should act like it. We go to a web page and check our bank balance, and then we go shopping with full assurance that our purchase will not be declined. Let’s apply that same principle to our walk with Christ. We go to the Bible and read a promise written there. Now let’s apply that promise to our personal situation with full assurance that our prayer will not be denied. Let’s trust Him.

Blessings in the Wonderful Name of Jesus,

Thomas

More Than We Ask or Think

As I, Regi, write this my heart overflows with joy and gratitude as I remember all God’s wonders over the past year. As I have shared before, the pro-Hindu government is determined to stop anyone from reaching the unreached people with the Gospel. They are changing the laws, and persecuting house churches in the villages, physically and emotionally. They falsely accuse and arrest pastors and believers, imprisoning them for many weeks without bail. Hundreds of house church leaders and believers have been in jail for months for sharing the Gospel.

This was the background as we planned our 2023 Christmas outreach. We had 648 house church leader trainees to send out for practical evangelism as part of our training. During this planning, we were approached by two youth groups who wanted to join us. Then a church wanted to join the outreach to celebrate their 25th anniversary. By the time we started on December 5th, we had over 1,620 people participating. Starting in the state of Gujarat, the teams went out in groups of 10, to the unreached villages in the remote areas. They spent two weeks in door-to-door evangelism, sharing the Gospel and giving out the Gospel of John to whoever could read it in their native language. They prayed for people’s physical, spiritual, and emotional needs, and invited them to a special Christmas public meeting in a nearby area.

During those two weeks of evangelism our people faced many challenges – physical, emotional, and spiritual. In several villages they were beaten up by Hindu and Muslim radicals, in others they were locked up in a room. Our sisters were verbally abused, accused, and publicly humiliated.

As they went house to house, they were stirred emotionally. They saw people suffering from physical and spiritual oppression, possessed by evil spirits, helpless and ignorant, forced into all kinds of evil practices, and in great need of deliverance. Spiritually, they saw great darkness everywhere, people who were lost and hopeless. As one of the tribal sisters said “We live among these people. We see these things every day but as we carried the Gospel message with us, our eyes were opened, and we began to see things differently. We finally understood the phrase in the Bible ‘Jesus was moved with compassion.’ When we shared the Gospel with them, we felt pure love and compassion. When we prayed for them, we prayed in tears. Our only desire was for the Lord to touch them, help them, and deliver them from darkness. Nothing else mattered to us. Not people’s accusations, not their threats, not humiliation, not our own fears. Somehow, we wanted them to be free from bondage.” These are the words of a 21-year-old tribal girl who participated in the outreach, and she dedicated her life to serve the Lord.

During the outreach, our Lord moved through the brothers and sisters, and hundreds of people were touched, delivered, found new hope, and were healed from their sicknesses. We reached 896 unreached villages and shared the Gospel with over 216,000 homes. We had over 239 Christmas public meetings in different villages. Due to Hindu and Muslim radicals’ threats, and officials not giving permission, we had to cancel several public meetings in different villages. In spite of that, according to our field report, over 75,000 people attended these public meetings. More than 9,000 people publicly responded to an altar call. The Lord of The Harvest gave us a great Harvest, beyond what we thought and imagined. Personally, I spent 23 days traveling and attending 59 public meetings, where we saw hundreds responding to the Gospel call, and people healed and delivered in front of our eyes.

One of the incidents which we will never forget took place at a public meeting very close to a slum. As Sherly and I walked from the car to the meeting place, a young, crippled girl shouted at us to stop. Unable to walk, she crawled toward us with her hands, dragging her useless legs behind her through the filthy water along the road. Seeing her struggle, we walked over to her. She greeted us and said she recognized me. She said we had given her a wheelchair several years ago, but her alcoholic father sold it to buy liquor. Here was a young girl in torn dirty clothes, soaking wet in 40° weather, shivering, sitting there looking desperate. In tears she said “I heard that you were coming here to preach, so I waited for two hours by the road, hoping I would see you. I don’t have a good dress to wear to the meeting, so I waited here, just to ask for another wheelchair.” Sherly walked back to the car, opened her suitcase, and got some of her clothes, a sweater, and a light blanket. With the help of another sister, they took her to her one-room house to meet her mother. I sent two of our pastors to a nearby medical shop to buy a wheelchair.

