About Us
Tonya comes from a family of missionaries. Her grandparents and great-grandparents served as missionaries in Africa, South America, and South-East Asia. Tonya grew up hearing stories about far away jungles and the wild frontiers of frontline mission work. Tonya and Jared met in Micronesia while serving as student missionaries at the mission school on the island of Yap in 2002 and 2003. After returning to the US and marrying, Tonya and Jared were sponsored by their church in Lincoln, Nebraska, Allon Chapel, to travel to Rwanda in the summer of 2005 for evangelistic outreach. In 2006, after they both graduated from Union College, they made the decision to join Adventist Frontier Missions, having a deep desire in their hearts to go and reach the unreached.
Late in 2007, Jared and Tonya joined the Gorkha Project in Darjeeling, India. They worked alongside Jonathan and Karen Lovitt until 2012, helping to establish a church and English language school. After that, they served briefly among the Nepali people of Nepal in 2012 and 2013, helping to encourage and strengthen the believers in that region.
In 2014, Jared and Tonya moved to Thailand where they served with AFM in partnership with the Thai Adventist Mission as administrators and teachers at the mission school in Ubon Ratchathani for two years. In 2016, they transitioned to a new target community about 20 kilometers outside of the city of Ubon to start a children’s and youth ministry in the village of Baan Krasop. In September of 2018, they completed construction of the Little Explorers Creative Learning Center, which serves as a center of influence for reaching the unreached Isan people of north-east Thailand.
As I write this, I’m sitting in an apartment in a country that borders India. Several months ago, we discussed with the Adventist Church leadership in this country the possibility of partnering with them to reach the Gorkha people who live here. We thought we might do this after we had completed our work in Darjeeling. However, last month, our partners Jonathan and Karen Lovitt received a letter from the local branch of the federal Indian police telling them they had seven days to leave India.
By:
Jared Wright
September 01 2012, 10:20 am | Comments 0
I’ve realized it’s easy for people, in their misguided zeal to protect themselves from the world, to throw up barriers to ward off what they consider evil influences. Unfortunately, those barriers often keep them from forming authentic relationships with people they might otherwise reach for Christ.
By:
Jared Wright
August 01 2012, 10:18 am | Comments 0
Teresa and her husband Satyam have been ministering to the people in their village below Darjeeling for the past several years. It hasn’t been easy for them. Though they are passionate about telling others about Christ, many of their neighbors don’t appreciate the work they’re doing
By:
Jared Wright
July 01 2012, 10:16 am | Comments 0
A sweet stench permeated the apartment as the Hindu priest lit incense sticks and butter lamps. He began to pull various talismans and religious trinkets out of his bag in preparation for the rituals. Glancing up, he noticed an image of Jesus nestled between the idols and pictures of Hindu gods and gurus that adorned the family shrine. “Why is there a picture of Jesus in this house?” he demanded.
By:
Jared Wright
June 01 2012, 10:14 am | Comments 0
Weve come to India to help people understand they dont need idols because God is with them and is speaking to them every day. That what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal (2 Cor. 4:18).
By:
Tonya & Jared Wright - Nilubon Srisai
April 01 2012, 12:38 pm | Comments 0