Thirty-nine people gave their lives to Jesus in Bhutan last year. Nine more have already followed in 2026. In a country where Christianity is a tiny minority, that’s not just encouraging — it’s extraordinary.
Our partners recently visited six village house groups they helped plant across the country. What they found gave them real reasons to celebrate. One group in a remote area started just four years ago with a single family. Now a second family has joined. Neither can read or write, so our partners gave them MP3 players loaded with biblical teaching — a simple solution keeping their faith alive in a place with few other resources. In another village, a fellowship that began six years ago with two families has grown to five, with another family on the way.
Elsewhere, three young men showed up to a Bible study for the first time — and all three repented and put their faith in Christ. And on one long taxi ride, a partner led his driver to Jesus. Just a conversation. Just an ordinary journey. Just someone willing to share.
That’s what gospel work looks like in Bhutan — small gatherings, unlikely moments, and lives quietly being transformed in mountain villages most of the world has never heard of.
The work is far from done. Pray for our partners as they keep going — and for many more families, young men, and taxi drivers to encounter the living God.
Tell others about this story
Thirty-nine people gave their lives to Jesus in Bhutan last year. Nine more have already followed in 2026. In a country where Christianity is a tiny minority, that’s not just encouraging — it’s extraordinary.
Our partners recently visited six village house groups they helped plant across the country. What they found gave them real reasons to celebrate. One group in a remote area started just four years ago with a single family. Now a second family has joined. Neither can read or write, so our partners gave them MP3 players loaded with biblical teaching — a simple solution keeping their faith alive in a place with few other resources. In another village, a fellowship that began six years ago with two families has grown to five, with another family on the way.
Elsewhere, three young men showed up to a Bible study for the first time — and all three repented and put their faith in Christ. And on one long taxi ride, a partner led his driver to Jesus. Just a conversation. Just an ordinary journey. Just someone willing to share.
That’s what gospel work looks like in Bhutan — small gatherings, unlikely moments, and lives quietly being transformed in mountain villages most of the world has never heard of.
The work is far from done. Pray for our partners as they keep going — and for many more families, young men, and taxi drivers to encounter the living God.
Tell others about this story
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