Finally, I joined the meeting. By this time, we were late. Over 500 people from the nearby slum were present in the meeting. I preached a simple Gospel message, gave an invitation, and a good number of people responded. We prayed for the sick and needy. At the end of the meeting, I wanted to publicly present the new wheelchair to the girl. My wife informed me that, now that she had a nice dress, she was sitting in the meeting. I asked some of the sisters to bring her to the front. As they lifted her, everyone recognized her and was aware of her condition. There was no life in her legs, but as she was brought to the front, we heard a loud cry from her. Everyone thought it was because of pain, but it was easy to see that while the other sisters carried her, she was moving her legs! After a few meters, she took a few steps. As she put weight on her legs, her lifeless legs became normal, and she began to walk on her own. She fell several times, but each time she got up and walked again in front of the people. I fell on my face and people were in tears, shouting “Hallelujah! Glory to God!” I was crying, looking at the wheelchair that I bought for her. The most I could do was give her a wheelchair. I was trying to be kind and caring, but my Lord went far beyond that. He gave life to her legs and lifted her up! All glory and honor to our God alone! That day, holding her mother’s shoulder for balance, she walked home in her own strength! A few days later she stood strong and shared her testimony. As you can see, she no longer needs the wheelchair.

Help Us Share the Gospel

We want to thank you for every one of your prayers. Without your prayers we would not be able to harvest this harvest. To read more inspiring and exciting testimonies of what God is doing among the unreached people groups of India, click the links on the right, and keep reading!

Proclaiming the Gospel…

…until He comes

Seeing Life Through New Eyes

Kumhar is the name of a people group in India with a population of 19 million throughout India. According to ancient Indian mythology, the Kumhar are offspring of the god Braham (who they believe created the universe). They claim to be the first inventors of the wheel. Their name means “makers of earthen pottery.” They speak the languages of the areas where they live. The Kumhar’s livelihood is agriculture, animal husbandry and making earthen pots. They are highly spiritual, honest, and hard working. For the most part, Kumhar farmers work on land owned by higher castes. They are given a portion of the crops at harvest time. The Kumhar are Hindu and pray to god Shiva, (the Hindu destroyer god) and other gods and goddesses.

In one particular state there are more than 2 million Kumhar people. Many missionaries have tried to reach them with the Gospel, but they have always met with great opposition and rejection. Some of our believers in that state have been praying for years for an open door to reach this people group.

Praise to our Lord that over the last four years we have seen Him moving through a young man from the Kumhar community and reaching thousands of people.

Aravind was born in a Kumhar community where the high caste people forced them to work in their field. He is the only child of his parents. His father drove a tractor for a living and his mother, too, worked on the farm. Aravind’s parents sent him to the village school so they could both work, and the school also provided him with a free lunch. He enjoyed playing with the village children, but he was treated badly by them because his family was poor. Unexpectedly, Aravind’s father became very sick. He was admitted into the hospital, but none of the treatments worked. Finally, the doctors diagnosed him with lung cancer, and within two months he died. Aravind was 16 at the time. He had a dream to become a schoolteacher, but the situation forced him join his mother, working for their landlord on his farm.

The life on the farm was horrible. They had to work almost 10 hours a day, but the wages were very low. They were unable to pay their house mortgage and the bank took their house, so they became homeless. At 17, Aravind took his mother to Delhi hoping for a better life. But in the city, he and his mother suffered greatly, and they ended up living in a slum in a plastic tent. Aravind’s mother become very sick because they did not have warm clothes to wear in winter. Some church people came to serve food in the slum and saw the physical condition of Aravind’s mother. They took her to the nearby hospital where she received care. After a few days in the hospital, she regained her strength. They went to the church to thank the people on the following Sunday. That day both mother and son heard the name of Jesus for the first time in their lives. The following week, on Christmas Day, Aravind and his mother went to another church service. There they heard the Gospel for only the second time in their lives, and they gave their lives to Christ.

