Voice of
the Martyrs Ships
100,000th Bible to Egypt
A new program from Voice of the Martyrs (VOM)
has just shipped its 100,000th Bible
under a program that puts God’s Word
in the hands of those who want to know about Jesus but are in nations that
limit access to Bibles.
Officials for the Bibles Unbound outreach say the program, launched because of
government limits on the publication or importation of Bibles, has surpassed by far the original hopes of a few hundred Bibles a month.
After only about nine months of operations,
the milestone Bible was mailed through
Bibles Unbound by Dr. Mike Earls
of Beggs, OK, and now is en route to an Egyptian who wants to read about Jesus.
Earls
and his wife became familiar with The Voice of the Martyrs in the early ‘80s
when VOM’s founder, Richard Wurmbrand, spoke at Oral Roberts University. They
later lost contact, but recently were in Phoenix, AZ, when they noticed two
men behind them in line wearing VOM shirts. They struck up a conversation,
and the relationship was renewed, VOM officials said.
Earls is an osteopath who cares for the
physical needs of people, but his life’s work is with VOM. “We are very, very,
very interested in seeing people saved. That’s our main thrust,” Dr. Earls
said. He believes one key ingredient in a recipe for that success is to have Bibles available.
“If anything, we
need to have superfluous amounts of Bibles
in the world where they’re easy to come by,” he said.
The Bibles
Unbound effort allows Christians in the free world to mail New Testaments one at a time directly
from their homes to someone in a nation where Bibles are illegal or restricted. While a truckload of Bibles can be spotted and stopped, that
same truckload of Bibles, wrapped and
mailed individually, just disappears, officials note. And once Christians in
nations where they are persecuted have access to Bibles, they will read them, and develop questions about Jesus.
Earls and his family help in the work, Earls
said. “It makes the kids more a part of the ministry so their prayers are a
little more tangible,” he said. “They’ve actually laid their hands on the Bibles, thought about the people, prayed
about the people, whereas sometimes when you get stuff from a magazine or a
website it sounds great and you say let’s contribute, but you’re really not as
involved as with this sort of unique ministry.”
Earls and his family have chosen to reach
out to Islamic nations, and have been sending Bibles to Egypt so far. “We’re interested in Muslims hearing the Good
News and receiving the Truth. The Gospel is going forth in the Islamic world. I
think once the Muslims hear the Good News of Jesus they’re going to accept Him,
but they can’t without the Word of God.”
Participants contribute the $30 each month
for five New Testaments and packing
materials needed to ship them. Addresses also are provided by the program.
The name of the outreach comes from the New Testament message from Paul to
Timothy, that, “Wherein I suffer trouble as an evil-doer, even unto bonds, but
the Word of God is not bound.”
Voice of the Martyrs CEO Tom White said
persecuted Christians even today are willing to risk being beaten and
imprisoned for their faith, and VOM supports them in many ways. “When they
asked us to begin mailing individual Bibles
into their communities, we immediately knew that was an incredible way to join
forces with them,” he said.
VOM is a non-profit, interdenominational
ministry working worldwide to help Christians who are persecuted for their
faith, and to educate the world about those persecutions. Its headquarters are
in Bartlesville, OK, and it has 30 affiliated international offices.
VOM was launched by the late Richard and
Sabina Wurmbrand, who started smuggling Russian Gospels into Russia in 1947,
just months before Richard was abducted and imprisoned in Romania where he was
tortured for his refusal to recant Christianity.
Wurmbrand was eventually released in 1964
and the next year he testified about the persecution of Christians before the
U.S. Senate’s Internal Security Subcommittee, stripping to the waist to show
the deep torture wound scars on his body.
The group that later was renamed The Voice
of the Martyrs was organized in 1967, when his book, Tortured for Christ, was released.
Publisher’s Note
The
article above was posted November 30th, 2006 on WorldNetDaily.com.
Voice
of the Martyrs is truly an outstanding and somewhat unique evangelical ministry
that I highly recommend supporting. My wife and I do!
VOM’s
ministry is to aid Christians around the world who are being persecuted for
their faith in Christ and educating the world about those ongoing persecutions.
One of the aspects of this ministry that my wife and I like is the fact that in
aiding those who are being persecuted, VOM doesn’t just send them money -- they
provide tools to those in need so that they may support themselves. In other
words, they not only give a fish but give a net as well.
For
those who may have concerns about whether or not VOM is a good steward of donations,
during 2005 out of some thirty million dollars donated to VOM only seven percent
was utilized for general administrative purposes and only three percent was
utilized for fundraising purposes. That means 90% of all donations went to
spread the Gospel of Jesus and help persecuted Christians and non-Christians around
the world.
To
learn more about the work of VOM, sign-up for a free monthly newsletter, find
out how you can become part of their Bibles
Unbound outreach, or make a donation, please visit their web site at www.persecution.com,
call (918) 337-8015 or write to VOM, P.O. Box 443, Bartlesville, OK 74005.