To see everyone, everywhere, in every language have access to God's Word!
MicroBible Portals (MBP) is a process that allows you to deploy a web server on your cell phone. The MBP process turns any Android device into a system that enables you to publish and distribute your biblical content - scripture, apps, videos, or websites - to any device that has at least a web browser and Wifi. Since MBP is deployed on a mobile Android device, other believers can access the content either through Wi-Fi/Hotspot, a VPN tunnel, or via the cell phone tower you are connected to.
To provide modern technology training to ministries and missionaries,
further equipping them to spread the Good News of Jesus Christ.
"So neither the one who plants nor the one who waters is anything, but only God, who makes things grow. The one who plants and the one who waters have one purpose, and they will each be rewarded according to their own labor. For we are co-workers in God's service; you are God's field, God's building. By the grace God has given me, I laid a foundation as a wise builder, and someone else is building on it. But each one should build with care. For no one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ." 1 Corinthians 3:7-11 (NIV)
"All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work." 1 Timothy 3:16-17 (NIV)
Partner Ministries
3
MBPs Created
12
Training Events Held
2
Partner Ministries
10+
MBPs Created
100+
Training Events Held
5+
MicroBible Portals is fully functional — the core system works. An Android device running MBP can serve Scripture, video, and biblical content to anyone nearby over Wi-Fi, no internet required. That's not a vision anymore. That's real.
But real field conditions expose real problems. Right now, when the web server running on the device encounters an issue — a crash, a configuration error, a dropped process — recovering it requires knowing Linux terminal commands. In a remote village in Ghana with no internet access, that's not a small ask.
One of our field testers is a Jesus Film Rider with OneWay Africa — part of a dedicated team of motorcyclists who travel by motorbike into remote villages across Northern Ghana to show the Jesus Film and plant churches among unreached people groups. He has taken MBP into the field, and his real-world feedback is the most valuable thing we have. When the server fails and he's hours from the nearest town, the gap between "functional" and "finished" becomes very clear.
That's what we're solving right now. The next phase of development focuses on reworking the app so that it handles those recovery situations automatically — no Linux commands, no terminal, no technical knowledge required. A rider in Ghana should be able to get his server back up and running with a tap, not a command line.
When that's done, MBP becomes something any missionary can carry and use — not just the technically gifted ones.
Your support funds the development time to get there.