With the help and encouragement of the church people, Aravind and his mother agreed to help an old missionary family who had been working among the Kumhar people in another state. For 23 years they had not accomplished much in their mission work. They were disappointed in their lack of success, beginning to feel their age, and had no children or any other family to take care of them. Aravind and his mother went to live with them and take care of them. Aravind grew in his faith and relationship with Lord under the guidance of the missionary couple. The missionary couple realized that our Lord had sent Aravind to their home as an expression of His divine care, provision and faithfulness towards them for their service to God in their old age. They also realized that God had a plan for them to invest in this young man’s life. Aravind and his mother took care of the old missionary couple for 7 years. They both went to be with the Lord during the covid season. After their death, our Lord gave Aravind a burden for his own people. He and his mother returned to their village and started to live in the community.

Aravind and his mother went to visit a young relative who lost her eyesight a few years ago. In her words “the doctors sent me home in darkness.” Her mother had to help her with everything. She became quite desperate and tried to commit suicide by hanging herself from a ceiling fan. While visiting her, Aravind’s mother asked if they could pray for her. With her parents’ permission, Aravind and his mother laid their hands on her and prayed for her to receive her sight. After the prayer she opened her eyes, and she was able to see! God in His mercy healed her from her blindness.

That was the beginning of a great revival among the Kumhar community, and over the past three years God has opened the spiritual eyes of thousands of people in the Kumhar community to see the light of the Gospel through Aravind and his mother. Today God is accomplishing and fulfilling the dreams of the missionary couple through their disciples among the Kumhar people. Sixteen house churches have been established in different villages in the Kumhar community.

Last June we started a training center among them, and 32 men and women are attending our house church leaders training from the Kumhar community. Among 19 million people, 16 house churches and 486 baptized believers is a very small number. But it’s a new beginning, and our Lord promises that “He will build His church.”

October 2023 Partner Letter

India is the most populous country in the world with one-sixth of the world’s population. According to official estimates in 2022, India’s population stood at over 1.42 billion. Among these people, there are 2,373 people groups, and 90% of those are yet to be reached with the Gospel. In the 2,135 unreached people groups there are more than 1.3 billon people.

So how do we reach them? One person at a time, one village at a time, one people group at a time. This month we hear about a people group of 19 million people, most of whom have never heard the name of Jesus. But God, in His rich mercy and grace, has reached out to these people through the lives of a few dedicated people who felt the burden to reach these people with the Gospel.

How were these people encouraged in their calling? Through the influence of others who were dedicated to the Lord in their own calling, with their own burden. As believers, we each have a calling and a burden to reach someone with the Gospel. Are we inspiring others to do the same?

As we think about our own lives, there are people around us who we influence. How can we encourage them to seek the Lord and find their own calling, and then step out and do what the Lord wants them to do? How can we be an example to them by demonstrating a faith filled life of service to our Master?

As you reflect on your calling, ask God to show you how you can help others discover their calling. You will be encouraged as you encourage others. As I say often, thank you for your faithfulness in partnering with us. We could never do what we are doing without your prayers and financial support.

Blessings in the Wonderful Name of Jesus,

Thomas

Overflowing With New Wine

Last month I was visiting a training center in a village called Dharuwala. The village name means “drinker’s village.” It is an untouchable village where the people are uneducated, and 90%, both men and women, are addicted to alcohol. The village business is making illegal liquor and selling it to other villages, which comes with all kinds of other illegal activities and fighting.  For many years we were trying to reach this village and send one of our outreach teams but had always met with resistance. Our brothers were beaten up in the village, put to shame, and threatened. We regularly prayed to the Lord to open the door for us to reach the people in and around that village.

Two years ago, during our Christmas outreach program nearby, two young girls brought their father, Bhagwan Singh, to be prayed for. He was an alcoholic and for the past four months he had been very sick. His liver function was minimal, so they took him to many hospitals, and they all recommended a liver transplant. These girls loved their father very much. The oldest daughter who is 19 was willing to donate part of her liver to her father, but because of his other health issues and the cost of the operation the family could not afford it.

One of their relatives who lives in another village asked some of our outreach members to visit their home. They shared the Gospel and asked if they could pray for the family. The first thing they asked was prayer for this man who was dying.

