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How Bibles are secretly distributed by Voice of the Martyrs

Martyrs

Image: VOM

Since its founding by Richard Wurmbrand, Voice of the Martyrs (VOM) has used “creative means to get Bibles into restricted nations.”

In a recent fundraising email, VOM asked potential donors to join a “unique opportunity to distribute 400,000 print Bibles as well as digital Bibles on SD cards into hostile areas and highly restricted nations.”

VOM spokesperson Todd Nettleton told MinistryWatch this wasn’t a particular project, but part of the ministry’s ongoing efforts to distribute more than one million bibles per year in hostile and restricted areas.

“We give a special focus to this effort in our free monthly magazine in April of each year, but the effort to deliver Bibles—and the chance for VOM readers to sponsor Bibles—extends throughout the year,” Nettleton explained in an email.

He said international ministry leaders at VOM expect Bibles sponsored by a donor today to be in the hands of Christians in a hostile or restricted nation within 12 months.

Local believers and outsiders participate in carrying Bibles into a country, but “when it gets to the point of actually handing a Bible to a Christian who needs one, that is always done in partnership with Christians and/or churches in the country where the distribution is happening,” Nettleton told MinistryWatch.

READ: Brother Andrew and Bible smuggling

VOM makes efforts to protect those involved in bible distribution, but VOM staff and partners in hostile areas are “willing to take every necessary risk to receive and deliver Bibles,” he said.

VOM has used secret and illegal printing presses in China, Iran, and Cuba. It has floated Bibles into North Korea attached to helium-filled balloons. In other places, VOM has hired smugglers to carry in Bibles.

He decided that if he was going to risk his life to smuggle this book into a closed Muslim nation, he should read it first.

“Several months ago one of the smugglers began to ask spiritual questions. He decided that if he was going to risk his life to smuggle this book into a closed Muslim nation, he should at least read it first to see what he was risking his life for. We pray that the seeds that Bible planted in his heart will blossom into faith,” Nettleton said.

While not all hostile countries receiving Bibles can be listed for security purposes, Nettleton said the list includes North Korea, Iran, China, India, Afghanistan, Colombia, Vietnam, Cuba, Laos, Myanmar, Pakistan, Sudan, Turkey, and Uzbekistan.

So, how can a donor be sure the Bible gets into the hands of a Christian believer in a closed country?

Nettleton said VOM has reporting requirements, including receipts for Bibles purchased and any distribution expenses, along with specific reports of where and when and how many Bibles were distributed in a given location or meeting.

One young man and his mother traveled 10 hours to get to a distribution point to receive a box of Bibles to share with their church and new believers.

Bible distribution tends to account for between 12-14% of VOM’s expenses. For example, in 2023 VOM spent $10,998,768 delivering Bibles in hostile countries and restricted nations. That calculates to just over 12% of revenue and just under 13% of expenses. The previous few years reflected a similar percentage.

VOM shared this story about a North Korean who smuggled Bibles into that country

Each time a new customer walked through the door of the small coffee shop in South Korea where Min-jae shared his story with VOM workers, he hesitated or stopped talking completely. The middle-aged North Korean studied each person’s face anxiously, searching for clues to his or her intent.

Min-jae knew from experience that he could never be too careful, even outside North Korea. Spies often cross the border into South Korea to find defectors and report their names to the North Korean government, which then punishes their relatives still living in the country.

Min-jae became a believer during a lengthy business trip to China in 2004. While there, he had visited a friend’s church and fallen in love with the Bible and all of its “weird” stories.

“In North Korea, no one trusts each other,” said Min-jae, who even suspected his wife of being a spy. “We have to be very cautious about how we think and always careful with our words. I still have that kind of tendency. I get a little nervous, looking back and forth.”

Five months later, after being baptized, receiving his own small Korean Bible and growing in his understanding of the Scriptures, Min-jae had to return to North Korea. But as he prepared to leave China, someone from the church made a bold request: Would he accept a shipment that included 10 hidden Bibles once he returned to North Korea?

