An illiterate mother came home with a Gospel tract and asked her son,
Sam, to read it to her. He refused, so she tucked it away among the few
other books in the house. One day Sam read the tract and gave his life
to the Lord. Subsequently he led his whole family to Christ and
enrolled in a Bible college.
Print Media
In addition to educating and supporting
indigenous workers, GFA also supplies these
faithful servants with the tools they need to be
effective witnesses. Gospel literature is one of the
most vital of these tools. Native missionaries carry
Bibles, New Testaments and tracts—by bicycle,
shoulder bags or boxes atop their heads—to some
of the most remote villages and dismal slums on
earth.
Printed literature is greatly valued
across South Asia. Even a Gospel
tract, costing as little as half a
cent, is often treasured and
passed on with powerful
impact.
Gospel for Asia operates
four printing presses in Asia.
These presses allow us to
produce more than 25 million
pieces of literature in various
Asian languages each year.