Helping those who serve Syrian refugees, providing Arabic audio Bibles to help churches reach out to their friends and neighbors, sponsoring conferences that honor women in cultures where they are often neglected, encouraging and caring for pastors in war-torn nations – this is just some of the work to which God has called The Joshua Fund in the Epicenter.
You can bless the lives of people in the Middle East in real and practical ways. When you give to The Joshua Fund, your donations feed the hungry, care for Holocaust survivors, protect the unborn, purchase medical equipment, provide for widows and orphans, and so much more.
“In our previous visits to a Distribution Center we were encouraged to see the youth’s commitment to diligently assemble the food-packs; this Distribution Center is a collaboration of six local congregations, and this time, the senior leaders did the packing." – A Joshua Fund team member
Join Joel C. Rosenberg for a unique tour of the Holy Land including the Epicenter Prayer Summit in Jerusalem. You will visit ancient sites where Jesus taught and ministered.
“‘The Christians of Egypt are being slaughtered inside their churches again.’ These were the opening words of an email just after an Easter week service explosion that took the lives of many.” – A ministry partner in Egypt
One tangible way your gifts to The Joshua Fund are showing the love of God is by providing household items for those in need who have recently made Aliyah, which is the process of Jewish individuals and families relocating back to the Land of Israel, according to Bible prophesies such as Isaiah 49:22.
“I feel that I have changed my ways and the desire to change is not from me but it was from God. I’ve always prayed and asked Him for this, but without Him it would not have happened.” – A student in a discipleship program in Israel
Join Joel Rosenberg as he shares a few personal updates, speaks about how he sees the Lord moving among the people of the Land, and shares how you can be praying for the people of Israel.
“Ministering the love of God to the Nubian communities of southern Egypt is much like planting palm trees that can survive and flourish in deserts, it takes years to enjoy their sweet fruit."
On January 27th, we solemnly mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the date on which the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp was liberated by the Soviet Army troops in 1944.
Discover three ways to better understand the nation of Israel.
An evangelical tour ministry worker in Israel recently shared, “Thanks to your partnership, we are able to lead outreach tours through biblical paths for Holocaust Survivors and new immigrants."