Our brothers not knowing the seriousness of his health issues prayed for his healing. The family was very touched by the prayer of our brothers. Every religious place they had gone for prayer in the past, the people chanted some mantras which they never understood. Here our brothers were praying in simple words which they could understand, and it was clear that they were expressing in prayer their heart’s desire for that dying man and his family. After the prayer our brothers invited them to the public meeting and told them, if possible, to bring the sick man to the meeting.

With great expectation the family brought him and his family to the public meeting. In the public meeting there were many people who were suffering with life-threatening sicknesses. They heard the testimony of a husband and wife who were healed of AIDS. Another woman who was bedridden for 6 years due to a stroke testified how the Lord healed her through the prayers of God’s people. Her husband and children stood with her in front of the people and thanked the Lord. These testimonies built the faith and expectation of this family. We laid our hands on that man and his family and prayed and blessed the family in the public meeting. During the follow up we came to know that this man was from Dharuwala village, and this man and his family was involved in making illegal liquor. In fact, it was in his house that they locked our outreach team a few years ago and beat them up very badly. Before they left that night, they asked us to visit them in their village.

According to Sobha the oldest daughter “in the public meeting when my father realized it was a Christian meeting, he was very uncomfortable. He felt guilt and shame for beating up the brothers who visited our village. But we were desperate and helpless. This was our last hope. In the public meeting, hearing the testimony of the people and the message that was preached that day was very comforting to our family. We even expected that our father would instantly be healed, but nothing happened. As we went back home, we all, including my father, felt comforted. It seemed that our burdens had lifted, and an inner peace and joy came back to us that evening. We sat together as a family, smiling at one another and enjoying our tea. It was the first time in our lives that we could remember just sitting together in peace, instead of constantly fighting, abusing and cursing one another. As the days went by the brothers and sisters visited us every week, praying for us, comforting us and building our faith in the Lord Jesus. We began to see changes in our father’s health. After many months of being bedridden he started walking around the house without anyone’s help. Within six weeks he was able to eat normal food and do normal activities. We never went to the doctor but we believe our Lord gave him a new liver. As a family we dedicated our lives to the Lord to serve Him and Love Him.

We then started a weekly prayer meeting in Bhagwan Singh’s home. Because of his testimony, many other families brought their sick and alcoholic relatives. Bhagwan Singh used to make and sell alcohol from his house. Now people come to his house to be delivered from alcohol.

Last November 49 people were baptized, including Bhagwan Singh and his family. Then during Christmas outreach our team shared the Gospel with every household in Dharuwala and its 6 surrounding villages. At the public meeting held in Bhagwan Singh’s field, around 700 people attended and more than 140 people came forward for prayer. Then again during the follow up last February another 41 people were baptized. Again during the Easter outreach we had yet another public meeting under the leadership of Bhagwan Singh with over 1,000 people attending, and in June 52 people were baptized. The last week of June we started a training center in Bhagwan’s former liquor shop, training 32 men and women who were saved and delivered from alcoholism. Most of these people are uneducated, some illiterate, but still they want to learn and share the Glorious Gospel that transformed their own lives.

Recently I (Regi) was in Dharuwala teaching the students. Four men came in, wanting to buy liquor, not realizing that Bhagwan Singh’s liquor shop had been transformed into a Gospel training center. Bhagwan Singh invited them in, and they sat listening to me for 45 minutes. During the break we shared the Gospel with them and served them tea. One of them said “For the past few years we have come and bought liquor from Bhagwan Singh. He never invited us to his house. He always chased us away, but today he invited us to his home, his daughter greeted us with a big smile and respect, and served us tea. You all have honored us, sat with us, talked to us with respect, and that is enough for us.” We prayed for them and blessed them, and in tears they accepted our prayer. Bhagwan Singh invited them to come and join them on Sunday for worship, and they said they would come.

God is using Bhagwan Singh and his family to save, serve, deliver, and transform the lives of the people in Dharuwala.

Help Us Share the Gospel

The people of India are searching and open to the Gospel, despite the persecution they face. The fields are ripe unto harvest. Join us in this work with your prayers and financial support.

