AUDIO
BIBLES AND THE ENDS OF THE EARTH
Morgan
Jackson[1]
Senior
Vice President, Faith Comes By Hearing
Published at
www.GlobalMissiology.org, October 2013
Let me first of all thank the editors of
the Journal of Global Missiology for allowing me the privilege of saying a few
words about Audio Bibles and the ministry of Faith Comes By Hearing in
using technology towards the fulfillment of the Great Commission. I recognize
the tremendous debt organizations such as ours owe to the work of countless missionaries
and missiologists before us in understanding the needs of the unreached world
and devising strategies to reach the very ends of the earth with the Gospel.
At Faith Comes By
Hearing, we are passionately committed to making the Word of God freely available
to everyone, everywhere in the language and format they can best use. As some 70% of the world’s population is
illiterate and/or live in oral cultures[2], we see a great need for and work toward the recording and
distribution of non-print (audio and video) Bibles.
We are also passionately committed to harnessing
the very latest technology for Kingdom use. Of course, we are not alone in this
regard, as Christ-followers have been doing this for centuries. Our Lord
Himself was known to use what I would call natural
technology to amplify the sound of his voice by speaking down a hillside or
across water—using the laws of nature to increase the reach of his voice.
Background
The history of our own ministry really
begins in the late 1960’s when my father, Jerry Jackson made the radical
decision to sell our home in California and move our family of six into a bus.
For the better part of four years, we drove the western part of the U.S.
ministering at local churches, Vacation Bible Schools, and any other venue God
opened for us. We even spent one summer in a hippy colony in the woods of Oregon,
where God did a mighty work among young people who were willing to go to
tremendous lengths to fill their spiritual longings.
Then we took up temporary residence on a
Hopi (Native American) reservation in Northern Arizona. A number of others workers had come before us
and a small church building had been used, but Christianity was only (at best)
a surface reality. Alcoholism, domestic violence, and animism all remained a part
of daily life for those we were ministering to.
But one day my father was in the church building and came upon a
bookshelf of Hopi Bibles. Curious as to why they were locked in a broom closet
as opposed to being used, we were told that the main problem was that very few
of the Hopi could read – so print Bibles were of little value to them. He was
heartbroken by this reality and began to dream of ways to record the Hopi Bible
so those shackled by illiteracy could hear.
Fast-forward to 1972. God (quite to our
surprise) had settled the family in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Through a series
of events too lengthy to go into detail here, we launched a ministry that
(among other things) recorded the English New Testament onto cassette and sold
them just above cost to churches and individuals all over the country. Cassettes
were cutting-edge technology at the time, and by the early 1980’s we were soon
one of the largest users of cassette tapes in the entire world. Within just a few years we were being
approached by missionaries and pastors from other countries pleading with us to
expand our work to include other languages as poverty and illiteracy were major
barriers to missions work. We quickly realized
that audio recorded Scriptures were a need all over the world.
As much as half the people alive today cannot
read printed text in their heart language. In many cases (such as the Quechua of Peru),
even those who are afforded a formal education are only taught to read or write
in a trade language. Yet, they are speaking a different language in their homes.
If they stay within their community, they don’t have a need to use the trade
language (especially in a print format), and thus remain essentially illiterate.
Centuries of cross-cultural mission work has shown again and again that people
and churches can only thrive when using their heart language – the language they
pray and express their deepest emotions in. Of course, tremendous strides are
being made in the areas of Bible translation, but today millions of speakers of
minority languages are cut off from Scripture because of illiteracy and the
fact that church services are being held in trade languages. Even many pastors
cannot read the Bible well enough to study or prepare a sermon.
This is well known now, but in the late 1980s
many people were still discovering these heart-breaking realities. Obviously,
the ability to read is a major social and economic advantage to people in
virtually any culture and we are grateful to the ministries who are focused on
this skill, but we felt that we couldn’t wait for people to learn to read
before they could understand the Gospel and full teachings of Scripture.
Recordings
Sensing that God was moving us in new
direction, we established recording teams to go into various parts of the world
to find indigenous speakers to record full New Testaments.
At the time, the process required
photocopying a New Testament text onto larger sheets of paper, and using
colored pencils or highlighters to divide the text into individual reader/voice
parts (Jesus, the narrator, the apostles, etc).
These pages were then placed into three-ring binders to be used as
scripts for the readers. In addition to these bulky binders, the teams also had
to carry heavy reel-to-reel recorders. The completed reels were shipped to our
studios in New Mexico where edits were made by physical splicing and taping.
Over time, we were able to convert the
script to an Excel spreadsheet, making it possible to sort by voice parts. Then
laptop computers became available, not only could they hold the script, but
could also be used as the actual recorders; Soon our entire recording toolbox
fit into two carry-ons. This saved time in preparing the script as well as making
edits to the audio files. These and other innovations eventually cut our
recording time from months to weeks.
