Our Battle Plan
Rescues
In the shadows of some of the hardest places, there are lives at risk and voices silenced. Stories of pain and exploitation often stay hidden from the world but never from God. Acts29 quietly steps into these places through our indigenous leaders, bringing safety, care and restoration to those in desperate need. Every rescue is guided by prayer, carried out with great discretion and fueled by one mission: to see freedom and dignity restored.
But the rescue is only the beginning. Survivors are placed in our orphanage and safe homes, where they receive protection, food, medical care and the chance to heal. They are embraced as family, discipled in hope and given the tools to rebuild their lives with dignity and faith.
Humanitarian Relief
When devastation strikes whether it’s a flood, earthquake, famine or wave of persecution, Acts29 responds with immediate relief. Through our indigenous leaders network in Pakistan and neighboring countries, we bring food, clean water, tents and emergency care to families who have lost everything. But we don’t stop there. Every relief drive becomes an opportunity to
reveal God’s love. We place audio Bibles in their hands, we pray over the brokenhearted and we speak hope into places where despair has ruled for generations.
Often, these are regions so hostile that even government aid refuses to enter. Yet when we show up in the middle of chaos, doors open that were once bolted shut. This approach has built lasting relationships and has given us the opportunity to
introduce Jesus to some of the most difficult and unreachable people.What begins as a bag of food and a prayer ends as a testimony that God has not forgotten His people.
Water Wells
In many villages and slums, clean drinking water does not exist. Families often survive by drinking from dirty ponds or contaminated sources that spread sickness and death. Every day, children walk miles just to bring back a few containers of unsafe water.
Acts29’s response is simple but life-changing, We dig and install water wells in communities where outsiders are usually not welcome. These are places that resist visitors but when you invest in their survival, something shifts. Clean water doesn’t just save lives—it opens hearts. When a village sees life flowing where there was only death, it creates trust, relationships and a bridge for the gospel.
In some slums, where people once turned to degrading ways just to earn a little money, these wells have become a source of provision. Families now sell clean water to upper castes for a small amount, giving them dignity, income and a future that once seemed impossible.
But a well is more than water—it is a testimony. Each well we dedicate is paired with the story of the Living Water, Jesus who satisfies the deepest thirst. The fruit is undeniable: communities once hostile are opening their doors, calling us back and asking to hear more. A water well is not just a gift—it is a bridge for the gospel.
Stealth Evangelism
In hard ground open preaching is not always possible. Acts29 calls this stealth evangelism spirit-led outreaches and hidden gatherings that plant seeds of truth in places where declaring faith can cost everything. We step into villages, tribes and slums where outsiders are refused. We do not seek drama; we accept danger. Week after week for the past seven years we have pressed into the darkest and most hostile areas places most avoid, places where the gospel has never been spoken. In these very places, we have witnessed the supernatural: sicknesses healed, people freed from oppression, hardened hearts transformed and whole families turning to Jesus.
What began as quiet whispers of faith has grown into a steady fire. From secret clusters to entire villages, hope is rising where fear once ruled. The gospel is advancing not by human effort but by the power of the Spirit who still writes the story of Acts today.
Stealth evangelism and open outreach are not just our strategies, They are our lifeline to obey the Spirit. And through them, the Kingdom is advancing in the very places the enemy thought he owned forever.
Manna: The Audio Bible
In hostile nations owning a Bible can mean prison or worse. Millions of people have lived and died without ever holding the Word of God in their hands. Others cannot read, yet their hearts cry out to know the truth. Manna was born as God’s answer to this impossible need. It is a small, solar-powered device that not only carries the Bible but also sermons, worship and testimonies—all in native languages. This makes Manna unique, It doesn’t just share Scripture, it disciples. It builds faith, strengthens believers and equips them to carry the gospel further.
Manna is also affordable, making it possible to place thousands of these devices into the hands of people who have been waiting decades to hear God’s Word. For the underground church and secret believers, it is more than a device—it is a lifeline. A single Manna can sustain entire fellowships in hiding, giving them the Word, worship and testimonies they desperately need to endure.
Through our indigenous leaders, we distribute Manna in regions where the gospel is forbidden. Entire communities are gathering underground at night to listen together hearing the Bible, worshiping in secret and being strengthened by stories of God’s power. What begins as a single device often becomes the heartbeat of a new underground church.
Manna is not just technology—it is a miracle in their hands. Affordable, powerful and unstoppable, A tool perfectly designed for the secret church and the unreached.
Training Leaders
The gospel cannot survive in hostile nations without leaders who are willing to risk everything for Jesus. In places where open faith can cost you your life, the underground church depends on courageous men and women who will shepherd, disciple and multiply believers in secret.
Acts29’s battle plan is to train indigenous leaders through specialized, Spirit-led programs designed just for hostile regions. This is not generic ministry training—it is practical, biblical and supernatural. We equip them to pray with authority, hear God’s voice, disciple in secret and evangelize with wisdom in dangerous environments.
These leaders are not outsiders, They are sons and daughters of the soil who know the language, the culture and the risks firsthand. They work day and night, sacrificing comfort, safety, even relationships with friends and family, driven by one burning desire: that one more person in their community or tribe will hear the gospel.
Many of these leaders we have trained are now running underground churches in places no one ever thought possible. Secret gatherings are multiplying, communities once closed to the gospel are opening and miracles are breaking out through the hands of ordinary believers who now walk in extraordinary faith.
Hope is rising where once there was only fear. Training leaders is not just strategy, It is survival. It is how the gospel multiplies where persecution tries to silence it. And it is how Acts29 is ensuring that the fire of the book of Acts continues to burn in the most dangerous corners of the world.