WHAT IN THE WORLD! Global Impact
October 21, 2025
Host: Dr. Jamie Mitchell
Guest: Phil Tuttle
Note: This transcript is taken from a Stand in the Gap Today program aired on 10/21/25. To listen to the podcast, click HERE.
Disclaimer: While reasonable efforts have been made to provide an accurate transcription, the following is a representation of a mechanical transcription and as such, may not be a word for word transcript. Please listen to the audio version for any questions concerning the following dialogue.
Jamie Mitchell:
Good afternoon and welcome again to Stand of the Gap Today. I’m your host, Jamie Mitchell. If I were to say that the world is changing right before our eyes, your response will probably be Jamie. That’s a great way of just stating the obvious. Well, I’m not sure at any time in my lifetime we have seen so many major movements and consequential changes occurring across the global map. Just last week, we saw a historic peace agreement occur in Israel with Hamas, but also there is amazing support of 20 different nations, many of whom who have been enemies or unwilling to cooperate in the past. Now we must pray that this will hold in the days of ahead. We continue to see monumental shifts of the world’s population through global migration. And this is not just people moving, but a sea change in the political makeup in countries.
From this migration, we have seen warring nations lay down their guns, but we’ve also seen a ramping up of persecution, especially towards Christians. In the last few days, all and all the world is not what it was, and by tomorrow it will change again. Yet, for believers of Christ, no matter the state of the globe, our focus is to sustain. How do we get the gospel to everyone and how do we build a thriving, multiplying church in every community? Our task is the same yesterday, today, and tomorrow, no matter what the world throws at us. That is our task. Today I want to discuss our efforts at reaching and impacting the globe with a mission focus update. And to help me, a returning guest to stand in the Gap, Phil Tuttle, the president of Walked through the Bible, walked through the Bible, has been around for five decades, best known for its Bible seminars, study materials, video teaching devotional bibles, and for years walked through the Bible has been a mover and shaker in global evangelization efforts. As a matter of fact, Phil, you’re just back from visiting one of our many outposts and we are excited to hear all about it. Phil Tuttle, welcome back to Stand in the Gap Today.
Phil Tuttle:
Hey, Jamie, it’s great to be back. I think this is my third visit and I’m especially excited about the topic today in the conversation you and I are going to have,
Jamie Mitchell:
Phil, my guess is that many have heard about Walk Thru the Bible through its seminars and Bible teaching, but they probably don’t know that you have had a real effort in taking the gospel and your amazing Bible teaching around the world. How was it that Walk Thru got into the missions game? Give us a bit of your mission’s history.
Phil Tuttle:
Yeah, I mean, God has always had bigger ideas for Walk Thru the Bible than even our Bruce Wilkinson had or any of us who have led the ministry have had. That’s part of the fun and the surprise of it all. But Bruce Wilkinson did the prototype for Walk through the Old Testament as his master’s thesis, that Dallas Theological Seminary, and you got to present your work and some of the faculty can challenge it and ask questions and they were impressed by it. But Professor Howard Hendricks goes, does it work? And says, go try it in five churches, then I’ll grade it. And Bruce honestly was not trying to start a ministry. He wanted to be a Bible college professor, maybe someday a Bible college president, but that was the birth of walk through the Bible. He taught his first one in a church and scheduled five more during the breaks at other churches.
And that same story can be extended then around the globe. I think it was probably around 1980. We were incorporated in 76, but around 1980 first expansion came in the UK. Australia seemed like those were pretty easy places to start, but then it began spreading to other countries after that. And last year we have 10 regional offices around the world and out of those hubs we got to serve people in 141 different countries last year. But it really just started pretty safe with other English speaking countries where we thought, well, if it works in the US it ought to work there even in spite of some cultural differences. And then it’s just going where God opens the doors. So that process still continues to this day. Jamie?
Jamie Mitchell:
Well, I guess I should disclose that I was a Walk Thru the Bible instructor for many years. Phil, you trained me. So I know firsthand some of this history. I know people like our dear brother, John Hoover, who is with the Lord now and really had a passion to take Walk Thru globally. One of the elements of Walk Thru the Bible’s history and missions was an initiative just about the time I got into Walk Thru the commission. Phil, what was that and what impact did it have, especially in regards to teachers in schools?