To find out how your support will help us, click here. To read more inspiring and exciting testimonies of what God is doing among the unreached people groups of India, click the links on the right, and keep reading!

Proclaiming the Gospel…

                     …until He comes,

Raising Up Joshuas and Calebs

Exciting Word began with the single vision of “reaching the unreached, telling the untold, and touching the untouchable with the Love of God.” The Lord has enabled us to be faithful to that vision and calling. But over the years, as I meet with different people, they very often ask me the same questions: “You have a great vision of reaching the unreached people groups, but what will become of the next level of leaders? Do they have the same vision?” My answer to those questions has been “we are raising up Calebs and Joshuas by the hundreds in the younger generation, to take God’s people into the Promised Land.” Many times I found the answer was not convincing enough or too common. But last month as I attended different meetings, the Lord gave me a better answer to that question.

As we prayed and started various house church leaders training centers in the very remote villages, I saw the young men and women and their eagerness to learn God’s Word. This gave me great joy and assurance that we are training up Calebs and Joshuas. We started 21 training center in various states, with over 600 men and women signed up for the training. Every year we train between 500 and 600 men and women through our training centers in their own native languages in their own native areas. Our instructors are training each of them to be a leader who will lead an indigenous church in their own native language and impart a vision for the lost souls around them, creating a church that is growing and reproducing itself. The students are involved in reaching the unreached through our systematic practical outreach programs that take place three times a year: summer outreach, Christmas outreach and Easter outreach. The impact of these outreach programs has resulted in thousands of people coming to the Lord, and has started hundreds of house churches every year in the unreached areas.

June was a very busy month, with Vacation Bible Schools and youth meetings in different places. Our VBS was a great blessing. It began with 3 days of teacher training in the first week of June. This took place in four different places, in four different languages, and 432 young men and women from villages and tribal areas attended the training. During the next two weeks, they were able to reach over 13,400 children in the villages and slums, age 16 and under, through Bible stories. The teachers who made it possible were simple village young men and women who were touched and transformed by the message of the gospel.

Arushi, 21, was a Hindu college girl when she was transformed by the love of God a year ago. She left a life of rebellion and drug addiction, and took the initiative to conduct a VBS in several slums. She and her friends reached 700 slum children and continue to reach them.

Shanti, a mother of 3 children who lives in a slum, came to the Lord two years ago when her husband was healed. She shared the Gospel with her neighbors, and today both she and her husband are leading several house churches and prayer groups in different slums. Last week we had a baptism service and 29 people who had been addicted to idol worship and alcohol were baptized.

Nadira is a 19-year-old Muslim girl who attended a VBS 5 years ago and received the Lord as her personal savior. When people in India come to know Jesus, they are excited to tell others about the God who changed their lives. They want others to know about the freedom, joy and peace they have experienced. Nadira shared her new-found faith with her other Muslim friends, which caused lots of problems in her life. Her parents locked her in her room without food and water, to force her to renounce her faith in Jesus. But Nadira never did. Over the last four years she has suffered a lot physically and emotionally for her faith. Last year she started to attend college. There she found two other young girls who believe in Jesus, but their parents were also unhappy about it and never allowed them to meet Christian friends. All three began to enjoy their freedom in praying, worshiping, and meditating on God’s Word. Last month they secretly arranged a youth meeting where 42 people attended, and 11 of them dedicated their lives to the Lord. Nadira and her two other friends secretly took baptism.

Manu is from a Hindu high caste family. At a young age he got into a fight and stabbed another young man, ending up in prison for 7 years. When he came out of prison, his family rejected him and he got into the world and worldly habits. Around Christmas last year, our Christmas outreach team found him lying on the roadside. They took him to the hospital, paid for his medical care, and gave him a place to stay in the church. He gave his life to the Lord, and last month he brought 21 other young men to a youth meeting who are struggling in their lives and need deliverance and healing. It was such a great joy to see that our Lord is transforming lives and using them to transform others.

