Connect with us

Around the World

Miracles Across the Map: Stories of Healing, Protection, and God’s Power

Published

on

The Global Missions office has a unique window into the miraculous ways God works in and through Open Bible churches around the world. Here we share four powerful, real-life testimonies of God’s healing, protection, and divine intervention from different corners of the globe: Nicaragua, Cuba, Ukraine, and Nigeria.

Baby Esther Paola

We have a wonderful testimony of a little girl, Esther Paola Sánchez, who just turned two months old. When Esther was just one month old, she was hospitalized for two weeks, undergoing many tests, and was ultimately diagnosed with congenital heart disease. The doctors told her parents that an operation was necessary and that baby Esther wouldn’t leave the hospital without it. The whole church went to prayer for her healing. Two days after we prayed for her, the doctors did a pre-surgery examination and found the baby no longer had anything wrong with her! Glory to God! Now baby Esther is home and free from all illness. The parents are joyful and praising the Lord for their baby’s healing. Christ heals and frees us from all illness. Hallelujah! 

Pastor Freire, in good spirits at the hospital.

One of our pastors, Rafael Freire, fell ill and was hospitalized with severe dehydration, dangerous levels of low blood pressure, and a heart rate of over 200 beats per minute. While in the hospital, diagnostic tests revealed he had lived his whole life with a congenital heart disease called Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF) consisting of four heart abnormalities that lead to reduced oxygen to the blood, causing a bluish color to skin, difficulty breathing, and fatigue. This disease is usually discovered in infancy and requires surgery to correct the issues. Without surgery, the life expectancy with TOF is only twenty years. Remarkably, Pastor Rafael discovered the diagnosis at age fifty-seven! For the glory of God, this pastor ministered for thirty years in difficult and mountainous terrain in Cuba without presenting any symptoms or skin discoloration. God performed a further miracle in the intensive care room: in just ten days he made a full recovery! We thank God for His healing and sustaining touch on Pastor Rafael’s life.

A glimpse of the destruction caused by the KAB

On March 13, 2025, a KAB (laser guided bomb) flew to our city right in the middle of the day. We live on the frontlines, so bombings are common, but daytime bombings are surprising. This KAB targeted the grounds at the private medical clinic where my wife, Oksana, and eldest son work. It fell and detonated next to the clinic. The way this KAB exploded was a miracle: instead of detonating on the ground, it hit a large tree and exploded mid-air, minimizing the overall damage. Had it exploded on the ground, the damage would have been catastrophic. The clinic remained intact, but the windows shattered and the suspended ceiling fell.

A burning car in front of a destroyed store front.

The Lord miraculously protected us in so many other ways. A medical employee on her way to another room lingered that day at my wife’s desk, and because of this, she escaped the shattering glass. The clinic’s ceiling fell on my wife’s head and the heads of other staff, yet no one was badly hurt. Our son always leaves work at a certain time every day and yet that day, he left fifteen minutes earlier than usual. If he had left at his usual time, he would have been outside at the bomb’s epicenter, and we can only imagine what could have happened to him. Other people who were on the street survived; the photos of the area show what a miracle this is. My friend, an Orthodox priest, was driving through town but stopped a block from the clinic for a coffee. Just as he arrived, the bomb exploded. Had he not stopped for coffee, he would have been passing the explosion site. These are just a few of the testimonies convincing me that even in this time of trouble, God is with us. 

Nwanase John

Sometime in 2023, I noticed a lump in front of my neck that moved back and forth when I swallowed. After a physical examination and scans at a clinic, it was confirmed that the lump was a goiter. It continued to bother me for two years. In March 2025 I was at work when suddenly I felt like I was choking. I tried clearing my throat a few times. When I rubbed my neck, I didn’t feel the goiter any longer. I was confused and kept rubbing my neck, not believing what I felt (actually, what I didn’t feel!). Praise God, the goiter is gone! I’m so grateful, and I give God all the glory for the miraculous healing.

These testimonies remind us that miracles don’t always come with lightning flashes, but oftentimes arrive quietly, unexpectedly, and always in deeply personal ways. May these stories encourage your heart and strengthen your faith, stirring you to believe that the God of miracles is still moving – perhaps even in your life today!


Around the World

Global Harvest Offering 2026: Building Hope in Africa

Published

on

Ask Open Bible pastors in Africa what the biggest problem in their church is and most reply with one word: REVIVAL! Just as Saul once ravaged the early church in Acts 8, our African brothers today face similar conditions: harassment, arrest, and even death for following Christ. But in the face of persecution, our churches are experiencing rapid growth in thirteen African nations.  They’re calling for our help, not to alleviate the suffering, but to build new church facilities to serve their expanding congregations and communities.