Phil Tuttle:
Yeah. When the Iron Curtain began to crumble, the wall went down and invitation came not from the church but from government leaders, educators in the former Soviet Union. I think one of the best quotes was one of the minister’s education in one of the countries said There are giant caverns beneath, beneath our entire society because for the last 70 years, an effort has been made to remove God from everything. We’ve got to put God back into our culture and we think the best to start that is in our schools. At the invitation of that, a number of ministries chartered a work there, campus Crusade or Crew, as it’s known now, A CSI Association of Christian Schools International and walked through the Bible were three of the main anchor ministries though that soon grew to dozens of ministries that responded to an invitation, will you all come and train our teachers?
And that was called the commission. And we would go and do, we did dozens of these in quite a number of countries over there. They were five day trainings for teachers, for administrators, and the title of it was Christian Morals and Ethics of Foundation for Society. And we were not there as bible teachers or missionaries, we were there as educators. A team of 40 would go to about each of those and there would be upfront keynote addresses, but the real work was done in small groups and God just did a fantastic work there. And then when possible, then a team was sent to be there for a full year or a couple of years. And it was really during that time that walk through the Bible, we had some international work, but it was always, well, what can we afford to do? And God really broke the heart of our founder and president Bruce Wilkinson with That’s not the right question. The right question is, what does God want done? Well, he wants quality Bible teaching accessible to everybody on the planet. That’s what he wants done. He wants disciples of all nations. And it really fundamentally changed our ministry and other ministries too from the inside out. And that’s in fact why I left pastoring in Illinois. I was already an instructor with Walk Thru like you were Jamie, but then to come down and serve full-time with the ministry because this was just, I’d never seen a movement of God like this in my lifetime.
Jamie Mitchell:
Wow. Well, we’re just getting started with our global impact update today. We’re focused on missions. I’m going to return and Phil’s going to give us a report from a recent trip he’s just taken and come back from the wonderful nation of the Philippines. My wife served there for a short period of time. Stay with us here at Stand in the Gap Today. Well welcome back. Today we’re asking the question, what in the world? And I used to hear my son as a teenager ask me that all the time. But today that question is about what is God doing in the world? And Phil Tuttle, president of Walk Through the Bible as our guest, Phil, you’ve just returned from the mission field, from the great nation of the Philippines. What happened there? Why were you there? Give us a taste of what you were doing there and what Walk Thrus doing in the Philippines.
Phil Tuttle:
Oh, it was a fantastic trip. Partially because now our kids are grown and gone. And so my wife can go with me on some of these adventures, which is really great. But we’ve been in the Philippines, this was actually partially, the timing was determined by their 25th anniversary of active ministry there. And we have 10 regional offices around the world. We don’t try to build infrastructure in every country. No way could we afford to do that. So for Southeast Asia Pacific, it is the Philippines, that’s our base of ministry. But then they really help oversee and direct what we do in Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Cambodia, and even having a lot of open doors into China that it would be a lot harder for an American to get there. So we were there for several reasons. We were rolling out a new course, Jamie, I know you love the biblical character series.
It’s just life on life teaching. And we were teaching them equipping their trainers to multiply it with a new course that’s called Courageous. It’s about Elijah, it’s courageous, choosing faith when you want to give up. And Elijah played all the keys on the piano, all the octaves. He had great triumphs like Mount Carmel and then turn a page or two and he’s depressed and wishing God would end his life. And it’s just a very honest look at what it’s like to devote yourself to serving God. It’s not all great. A lot of it’s hard. So we were there in the Philippines to roll that out. I think along with some of our local leaders, we taught that six different times in six different locations. We packed a lot into an eight day visit and visited a couple of seminaries. And then also we had two fundraising banquets, which was a first for them there.
180 people came to one, 200 people came to. And that’s part of the shift in global missions is that it’s not all driven by the US anymore. As the momentum of the church is moving toward the global south, well, some of the funding of that needs to move from the north and from the western cultures to the rest of the world too. And we were very encouraged by how that went. But of all of our regions, the Philippines is the best at a couple of things. One of those is our ministry. There is not just confined to the local church or even Christian schools. We’re very active in the Filipino military with police departments across the land. And also a lot of teaching is done in businesses. Our board chair there in the Philippines is the lead attorney and one of the top folks at the largest bank in the Philippines, some 45,000 employees that bank has in all of their branches and even beyond the Philippines.
