Apr 17, 2026 Hope on Two Wheels

In the rural villages surrounding Yendi, Northern Ghana, reaching people with the gospel is not simple.

The roads are in terrible conditions, especially during the rainy season.

Many communities are far apart, difficult to access, and often without reliable transportation to get there.

For gospel workers, every visit, every outreach, and every delivery requires determination, and most importantly the right tools.

That’s why motorcycles are not just helpful, they are essential.

One night, a call came from Nagani village.

A young girl was seriously ill. Her family had no way to get her to the hospital in Yendi. There were no vehicles available, and time was running out.

But they knew who to call. They called their local gospel worker. Somone they could rely on.

The gospel worker picked up the call, heard the fear in their voice, prayed with them, and set out immediately on a QHM motorcycle.

When he arrived, the family was already gathered—waiting, hoping, praying that help would come.

That night, the motorcycle became more than transportation.
It became a lifeline.

He carried the little girl and her mother safely to the hospital. Three days later, she was discharged—fully recovered.

Moments like this remind us that motorcycles don’t just carry people.
They carry hope.
They carry compassion.
They carry the love of Christ into real, urgent situations.

That same motorcycle is used day after day to reach homes, villages, and communities that would otherwise remain untouched.

In just one reporting period:

  • 270 households were visited through personal ministry
  • Health outreach programs helped communities prevent disease
  • Public evangelistic meetings were held in Nagani and Nashegu

But one of the most powerful impacts has come through something simple—yet life-changing:

Audio Bibles.

In many of these communities, especially among the elderly and those in remote farming areas, reading is a challenge. Even when people want to know God’s Word, access can be limited.

Audio Bibles remove that barrier.

Now, people can hear Scripture in their own language—Likpakpaln—and understand it clearly.

“It’s so clear now.”
“I feel God speaking directly to me.”
“Hearing it in my own tongue touches my heart deeply.”

These aren’t just devices.
They are opening hearts.

In villages, Audio Bibles are played in communal spaces, bringing people together for shared learning and discussion. In the fields, they bring encouragement during long hours of work. In homes, they help parents pass down faith to their children through storytelling—a deeply valued tradition in their culture.

But none of this happens without transportation.

Motorcycles are how gospel workers reach these communities.
Motorcycles are how they visit homes.
Motorcycles are how they carry Audio Bibles into villages that cannot be reached any other way.

Without motorcycles, the gospel simply doesn’t travel as far.

And the need is growing.

Poor road conditions continue to make access difficult. In many cases, even more support, like additional motorcycles or transport solutions, is needed just to keep up with the opportunities.

The story from Nagani is just one example.

A motorcycle carried a sick child to safety.

But every day, these same motorcycles are carrying something just as urgent—the Word of God.

They are helping people hear, understand, and respond to the gospel.

They are helping communities encounter Jesus.

And they are making it possible for hope to reach places that would otherwise be left behind.

Right now, there are still villages waiting, waiting for someone to come, waiting to hear God’s Word in their own language.

Your gift can help provide the motorcycles needed to reach them.

When you give, you’re not just funding transportation—you’re helping deliver Audio Bibles, support gospel workers, and bring the hope of Jesus to people who may be hearing it for the very first time.

Will you help put more “hope on two wheels”?

Please pray for this work—and as you feel led, consider giving to help provide a motorcycle or support the outreach that makes stories like this possible.

Thank you for helping carry the gospel farther than ever before.

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