Partner with Local Missionaries in Sri Lanka

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Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka, a teardrop-shaped island country off the southern coast of India is famous for its natural beauty, cultural diversity, and tea production.
The Sinhalese people, who comprise around three-fourths of Sri Lanka’s population, are Buddhists who follow the Hindu caste system. Half of the Sinhalese belong to the farming caste, raising animals or crops using primitive farming methods. A three-decade long civil war between the Sinhalese majority and Tamil separatists, who wanted an independent state on the north side of the island, ended in 2009. An estimated 60,000 to 100,000 people were killed in conflict.
Nearly 45 percent of Sri Lankans live on less than $5 a day, and the country suffers from high rates of undernourishment, stunted growth and malnourishment, especially in children, according to the non-profit Borgen Project.
Many children in Sri Lanka, considered a major center of pedophilia, are vulnerable to abuse and exploitation. Several indigenous ministries are protecting such children, sheltering them and providing them with food, clothing, medical treatment, and discipleship in God’s Word. One of these ministries runs a rescue home for marginalized and exploited children, providing them with education, spiritual guidance, the saving knowledge of the Lord, and involvement with the local church where they get to attend Sunday school, Bible study, and prayer groups. Many of these children have grown up to serve in the ministry.
“Children, dirty and hungry, began arriving on our doorstep,” wrote the ministry leader. “Many of the children who came to our center had been abused by alcoholic and drug-addicted parents.”
With help from Christian Aid Mission, the ministry built a girls’ shelter and, later, a separate shelter for boys. Their literacy center provides children from four slums with an education. They also have a women’s shelter, where they provide a safe, caring environment for young women who have been raped or otherwise abused.
Other indigenous ministries in Sri Lanka share the gospel with unreached Hindus and Buddhists, helping poor families send their children to school and providing for their basic needs. Another ministry is bringing the gospel to remote villages and the Free Trade Zone where over 100,000 young men and women labor in 180 factories
Sources: Joshua Project, CIA World Factbook, Borgen Project

21 million

Population

Unknown

Evangelical Population:

174

People Groups:

79

Unreached People Groups:

How to Pray for Sri Lanka

  • Pray that God would open the eyes of the people of Sri Lanka to the truth of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
  • Pray for God’s protection on Sri Lanka’s vulnerable children, that many would come to know Him and grow up to serve Him.
  • Pray for the indigenous ministries working in Sri Lanka, that God would grant them every provision to continue sharing Christ’s love and truth with people in need of a Savior.

More stories from Sri Lanka

Encourage the Body of Believers in Sri Lanka
More than 70 people recently attended a local ministry’s seminar in which they participated in three workshops: grace in the church, grace in the home, and grace as a person. The workshops were led by three graduates of the ministry’s counseling program and resulted in several participants inquiring about how to join that same program. Your donations help support such discipleship opportunities. Pray for the kingdom to grow in Sri Lanka.
Help Equip Believers for Ministry Work in Sri Lanka
As a local ministry plants churches in various places, they also train pastors and leaders at the same time with the knowledge that each new church will need believers already equipped to lead and who are deeply rooted in the Word of God. During the most recent training session, the ministry prepared for 60 participants, providing accommodation, food, and tuition alongside biblical teaching. “We believe and are called to do the Great Commission,” the ministry leader said. “Our mission is to reach the unreached areas in Sri Lanka.”
Tell of God’s Redeeming Love in Sri Lanka
As a local missionary evangelized in a village, she met a woman who became filled with joy upon hearing the gospel message. But the woman’s daughter was ill, and she asked the missionary to come to her home and pray for her. The missionary agreed, and over time, she began to build a relationship with the mother and her daughter. Soon, they began to attend church, where members continued to pray over the daughter. “Praise the Lord, now they are continually coming to church and received Jesus Christ as their personal Savior,” the ministry leader said. Your donations assist with such evangelism and discipleship.
Share the Message of God’s Love in Sri Lanka
A woman who was not a believer took a job in the kitchen of a ministry's Bible college. While there, a professor at the college met her and shared the gospel with her, and the woman expressed interest in knowing more about Jesus. Through the relationship the professor established with the woman, the woman soon became eager to attend church, and the professor directed her to a local church close to where she lived. Your donations support such outreach as believers build relationships with those in search of Truth.
Transform Idol-Worshipping Communities With the Gospel in Sri Lanka
Though local missionaries regularly conduct outreach and evangelism in Buddhist communities, acceptance of the gospel is slow. “We cannot expect a big change in the communities,” the ministry leader said. “But our believers who live in these communities are showing their love to their neighbors and they are witnessing for our church.” Missionaries distribute gospel tracts, and when someone expresses interest in what they've read, a follow-up visit is conducted. Donations of $25 or $50 help support local missionaries in their outreach and evangelism.
Provide Opportunities to Learn of Jesus in Sri Lanka
Pray those who fall away from their faith will return to Jesus. Through a local ministry's Christian library, members of the community not only have the opportunity to learn more about the gospel, but children living on the streets are also able to receive reading and writing lessons there.