And so we were just there to accelerate all that. We don’t have to send trainers from the US anymore. They have just wonderfully gifted men and women there. But it was just a time to come and celebrate, but also to introduce them to this new course and they are already off and running with it. It’s so exciting to see that happen. So that was the main purpose. Walk Thru. The Bible isn’t primarily a sending organization. We have 20 to 25,000 men and women who actually actively teach our materials in a given year outside the us There aren’t 50 Americans in that 20,000. We’re not a sending agency. There’s still a need for that. But we’re a finding ministry. We find people who already love the Lord have the gift of teaching and they also understand the culture. They don’t do dumb things like I do when I visit out of ignorance as my wife goes, they already love the food, they know the language. So that isn’t necessary to invest time there. And the bang for the buck that comes from equipping locals who already are at home in that culture and are probably going to be there their whole life, the multiplication of that is just off the charts. So that was the focus of our trip, Jamie?
Jamie Mitchell:
Well, Phil, it’s so interesting. Walk Thru in many respects was a number of years ahead of what was happening and the changes within missiology in America. We here in America, we were still loading up Americans and all their goods and all their supplies and everything they needed the creature comforts that they needed to go into the mission field and all the money that was needed. But Walk Thru understood early on that if it could actually find people, nationals, people who live in those countries and then equip them with God’s word and equip them with the techniques and resource them and translate and do those types of things, that the gospel and good Bible teaching like fire would roll through a country like an inferno during the fires in California last year, though, we don’t want to bring up a bad subject like that, but it really was something. And now as I talked to a lot of ologists and those who are involved in global work, that is what we see happening more and more. It’s so much more like the Paul Line method, Phil gatherings, like the one that you just had. You have those all over the globe though, because the Philippines is one of your outposts, but you have these gatherings happening around the world.
Phil Tuttle:
Yeah, that’s right. And I’ll usually take three or four international trips a year. I mean, there’s just something about when you are the president that sometimes you can get denominations that normally don’t partner. You can get them to work together just because you flew on a long airplane flight to get there and it opens doors, but the real work is done by the locals and so not, we may have two or three training conferences a year. No, it’s constant. I know in India we have Jamie, I don’t know how much you even know about this, but we have just in India, 24 full-time trainers, equippers or Coopers as they call them there. And so every January we’ll give them a new course as well as leaders from Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan are at that regional conference. And then within three months they’ve taken that new resource, like in this case, courageous, in three months.
They’ve translated that into probably 12 to 15 local languages and then full-time they train groups of pastors all over their country, all over the region. And that’s probably our greatest success story of doing that is India. I mean, money goes so far there, a few hundred dollars a month will support a local full-time and they’ll live pretty well and provide for their family with that amount of money. And there’s still a need for American missionaries, don’t get me wrong. And I love the brothers and sisters who are called to that, but we better be doing something to equip a local who ultimately will do it better than we can do it as an outsider. So that’s really, we sure weren’t the first ones to discover that, but I think you’re right. We’ve had a role, at least in accelerating that change in mindset.
Jamie Mitchell:
You mentioned to me that the Philippines is an important place in expanding our reach into China and seeing that China is one of our geopolitical enemies, but if we could get the gospel and see heart change and life change there, it could change everything. Do you have inroads to China and how effective is your reach and to that country?
Phil Tuttle:
Yeah, I mean we definitely have inroads there. As you’re listening to this, there’s really kind of two kinds of churches in China. There’s underground churches still, and they may practice angel singing where it’s ah, amazing grace, just barely audible because they’re meeting in secret. And then there’s the above ground church often called the three self church that’s government sanctioned. And we actually have ministry in both of those contexts. And a lot of that is driven by the Philippines, Singapore, a few other countries, and they’re just better received than we are. They’re not perceived as geopolitical enemies. And for whatever reason, God has made Filipinos so that they are welcome and just received everywhere they go. They’re hard workers, they’re gracious as a people group. There’s more than 10 million Filipinos who are overseas foreign workers. Some of that’s economically driven, but I think it’s part of God’s modern day diaspora, just like the scattering in the Book of Acts. And everywhere I go, I run into Filipinos and they found a home there. And so business can take Filipinos to China and they don’t have trouble getting visas. They’re not followed around. They’re free to do ministry. So yeah, we’ve got quite a lot going in China. Not near enough. I mean, there’s over a billion people there, right?