Last year, we were able to launch a
Virtual Recording process, harnessing technology to complete Audio Bibles entirely
via the internet. Recently, we opened auditions for a recording in a highly
sensitive part of Asia, and more than 600 people responded! This was a region
that we had tried for several years to get a recording team into, but the
amazing reach of the Internet actually brought the voice talent to us. We are
anticipating using Virtual Recording to have possibly hundreds of recording in
process simultaneously.
Audio
Bible Distribution
For the first 15 years of our
international ministry, Bible recordings on cassette were the primary media
choice. We were amazed that even remote villages often had access to a portable
cassette player! Millions of people worldwide were discipled in God’ Word
listening from Matthew to Revelation in their heart language.
But eventually, as cassettes and even
CDs began to wane in the marketplace, our president felt we needed to develop
our own playback device. We asked staff
members who were willing to fast and pray for three days. Near the end of that
time, our engineer presented us with a prototype of a device which we’ve since
named the Proclaimer. The Proclaimer
is a totally self-contained Audio Bible playback unit with an internal battery
which can be recharged via standard A/C, solar (with its attached solar panel),
and even hand crank. The sound chip is a proprietary design, so that it can
never be recorded over with pop music or anything else someone may wish to
broadcast.
In the past eight years, the Lord has
allowed to provide more than 340,000 Proclaimer to indigenous churches,
schools, hospitals, villagers, prisons, and numerous other venues in more than
150 countries. In order to get a free
Proclaimer, the pastor or other leader has to agree to gather people together
for a set time each week. Often the group leader is a village elder, whose
invitation to the group virtually guarantees full participation. These
“listening groups” listen to the Audio New Testament for at least 30 minutes
and then spend time discussing the passage and how to apply it to their
specific cultural context. Thorny issues
like polygamy, syncretism versus contextualization, how to love your enemy when
your enemy is trying to kill you, and a myriad of
others can be biblically discussed by the entire community of believers—whether
they are young or old, educated or uneducated.
By following this simple method, the
group will hear and discuss the entire New Testament one or more times within a
year. Often a single Proclaimer is recharged,
passed around, and used multiple times a week for multiple listening groups. Some literally play day and night, and our
research shows that a single Proclaimer unit will eventually be heard by at
least 90 people! Our regional workers will also return to these villages to
follow-up to see that the groups are still going and to collect testimonies.
Over the years, the five most reported transformations taking place as a result
of group listening are:
The Proclaimer’s engineering has since been
re-designed to include a pocket-sized version (MiniProclaimer) for areas where
group listening must be discreet and the micro-Proclaimer (small enough to
attach to a keychain). In addition, a small, digital audio player called a BibleStick
is used for individual listening in sensitive regions. Each device is
pre-loaded with the New Testament in one of our 740+ available languages.
Digital
Bible Platform
Communication technology is changing and
developing at a rate that is nearly impossible to keep up with. Ten years ago, less
than 25% of the world had Internet access; today populations
with access to the Internet has topped 96%. And the number of cell phone
subscriptions has risen from 662 million in 2003 to 6.4 billion at the end of
2012. This equates to 91% of the world’s population.[3]
So, in 2010, Faith Comes By Hearing launched the Digital Bible Platform, which
includes the Bible.is
app, and houses the world’s largest collection of digital Bibles in audio and
text. To date more than 107 million people from virtually every country on
earth have engaged with Scripture (audio, text, and JESUS film clips) via podcasts, streaming sessions, and downloads.
This year, utilizing the Digital Bible
Platform, we released over 700 Internet radio stations through iTunes, and also
added a partnership with SAT-7 to broadcast the Arabic Audio Bible via
satellite TV across the Middle East and North Africa. The opportunity to expand
satellite coverage and reach people with God’s Word is staggering.
Amazingly to me (since we’re known as an
audio ministry), God has even opened up doors to reach the world’s Deaf
population through the Deaf Bible.is app. This app currently has the complete
video recording of the New Testament and portions of the Old Testament in American
Sign Language, and will soon include numerous other sign languages as well.
The
Future is Now
Groups such as O3b (Other 3 billion) are
committed to make broadband connection available to the three billion people on
earth who currently do not have it. This will mean that literally everyone on
earth will have the potential to access the Word of God digitally.
These are truly exciting times to be
alive, and my sincere prayer is that the church remains on the very cutting
edge of technology to take advantage of every single opportunity and means to
take the Good News to the very ends of the earth. We at Faith Comes by Hearing
are honored to be a part of that mission by harnessing and deploying technology
as a strategy for Scripture distribution.
(1)
http://www.lausanne.org/docs/2004forum/LOP54_IG25.pdf
(2)
http://www.itu.int/en/ITU-D/Statistics/Documents/facts/ICTFactsFigures2013.pdf
[1] Morgan Jackson is the senior vice president of Faith Comes By Hearing, the home of the world’s largest catalog of Audio Bibles. He is a popular speaker and natural story teller who shares the need for God’s Word in audio with audiences all over the world. He has traveled to more than 60 countries and has been called “a true champion for poor and illiterate people”.
[2] http://www.lausanne.org/docs/2004forum/LOP54_IG25.pdf
[3]
http://www.itu.int/en/ITU-D/Statistics/Documents/facts/ICTFactsFigures2013.pdf