Last month, as I was sharing in different youth meetings, I was greatly blessed to see the vision is being carried forward by the next generation. Pastor Peter, Pastor Binny, Pastor Timothy and Pastor Abishek all are young youth pastors who conducted the youth meetings in different states. Along with them, I ministered to over 1,200 young men and women in different youth meetings. I was blessed to see their commitment to the Lord and His service, and their willingness to serve the body of Christ. They have come from Hindu, Muslim, Sikh and many other religious backgrounds, experienced the love of Christ and received deliverance, healing, and compassion. As one of them said “we are loved to love others, we are delivered to deliver others, we have been healed to heal others, we have been comforted to comfort others and we have been transformed to transform others in Jesus Name.”

Help Us Share the Gospel

The people of India are searching and open to the Gospel, despite the persecution they face. The fields are ripe unto harvest. Join us in this work with your prayers and financial support.

To find out how your support will help us, click here. To read more inspiring and exciting testimonies of what God is doing among the unreached people groups of India, click the links on the right, and keep reading!

Proclaiming the Gospel…

                     …until He comes,

July 2023 Partner Letter

There is an old saying that goes “Only one life will soon be past. Only what’s done for Christ will last.” As we grow older it is natural to look back and reflect on what we have accomplished in our lives. We think about our childhood, our youth, our career, and our family. Did we make the right decisions at each crossroad of our lives? And as believers in Christ, we also think about our calling. Did we do everything that God called us to do?

In this month’s story, Regi reflects on his calling and asks another important question: Will there be someone to carry the mission forward into the next generation? Have I succeeded, with God’s help, in raising up someone who can keep my vision alive? It’s an important question to ask ourselves. Have you accomplished everything that God called you to accomplish? Is there someone who can carry your vision forward for the next generation? If you have children, think about how you can inspire them to build on what you are leaving them. If you don’t have biological children, perhaps there are young people you have mentored, and poured your life into. Maybe you have creative gifts and you will leave behind a legacy of creativity to others.

Whatever gifts God has given you, take time to reflect on how you have stewarded them. Rather than burying your talents, look for ways to multiply your talents. If your gift is teaching, use your gift to impart knowledge and understanding to others. If your gift is art or music, use your gift to enrich the lives of others while you are here on earth. If you have a gift of financial stewardship and generosity, use it to bless others and to advance the Kingdom of Heaven here on earth. See Romans 12:6-8 for more examples of how to use your gifts. These gifts are summed up in Romans 12:10 “Be devoted to one another in brotherly love.”

We rejoice that the brothers and sisters in India are devoted to one another. It gives us a wonderful example to follow in our own lives. Thank you for your faithfulness in partnering with us. We could never do what we are doing without your prayers and financial support.

Blessings in the Wonderful Name of Jesus,

Thomas

June 2023 Partner Letter

Dear Partner,

God loves this world more than we do, much more than we can even imagine. Is it any wonder then, when He moves in a remote tribe who are considered “untouchables” and decides to touch them with His Spirit? This month’s story is about such a tribe, a people group cast off by society, without hope in this world. But God…

What about you? Are you feeling like society has cast you off? Are you feeling like you don’t fit in? Like you aren’t accepted anywhere? Our answer is the same as this remote tribe discovered. But God! God loves you more than you can even imagine. He wants to provide for you, heal you, give you His Peace. He wants to shower you with His blessings. Sometimes we need a reminder of His plan, His purpose, and His character.

Jesus summed it up when He said “The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I came so that they would have life, and have it abundantly.” If you are experiencing things in your life being stolen, killed, or destroyed, Jesus says that is the work of the “thief.” If your relationships are being destroyed, your peace is being stolen, your hope is being killed, that is not God at work in your life.

Take a moment to cry out to Him and ask Him to impart to you His promise of abundant life, and He will do it! He wants to give you His abundant peace, His abundant joy, and yes, even His abundant provision. Take Him at His word today and expect Him to answer with showers of blessings on you.

That’s what this remote tribe did, and God began to change their lives. Like what happened to them, your change isn’t going to manifest itself immediately. You may have to listen for God’s direction in your life. You may have to start making different choices. But God tells us that “My grace is sufficient for you, for power is perfected in weakness.” Let’s choose to trust Him with that, stand firm, and watch God move and bring the answer.

Thank you for your faithfulness in partnering with us. We could never do what we are doing without your prayers and financial support.

Blessings in the Wonderful Name of Jesus,

Thomas