Jamie Mitchell:
Yep. Well, friends, there’s a lot of bad news that we hear daily, but it’s refreshing and hopeful to see God at work when we return. Phil’s going to share some new doors of ministries that are opening. Well, we’re focused on missions and taking the gospel to the whole world. How we did missions 50 years ago is not how we do it today. There are many cultural and technological advantages that have made missions much more effective, but there are also many adversaries that we must overcome. The apostle Paul understood this. This is why he pled with the church in Colossi to pray for him. Colossians four says, this continues steadfastly in prayer, being watchful in it with Thanksgiving. At the same time, pray also for us, listen, that God may open doors for us for the word to declare the mystery of Christ on account of which I am a prisoner, that I may make it clear which is how I ought to speak. Phil Tuttle is our guest today. Phil, I believe God is answering that prayer on behalf of walk through the Bible and your global efforts, you’ve had a number of new opportunities that I want you to share about and encourage our people especially. What is the door of opportunity that’s being opened regarding television? What is God doing with that?
Phil Tuttle:
Yeah, I mean some of this goes back to COVID. I don’t even like it when people say, walk through the Bible as a parachurch ministry. We are a pro church ministry. I mean, we believe the local church is God’s plan A and every other ministry really is given to support and uphold and extend the ministry of the local church. But during COVID, I mean our seminars like you’ve taught, and I’ve taught for years, Jamie, we couldn’t get into churches. They were not even having regular services. And even if they were, they weren’t bringing in outside speakers. And so we had a choice. We could either kind of ride out that storm or we could say, well, let’s pivot because there are unique opportunities. People are stuck in their homes. Let’s do more online. Let’s give more content away for free. Let’s double our efforts with social media.
And part of that was also God began to open up broadcast opportunities. We’re not primarily a media ministry. I mean we’re a life on life. Second Timothy two, two, what you’ve received from someone else, pass it on to somebody else who’s faithful, who will give it to other men and women and they’ll take it and run with it. That’s still our model. But all the other things that we started during COVID when churches opened back up, we’ve continued those. So not on a global basis, but nationally, our tools are broadcast in a number of countries now. There’s a satellite in the Middle East called SAT seven that has a tremendously impactful ministry. They have different satellites in a number of languages, but they’re Arabic speaking satellite at any given moment, there’s almost always a million plus people watching that seven programming. And we’ve knocked on their door for a lot of years, like more than two decades.
And we had some good conversations, but nothing really came of it. And we had our 10 regional directors together in Jordan this year, and our director for the Middle East to Sam, he says, Hey, the director of the Arabic channel for SAT seven wants to have lunch with us. And I said, that would be great. And I thought, Hey, maybe let’s wiggle the doorknob again. Jamie, we weren’t two minutes into lunch. And he goes, I love your biblical character series. I’ve seen almost all of them. If you take all the sessions from those 10 courses, I think there’s 51 of them. I didn’t even know that. And he says, when I hear 51, I hear a year’s worth of content. We want to televise all of those. We’ll give you the slot right after the chosen is on each week, and we’ll show those episodes.
Again, it’s your content. We don’t want ownership of it. That’s yours. We’ll even help you get the workbooks produced in country. And I’m just like, my mouth is dropping open. The two guys with me are like, were there discussions before this? I didn’t know about. Nope. Turns out that guy and our director who Sam have been friends for 20 plus years, and he says, but there’s a problem. And I said, yeah, you don’t need an American with subtitles. You need this taught by a local in Arabic. And he goes, that’s right. And he says, A lot of ministries aren’t willing to do that. And I said, we are. And I said, I would trust who? Sam with my life. Well, surely I trust him with my content. So they have already recorded three of those series with Sam teaching it in Arabic. They’re beautifully produced, great graphics, everything.
And those will begin being shown once a week in February. And again, it’s at least a million people are going to see each of those episodes. We need to do some serious fundraising to pay for the production of that. But they are giving us a sweet deal because they just want local content. And so I put the series together, but they’re just straight out of scripture and who Sam does with them applying them and contextualizing in a way I never could. So I think this is a model for our future that can be duplicated in other regions as well. And God did that. We just kind of look at each other and go, we never dreamed that would come out of that lunch meeting, but that’s what God had ordained.
Jamie Mitchell:
By the way, friends Phil and I did an entire stand in the Gap today program, I think it was last year, on the importance of teaching biblical characters. And we kind of talked through some of Phil’s video teaching on those characters. I want to encourage you to go back in the archives, but Phil, God’s also given you some unique opportunities to impact children and refugees. Can you give us a quick update on both of those special and unique ministries?