The Global Harvest Offering of 2026 is “Building Hope in Africa,” and it is our opportunity to participate in this revival. In this initiative, we will partner with our missionaries and national directors to fund thirteen new church building projects across the continent. God is using faithful missionaries and nationals to plant churches, raise leaders, and reach communities with the hope only found in Jesus!

… in the face of persecution, our churches are experiencing rapid growth in thirteen African nations.

Our missionary partners are many: the Godwins, the Kopps, the Parkers, Okon Obot, Peter Mahoye, the Moores, the Welches, and our brothers and sisters throughout the Antioch Network.

Thirteen churches.


Thirteen countries.


One goal:
to raise the $200,000 needed to
cover the costs for all thirteen projects.

With over 230 Open Bible churches in the United States, we can meet the financial goal of the Global Harvest Offering if each church gives $875. Alternatively, just 2,000 people giving $100 this year would meet the goal. Your support in this effort helps build more than walls; it builds hope, community and the Kingdom of God. Look for the QR code or this link to give to Building Hope in Africa  today. Thank you for your partnership to build hope for Africa.

Continue Reading

Around the World

Seventy Years Strong: The Past, Present, and Promise of Japan Open Bible

Published

on

On October 31 – November 5, 2025, Japan Open Bible Churches celebrated their seventieth anniversary. Global Missions Director Vince and Lois McCarty, Open Bible President Michael and Julie Nortune and I were honored to join them for this celebratory occasion.

My own connection with Japan goes back to my twenty-third birthday when I boarded a plane to Kobe with two suitcases, only five words in my Japanese vocabulary, and a heart full of missionary zeal. During my six years there, the Japanese church shaped me deeply as both a missionary and a person. When I left Japan thirty-six years ago, I left a piece of my heart. Joining them again to celebrate seventy years brought me real joy! 

When I left Japan thirty-six years ago, I left a piece of my heart.

Japan Open Bible has become a true partner in ministry with Open Bible Churches globally, a partnership especially visible across Asia. The anniversary celebration honored the legacy of Japan Open Bible missionaries and the heritage of churches they planted while also affirming the importance of today’s smaller, community-based congregations. We visited, preached in, and celebrated with churches and pastors in both eastern and western Japan.

A celebratory dinner in Japan Open Bible West.

Japan’s geographical isolation and a 250-year ban on Christian missions in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries gave Japan a reputation as “the missionaries’ graveyard.”  Yet, after World War II some US veterans, having seen the spiritual vacuum in Japan, returned as carriers of the hope of the Gospel. The Jake Collins, Eddie Carnes, and Phil Rounds families were among the first in the 1950s era to be sent by Open Bible Churches.

From a handful of missionaries and new believers in the early years to a network of Open Bible Churches across Japan today, God’s presence has been a steady flame of hope in the darkness.

From a handful of missionaries and new believers in the early years to a network of Open Bible Churches across Japan today, God’s presence has been a steady flame of hope in the darkness.  Even though fewer than one percent of Japanese identify as Christian, today across Japan we see our churches, large and small, alive with joy and power of the Holy Spirit.

The Rounds family, some of the first Open Bible missionaries to Japan.

One of the early converts, now ninety-year-old Yaeko Yoshinaga, is likely the oldest surviving member of those first Japan Open Bible congregations. As an eighteen-year-old, she lived with the Rounds family helping in the home. She loved their children and learned to love potatoes (more than rice) as they did, but even more, came to faith in Jesus Christ.

Yaeko says, I would not have believed in Jesus if I had not met Mr. Rounds, the missionary.  She and her husband later pastored for 45 years, and today her son and wife pastor the flourishing church. Decades later, the flame of God’s love still burns brightly in Yaeko sensei. Her love, joy, humility, and faith impact every generation in the church. She remains a powerful reminder of how one relationship can change the direction of an entire life.

The first missionaries to begin Open Bible’s work in Japan.

Pastor Yoshio Ishikawa told me the story of how he came to Jesus as a young boy. In the late 1960s, ten-year-old Yoshio’s family lived near an Open Bible Church in the Sumida neighborhood of Tokyo. He recalls, When I was ten, I saw a TV drama about an incurable disease. It scared me, and without really knowing why, I walked into the church in my neighborhood that I had passed by many times. That church was Sumida Open Bible – the church I now pastor.”

Today, Pastor Ishikawa uses his talent as a skilled musician to reach people in new, non-traditional ways. He teaches a group ukulele class as a bridge to the gospel. Students learn to play the ukulele, then hear a teaching from the Bible and join in prayer. Other approaches, like book clubs, English lessons, and choirs, give churches relational ways to connect and open doors for evangelism.

Worship during the JOB (Japan Open Bible) 70th anniversary celebration.

