Mission Stories & News
Once Poor, Now Rich
January 28, 2024
When Asmita was 8 years old, a neighbor told her parents about a Seventh-day Adventist orphanage that cared for children who had no parents or had parents who couldn’t take care of them.
Read MoreHome Transformers
January 28, 2024
She looked down at her arms and wondered why she was getting “It’s impossible for me to sleep there,” she said. “I don’t know why.” Twinkle and Milind didn’t know what to do with the room. But they knew where to start.
Read MoreSecularism and Post-Christianity at a Glance
January 21, 2024
Most secular and post-Christians believe there is no objective truth and that individuals decide what is true and false, right and wrong, good or bad.
Read MoreLoving Heavenly Father
January 21, 2024
During the day, Father worked in the field, growing crops. But he began to drink instead of growing crops. He stopped coming home in the evening.
Read MoreGospel Goosebumps
January 21, 2024
She looked down at her arms and wondered why she was getting goosebumps. A strong desire filled her to walk over to the building and see with her own eyes what was happening.
Read MoreThe Sower and the Sewer
January 14, 2024
Naresh and Rita smiled as they understood that through a clogged sewer, God had opened the way for them to minister in this community, sowing seeds of faith.
Read MoreMuch-Awaited Child
January 14, 2024
But the man and his wife kept praying. They knelt on their knees at 3 o’clock every morning and told God about their desire for a child.
Read MoreSoccer on Sabbath
January 14, 2024
“If you choose to become an Adventist, you will have no part in this family,” he said. “You will be thrown out of the family.”
Read MoreHinduism At A Glance
January 7, 2024
There is no one definition of what makes someone Hindu; individuals determine what they believe. A person can be a Hindu without believing the Hindu scriptures or in any of the religion’s 33 million gods.
Read MoreHappiest Boy in India
January 7, 2024
His face filled with longing to be with them, to wear the uniform that they were wearing, to carry the books that they were carrying, and most of all to sing the songs they were singing.
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