Phil Tuttle:
I mean, the refugees, there are more displaced people globally right now than at any time in history. And some are technical refugees, others of them, I mean all over Ukraine. There’s people who are displaced, they’re still in their own country, but they’re not able to live in the war torn part since the invasion by Russia. And so a course we had put together on the book of Ruth called Refuge Finding Home in a World of Change. I mean, when I taught that, I certainly had displaced people in the back of my mind, but I didn’t know how much God would leverage that for his glory. And so we’re talking about who Sam a minute ago in Ahman, within 50 miles of Ahman, Jordan, I don’t know, there’s probably a million or 2 million refugees. There’s enormous refugee camps. And to have simple Bible teaching, sticking very close to scripture, that’s language ready and can be distributed free on smartphones, God’s just taken that and multiplying it.
So that’s kind of the heart of our ministry there. And then children, we’ve had children’s events lots of times in parallel with our adult events for years. But if you go back six, seven years, if we taught 50,000 kids in a year, we’d be high fiving each other in the hallways. And about five or six years ago, we got serious about children’s ministry. And again, numbers aren’t everything, but God did name a book numbers. So sometimes it’s a way of measuring fruitfulness. So it all comes down to what goes on in an individual heart. But last year we had the privilege of teaching over 2 million kids worldwide. I mean, Jamie, think about that number. We wouldn’t have even had the guts to pray about a number like that a few years ago. And the thrilling part is that’s in almost every region we have. And if you take that 2 million, more than half of those kids are being taught either our walk through the old or walk through the New Testament in public schools, sometimes we can only teach it as history and literature.
We can’t encourage conversion, but God’s word is still God’s word. And in some countries, 97% of the kids we teach have no connection with any church. So what an incredible open door from God in other places like most of Africa. I mean, if you want to give an invitation in the classroom and lead kids in prayer of how they can receive Jesus as a savior, that’s wide open there. Other places, they’ll give us a list of values that they want to see developed in their culture and say, if you can find these in the older New Testament, then you’re welcome in our schools. And honestly, that’s not even a challenge. It’s like integrity. Yeah, I think that’s on God’s far. Oh, they’re worried about bullying and they want to see reconciliation rather than revenge. Hey, a guy named Joseph lived that. I mean, it’s not even hard at all to connect it with the core values that they know make a strong nation.
So we’re just kind of trying to keep up with the doors God is opening. And thankfully these 10 regional directors are all, they’re all just people of enormous faith. And again, the challenge is oftentimes the limiting factor is just the finances, but it’s now down, I mean, well under a dollar, under 60 cents for each person that we reach around the world. And Ellen and I have given our lives to walk through the Bible. Well, we also give beyond our local church, we give a pretty good chunk of our money to it. I love the bang for the buck that comes from spiritual multiplication. So yeah, Jamie, refugees kids, it’s just God birthed walked through the Bible for now, not for 50 years ago, and it’s a lot more evangelistic oriented with still discipleship and growth. But every year, thousands of people meet Jesus’ Savior at one of our events or resources.
Jamie Mitchell:
Amen. Hey, the Bible tells us that we don’t have, because we don’t ask. We hear that, and we still don’t ask friends, what ministry door is waiting for you to be open by just fervently praying. Ask God to open the door when we finish up, Bill’s going to take us to the Ukraine ministry that he has what happening there. Well, thank you for staying with us today as we give a global impact update with Phil Tuttle and walk through the Bible Ministries. Phil, I know that there are ways for our listeners to find out how they can partner with you. Can you give them some information about the mission arm of Walk through the Bible, how they can get some of those amazing resources or even give to your mission efforts?
Phil Tuttle:
Sure. First of all, my email is easy. It’s just Phil, PHIL at Walk Thru, W-A-L-K-T-H-R-U, spelled the funny way, THR u.org n. And I’d love to hear from any of your listeners. Also, our website is just Walk Thru.org, WLKT h.org. There’s lots of videos on there. There’s stories that have been written testimonies from all around the world. Just go explore on our website, there’s a donate button if God prompts you to give. We don’t want any money that rightfully belongs to your local church, but if God has blessed you with additional resources, this is a great way to leverage those for his kingdom. So we’d sure invite you to do that, but that’s probably the best way to find out. There’s also a store on there with all these different biblical character series. You can still get DVDs if you have something to play those on, or we’ve now joined this century and you can stream almost all of our stuff too. So a lot of resources there@Walk Thru.org.
Jamie Mitchell:
So no more VHS tapes laying around in the storage room, huh, Phil,
Phil Tuttle:
If you know the right people, we can hook you up. Jamie, you might even get an eight track or two if you know who to ask.
