Central Thai

  • Pre-Entry
  • Pre-Evangelism
  • Evangelism
  • Discipleship
  • Phase-Out
  • Completed

About the People

The Royal Kingdom of Thailand (which means Land of the Free) was founded in 1238 in a declaration of independence from Khmer overlords. Bordered by Laos, Cambodia, Myanmar, and Malaysia, the country also boasts coastlines on the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea. Thailand exports large quantities of Jasmin rice, silk cloth, silver and silver jewelry, wicker weaving, cabbage, herbs and naturally dyed cotton. Open-air markets carry plenty of fresh produce at reasonable prices, and vegetarian restaurants abound. Temperatures range between 60 and 100 degrees year-round, and the political climate is peaceful.

Thailand is a deeply Buddhist nation, with over 92 percent of its population espousing the Buddhist faith. Missionaries have had very little success at penetrating this massive “spiritual wall.” Only about 1.6 percent of the Thai population is Christian. There are 37 Seventh-day Adventist churches in Thailand, most of which are in the north. Khon Kaen—the focus of the Central Thai Project—has no Seventh-day Adventist presence.

About the Project

The primary goal of the AFM missionaries on the Central Thai Project is to establish an indigenous church-planting movement among Thai Buddhists in Central Thailand. To reach this goal, they live closely among the people, learn the Thai language, study local culture and religion, and build deep friendships. Using what they learn, they will craft evangelistic materials in the Thai Buddhist context. They aim to share Christianity in a way that leads to conversions that are deeply meaningful and lasting. Local converts will be discipled to become leaders in the first church plant, and they will be trained to plant new churches. In this way, the result will be a locally-led, newly-born Adventist Christian movement that continues expanding God’s kingdom in Thailand.

In 2014, the Northern Khmer Project merged with the Central Thai project to begin a multifaceted ministry to Thai Buddhists in Khon Kaen. The newly enlarged team runs a music school and focuses on creating worship music and outreach materials carefully crafted to reach Thai Buddhist hearts.

People-Group Facts

  • Population: 67 million
  • Language: Thai
  • Religion: Buddhism

Frontier Stories

The “Never Been Unloved” Concert

We were able to help spread the message of God’s amazing love revealed in the life and sacrifice of Jesus.

By: Christopher Sorensen
June 01 2016, 1:37 pm | Comments 0

Fruit is a Process

The Holy Spirit has been at work a long time, and other people, organizations and events have prepared the soil of their hearts and planted seeds.

By: Alicia Palacios
June 01 2016, 1:36 pm | Comments 0

The Picture

May the Lord help us all to align our “picture” with His.

By: Kyle Tumberg
June 01 2016, 1:03 pm | Comments 0

Medical Missionary Beginnings

I don’t know what the future holds for the work in Khon Kaen, Thailand, but I would like to believe that big things are possible by the grace of God.

By: Kyle Tumberg
May 01 2016, 10:04 am | Comments 1

Birthday Blessing

I hope to follow Dream’s example and look for ways to bless others when my next birthday rolls around.

By: Alicia Palacios
April 01 2016, 11:27 am | Comments 1

When Life Happens

I realized how human and frail I am and how much I need the power of grace in my life in order to accomplish anything of eternal value in Thailand or anywhere else.

By: Kyle Tumberg
April 01 2016, 10:53 am | Comments 0

Not By Chance

It was not by coincidence that Phii Joon found his way to us.

By: Christopher Sorensen
April 01 2016, 10:37 am | Comments 0

By My Spirit

God is able to work and send us more searching people than I even imagined I would meet here.

By: Nina Sanadze
March 01 2016, 2:38 pm | Comments 2

(Your Child Here)

Thank you for sacrificing so that your children could make an eternal difference in this world!

By: Alicia Palacios
March 01 2016, 2:21 pm | Comments 0

Starting Over Again

We look forward to applying what we learned as we seek to expand our work in Khon Kaen.

By: Kyle Tumberg
March 01 2016, 2:16 pm | Comments 0

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