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The Evansville missionary men finished their third of three hitchhiking trips through the cities and rural towns of southern Indiana in mid-September.

 

“When we go through a neighborhood, we don’t always knock on every door,” Mary says. “But the Lord is leading us to the doors he wants us to knock on.

 

“You and the other gal saved my life last week,” he said to Peter. “You came at my lowest point.”

 

“I can’t give you money and we don’t have any pop around,” David said. “But you know what? We could pray for some, and God could give it to you. If God wants you to have some pop, he’ll take care of it.”

 

For John Bowar, Annie Bulger, Liz Loughran and Claire Mysliwiec, the move from the mission field to the campus quad brings changes large and small: spending long hours on homework that used to be devoted to evangelism, hauling heavy textbooks instead of only a pocket Bible and traveling solo to classes rather than always moving with a small missionary team.

 

The community’s presence in the Triangle is rapidly increasing. A seed planted there by three missionaries in the winter of 2007 is now a growing group of 18.