Jamie Mitchell:
Phil, with the time left, let’s talk about the sober work that’s being done in the Ukraine. What presence does walk through the Bible, have there on the ground? And I know a little bit of what you have shared with me. I think our people would love to hear and to be able to pray for Ukraine.
Phil Tuttle:
I mean, I hope you’re praying all through this show as I share these stories. We’re sure not bragging on Walk Thru, we’re bragging on God, but every different topic is a call to prayer for some part of the world and especially Ukraine, as this conflict seems to go on and on and on. And it’s not front page news, it’s not covered much on TV anymore, but the fighting is still so intense, and we have a team who lives there, that’s their home. Our ministry is headquartered in Kiev or Kiev as a lot of Americans pronounce it. That’s also the hub for all of Northern Eurasia. So our work in Russia, work in Belarus, all the different stand countries. That’s all hub there in Kiev, and it makes it really difficult when there’s that level of conflict. Our director and his wife Boris and Lilia Boris had COVID really bad was in ICU 42 days.
Lily only saw him once during that time. He had so many roommates die little room. We’d put two patients in America, they had eight or 10 in there, and so many of them didn’t make it. But God spared Boris’s life. Lilia saw him once during those 42 days because she took a ladder and leaned it up on his second floor window at the hospital just so she could look in and see him. And God spared his life. And he’s actually got relatively minor lung damage, which is a miracle. He was out of the country during the early stages of the war, but they made the courageous decision to go back home and they said, this is too great a need and this is too great an opportunity. And so a woman named Kat leads our children’s ministry. There more and more open doors in not just churches, but in schools all across Ukraine.
It’s a miracle. And again, it’s classic what people meant for evil. God is amusing for his glory and that doesn’t ease the grief of those who’ve lost husbands and fathers in the fighting. But it does give perspective that ultimately there will be victory, that God will build his church and the gates of hell will not prevail against it. But my wife is in constant touch with Lilia, and every night the missiles and the drones fly over their house and they’ve had them land in neighbor’s yards and huge craters, and it’s a frightening time and the people are tired, and yet there’s hope that comes from the gospel of Jesus Christ, even in the midst of the most war torn country. So be praying for Ukraine, be praying for Russia. This is not the Russian’s people fault. This is Putin, his agenda to rebuild the old Soviet Union. He’s an old JGB guy and there’s not one side’s pure and the other side’s innocent people are messed up, but yet God loves all people groups and his goal is to reach all of them with the gospel, so peace in that region, which surely expand our efforts and the efforts of so many other ministries as well.
Jamie Mitchell:
Phil, as you’re talking, my mind then goes back to the days of the commission and all of that teaching that went on. And if you think about it, that there were probably children in those schools back then who were being taught by teachers that Walk Thru and others were training who are today officials or leaders or maybe even soldiers who are in this conflict in Russia. And we can only believe and hope that somewhere, both in Russia and in Ukraine because of the work of Walk Thru and a PN was in Ukraine way back in 2000 12, 13, 14, helping the Christians who were in the Parliament back then. But we could never, ever underestimate what God could do through us years later, after we have shared the gospel, shared the word of God and represented Christ to people, that God would then raise them up and we can only hope and pray, Phil, that that would be what God does. We got about a minute left. Phil, give me one or two things. We’ve got Ukraine, we have the Philippines, we have these other things. The stat seven. Give me one more thing that we can pray for with the global efforts to walk through the Bible.
Phil Tuttle:
Well, if you want something specific, we have our major donor event this coming weekend as people are listening to this show and that God would provide bountifully for that through the people who are there and the people who are not there. And then just that God would continue to let us know which doors to walk through. We have standing invitations from so many countries and more and more in the UK that’s more post-Christian than America, and yet there’s a waiting list in schools who want our old and New Testament that God would raise up more and more teachers and more and more generous partners that we’d be able to walk through more of the doors that God has opened up. That’s my prayer.
Jamie Mitchell:
Amen. Phil, you’ve given us plenty pray about regarding missions, but we also are committed to pray for Walk Thru and the inroads, the favor God has given you. Thanks again for being with us, and even though God opened doors of ministry, it takes Holy Ghost courage to walk through those doors. Courage is the most vital virtue for today, and we need God to build us up and then to deploy us to live and lead with courage. That’s my encouragement each day. Thank you for being with us. Have a great day. We’ll see you back here in 23 hours for another stand in the gap today.
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