At first he declined. He was already nervous about bringing his own small Bible into the country. If border guards caught him with even a few pages, he could be tortured or killed. And Min-jae knew that receiving the shipment of Bibles could result in his imprisonment in one of North Korea’s notorious concentration camps.

As he agonized over the decision, he remembered that he had given his life to Christ and it was no longer his own. He decided to trust his Lord.

“Now I believe in God, and in God everything is possible,” he thought. “I can do anything he wants. Even if it looks difficult, maybe God will just do his work.”

The shipment arrived a few months after Min-jae’s return to North Korea. At 1 a.m. on a morning in November 2005, he approached a boat along the bank of the Yalu River, praying for God’s protection and guidance with every step.

After retrieving three large vinyl duffle bags, he hoisted them onto his back and ran toward his home in the dark. Once inside the relative safety of his home, he opened the bags to find them tightly packed with pants. But wrapped randomly within the clothing were 10 small Korean Bibles.

“I was afraid and nervous,” he said. “Receiving them was fine, but when I actually opened the bags I began to wonder, ‘How can I distribute these at this time?’ I began to have doubts.” Min-jae decided to keep the dangerous books hidden until God led him to the right people.

Then, as he walked through his village one day in February 2006, he heard a man whistling a Christian hymn; he had learned the tune, “The Trusting Heart to Jesus Clings,” during his time in China. Min-jae made note of where the man lived and decided to deliver some Bibles to him that night under cover of darkness.

After midnight, Min-jae rewrapped eight of the 10 Bibles in the pants and left them at the man’s front door. He didn’t leave a note for fear that it could be traced back to him.

Months later Min-jae returned to China with the intent of defecting, but in November 2006 he was arrested and extradited to North Korea.

In prison, he met a former friend who had been arrested because of his Christian faith. And as they talked, Min-jae came to realize that the man he gave the Bibles to was his friend’s uncle. That man also had been arrested and was being held in a different cell in the same prison.

Min-jae’s friend told him that his uncle had given the eight Bibles to relatives, who had then committed their lives to Christ. The entire family of 27 people began to gather secretly at night to worship God and to read and discuss the Scriptures. But one night a neighbor overheard the believers singing hymns and reported them to authorities. The secret police raided their home and arrested everyone.

Although he wasn’t able to interact with them in prison, Min-jae often heard some of the family members praying in their cells. He never told his friend that he was the one who had left the eight Bibles on his uncle’s doorstep. It was still too risky for anyone to know.

A month later, all 27 family members, including Min-jae’s friend and his friend’s uncle, were sent to a concentration camp.

SET FREE

Min-jae was released after seven months in prison, and in 2014 he successfully defected to South Korea.

He remains concerned — even feeling a bit guilty — about the Christian family suffering in a concentration camp. After all, he supplied the Bibles that helped lead to their imprisonment. Still, he knows that God ultimately provided the Bibles and that he is with them as they suffer in his name.

“I believe that these 27 people are children of God and that God will somehow release them miraculously,” Min-jae said.

VOM has provided some support to Min-jae, and today he serves in a variety of ways at his church and participates in a one-on-one discipleship program. He continues to pray for a job that will enable him to support himself and asks Christians in the United States to pray that more North Koreans will learn of God’s love for them.

“I just want for North Korean people to hear the gospel and share the gospel,” he said. “That is my only prayer.”

At the conclusion of his conversation with VOM workers in the South Korean coffee shop, Min-jae pulled out the hand-sized Bible he received in China when he first came to know Christ. The outside looks like a notebook, but its pages contain God’s Word in a near-microscopic font. He had hidden the Bible from everyone, including his wife, and it had sustained him when he was a lonely Christian fearful of his work as a Bible smuggler.

Like the family of 27 believers imprisoned for their faith and countless others secretly following Jesus inside North Korea, Min-jae depends on God’s Word, too.

Ministry Watch and Metro Voice| with permission

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