In fact, many “unconventional” forms of evangelism are used to touch lives in churches in Japan. Often, churches and Christians invest years building trust and relationships before someone decides to follow Jesus. In my own experience, I saw that converts under my ministry were often a result of groundwork laid by others before me.  

Looking ahead, Japan Open Bible embraces a bold vision: to plant ten new churches throughout the country in the next decade. I, for one, believe it can happen! God has not abandoned Japan. The hope of the Gospel that the missionaries brought with them back in the 1950s continues to burn brightly in our brothers and sisters of Japan Open Bible. May God fan that flame as they carry His hope across the country in ways we have not yet imagined!

Open Bible leaders pose with JOB young people after a youth service at Trinity Square Church in Machida.

As I leave Japan once again, I reflect and am grateful to have shared in the celebrations of what God has done, excitedly anticipating what He will do next!

Listen to Yaeko Yoshinaga’s testimony:


About the Author

Tammy Swailes is passionate about cross-cultural Christian education, so working with INSTE Bible College to disciple and equip leaders throughout Europe and beyond is a great fit! Tammy has lived in Europe since 1999 – first in Hungary and now Ukraine. Before that, she was in Japan, as well as Spokane, Washington. She now serves as INSTE regional director in Europe, assisting INSTE programs in five languages. Tammy has her undergraduate degrees in both Missions and Christian Education and a MA in Intercultural Studies. Photography, good coffee, multi-cultural experiences, and the family’s Yorkie are some of Tammy’s favorite things.

Continue Reading

Around the World

Hope Rising in Venezuela: How Open Bible Churches are Transforming a Nation Through Faith and Compassion

Published

on

Despite Venezuela’s fifteen-year ongoing humanitarian crisis, with nearly seventy percent of the population enduring multi-tiered poverty and almost half facing severe humanitarian needs, a movement of hope has unfolded in Open Bible Churches. Across the country, Open Bible is not only responding to urgent physical needs but is also nurturing a generation of believers in faith and service to stabilize Venezuela’s future. 

Open Bible is not only responding to urgent physical needs but is also nurturing a generation of believers in faith and service to stabilize Venezuela’s future.

Children worshiping at the Good News Crusade

Church soup kitchens have long ministered beyond their walls to ensure that vulnerable children receive a hot meal. They also see that families receive food supplies, clothing, and shoes, bringing tangible relief to their neighborhoods. The Church has also stepped in where public services falter through medical outreaches – with eye exams, vaccinations, and even free haircuts. Through these initiatives, a vibrant children and youth ministry has emerged. The youth are not just recipients of aid but have become leaders, actively involved in church life – in worship, evangelism, and home groups.

Often, children and youth have no Christian family support and are the only believers in their homes. Many were left with relatives when their parents went to nearby countries in search of a better life. So, the church teaches and empowers youth to grow spiritually and practically. These “little-big giants” are proving to be a wave of hope as they grow “in wisdom and stature, and favor with God and man” (Luke 2:52).

Venezuela’s church is resilient, reinventing itself to meet the social, spiritual, and familial challenges with creativity

Sunday morning Children’s Church

Over the years, events like the “Good News Festival” have sparked revival, resulting in Open Bible church plants. This festival, focused on children, reflects God’s heart for the youngest and most vulnerable, and brings new life and whole communities into faith. It is not unusual for entire families to be brought to Christ through their children.

Despite the widespread emigration of many adults, Venezuela’s church is resilient, reinventing itself to meet the social, spiritual, and familial challenges  with creativity and, above all, through the power of the Holy Spirit.

Our Open Bible brothers and sisters in Venezuela demonstrate how the Church can thrive despite adversity by living out Jesus’ command to love our neighbors, serve the least, and disciple this generation. Through continued partnership and prayer, we look forward to seeing Venezuela transformed by the hope, faith, and love found in Jesus. If you’d like to support our Open Bible family in Venezuela as they share Christ’s love and serve those in greatest need, please send a check to:

Open Bible Churches
2020 Bell Ave.
Des Moines, IA 50315
Make checks payable to Global Missions of Open Bible Churches and write “Venezuela humanitarian aid” in the memo line.

Thank you for partnering with us to extend Christ’s love and mercy in Venezuela.


About the Author

Tammy Swailes is passionate about cross-cultural Christian education, so working with INSTE Bible College to disciple and equip leaders throughout Europe and beyond is a great fit! Tammy has lived in Europe since 1999 – first in Hungary and now Ukraine. Before that, she was in Japan, as well as Spokane, Washington. She now serves as INSTE regional director in Europe, assisting INSTE programs in five languages. Tammy has her undergraduate degrees in both Missions and Christian Education and a MA in Intercultural Studies. Photography, good coffee, multi-cultural experiences, and the family’s Yorkie are some of Tammy’s favorite things.

Continue Reading

Follow Us

Subscribe to the Message