International Christian Concern (ICC) is a Christian ministry serving the persecuted Christians around the world. The organization provides aid to…
Christian ministries that put Scripture into the hands of people who need it — whether through printed Bibles in hotels and prisons, audio Bibles for oral cultures, smartphone apps with global reach, or covert distribution in countries where owning a Bible can mean imprisonment.
Christian nonprofits in this focus area that have been verified against The Most Trusted Standard.
International Christian Concern (ICC) is a Christian ministry serving the persecuted Christians around the world. The organization provides aid to…
Iris Global is compelled by the love of God to stop for the one in need through worship, outreach, family, education, relief, development, healing…
KiDs Beach Club® is an innovative ministry that partners with churches to reach unchurched children with the gospel of Jesus Christ. Our vision is to…
At Lifeline Christian Mission, we mobilize, develop, and empower people and communities, both locally and globally. Our ultimate vision is that…
MEHR Ministries (Middle East Heritage Reformed Ministries) is a reformed ministry for training and equipping servants of Christ to plant biblically…
Metro Relief seeks to mobilize, empower, restore, and satisfy the needs of the oppressed. Metro Relief draws people toward Christ as the ultimate…
Operation Care International is a faith-based non-profit organization that supports the homeless in Dallas, Texas. Its mission is to be able to…
Our mission in working with the poor and oppressed around the trash dump of Korah, Ethiopia, is to help promote human transformation, seek justice…
The mission of Paradise Bound is to continue the earthly ministry of Jesus Christ. We accomplish this through His primary example of ministering to…
Prison Alliance is a prison ministry dedicated to making disciples. The first step is providing free Christian books, Bibles, CDs and DVDs to prison…
Reaching Unreached Nations (RUN) Ministries is a USA-based charity with a passion for global holistic transformation. We equip the local church to…
Shared Blessings is committed to meeting a variety of needs in people's lives. They help with clothing, food, furniture, baby needs, emergency…
176 nonprofits
Putting Scripture into someone's hands is the first step of a long journey. Bible distribution ministries work across many formats, populations, and contexts — each method shaped by who needs Scripture and what barriers stand in the way.
Printed Bibles given freely to those who can't afford them — placed in hotels, hospitals, prisons, military, schools, addiction recovery programs, and community centers around the world.
Specialized ministries that deliver Scripture into countries where Bible ownership is illegal or dangerous — North Korea, Iran, parts of China, and others — often through covert and high-risk methods.
Free Bible apps, online platforms, and downloadable Scripture in thousands of languages — bringing the Bible to anywhere a smartphone reaches, including remote regions historically beyond print distribution.
Solar-powered audio devices and recordings bringing Scripture to oral-tradition cultures and populations with low literacy rates — often the only viable format for unreached people groups.
Putting Bibles where people most need them at critical moments — hotel rooms, hospital bedsides, prison cells, military barracks, university campuses, addiction recovery centers — where Scripture meets the searching reader.
Discipleship resources, reading plans, study guides, and small-group materials that help recipients actually read the Bibles they've received — bridging the gap between delivery and life-changing encounter with Scripture.
For most American Christians, Bibles are easy to come by. Bookstores, hotel rooms, smartphones, mail-order, free copies at churches — Scripture is everywhere. It is genuinely difficult to imagine a world in which a Bible is rare, costly, or dangerous to possess. But for much of the world, that world is still the present reality.
Roughly 1.5 billion people lack Scripture in their first language. Many live in countries where Bibles are restricted, expensive, or illegal. Others live in oral cultures where written text is impractical without audio. Still others have access to a translation in theory but no actual physical or digital copy in practice. The work of putting Bibles into hands — through whatever format works for whatever audience — remains enormous, and remains far from finished.
What has changed is the scale of what's possible. Two decades ago, getting Scripture into a closed country meant smuggling printed copies across borders at real personal risk. Today, a single smartphone with the right app can hold thousands of Bibles in hundreds of languages — downloaded once over a brief WiFi connection and read offline forever. The digital revolution has dramatically expanded what donor dollars can accomplish. But it has not eliminated the need for physical Bibles where electricity is unreliable, smartphones are scarce, or printed Scripture remains the cultural standard.
The mature Bible distribution movement has also learned that delivery is not the goal — engagement is. A Bible on a shelf changes nothing. A Bible read, studied, prayed over, and lived from changes everything. The best ministries today increasingly pair distribution with discipleship resources, reading plans, audio companion content, and follow-up — recognizing that getting Scripture into someone's hands is the first step, not the last.
Beyond our standard verification framework, here are factors specific to Bible distribution ministries that thoughtful donors often weigh.
The best ministries focus distribution where Scripture access is genuinely limited — closed countries, persecution contexts, oral cultures, prison populations, addiction recovery settings — rather than over-distributing to populations already saturated with Bibles. Look for ministries that can describe specifically who their distribution reaches and why those populations were prioritized.
A Bible delivered but never read accomplishes nothing. Excellent ministries pair distribution with discipleship resources, reading plans, study guides, audio companion content, or local partnerships that ensure recipients actually engage with what they've received. Beware of ministries whose metrics stop at units distributed.
Some populations need printed Bibles; others need audio; others need digital. Excellent ministries match format to context — using digital for educated urban populations with smartphones, audio for oral cultures or low-literacy contexts, print where electricity and devices are unreliable. Beware of ministries committed to one format regardless of fit.
Bibles are distributed in particular translations. The best distribution ministries partner with reputable translation organizations and use Scripture versions trusted by the populations receiving them — not low-quality translations or proprietary versions with theological agendas. Look for ministries transparent about which translations they distribute.
Bible distribution in persecuted countries carries real risk — for the distributors, the recipients, and the local Christians who may be implicated. Ministries operating in these contexts should have clear ethical frameworks: protecting local believers, avoiding methods that bring undue attention to recipients, and working through trusted in-country networks rather than risky one-time drops.
Excellent ministries publish clear information about what donor dollars actually accomplish — cost per Bible distributed, percentage of donations going directly to distribution versus overhead, and partnerships that multiply impact. Beware of vague impact claims that obscure how money is actually being used.
Explore verified Bible distribution ministries above — or browse Christian ministries by other causes, locations, and award levels.