Alone, pregnant, in disgrace and miles from home, by chance, despairing Chipo heard Feba’s Faith in Action programme on Zimbabwe’s national broadcaster, SFM. She trusted the Lord - and began to turn her life around.

Three hours into a rural village meeting in India where Feba Delhi staff had been invited to share the Gospel, a young man arrived and said the meeting needed to be closed.

It’s a distance to travel from worshiping the Hindu god Tirupathi Venkatachalapathy - via the condemnation of your parents - to a Christian baptism.

Joseph was a womaniser and a heavy drinker until a Feba Zimbabwe programme changed everything, as Shannon June Kittlitz reports.

Nelson, a Feba India team member, was invited home by a family he met during a church visit, to share the Word of God and pray with them. He soon realised that there was a problem in the family.

“Their eldest son, we’ll call him Arun, had left home and they were upset. His father had scolded him for some reason; the boy felt very bad about it and left,” Nelson explains.

Listener under a tree

When Sudhakar, a member of Feba’s Bangalore team, visited an evangelical church in the Indian state of Goa, he met a listener called Samuel. Samuel related how God had intercepted him in a disastrous course of action, brought him to repentance and transformed his life.

Goa is best known as a holidaymaker’s paradise. Long sandy beaches, a relaxed lifestyle, exotic cuisine, friendly people. Around 30 per cent of the people are professing Christians, a legacy of four centuries of Portuguese rule which ended in 1961.

When Christian follow-up literature ‘goes astray’ for whatever reason, God can still use it to achieve his purposes

Isn’t it frustrating to be expecting something in the mail – to wait and wait, and it doesn’t arrive? This happened to one of our listeners in South Asia who had requested a Gospel (New Testament) from us and, as a colleague reports, “In his next letter, he complained, ‘The Gospel you were sending me, I did not get it.’”

Anton Meyer remembers a teenager who came to faith through Feba against his parents’ wishes

Names have been changed, but Mostafa’s experience is typical of many listeners who respond to our Arabic evening broadcast to Yemen

Listeners may be hidden away in rural Yemen, but Feba’s broadcasts in Yemeni Arabic are reaching them with the Good News, as Ahmed’s story reveals