The map can show public source signals, concentration zones, and research priorities. It cannot prove every local condition, replace field relationships, verify partnerships by itself, or guarantee that a donation directly funds translation work unless a verified payment and partner rail exists.
Passage and source basis
Proverbs 15:22; 1 Corinthians 4:6
The article follows the public site method: observe the text or source, interpret it in context, state a plain conclusion, and apply it responsibly.
What to observe
- Maps are strongest when they show where to ask better questions.
- Public datasets need attribution and dates.
- The site should distinguish research support from direct translation sponsorship.
Common misunderstandings
- A map is not a church.
- A map is not a field report by itself.
- A map should not make unsupported partnership claims.
Application
Personally, the article invites a reader to handle Scripture and mission information with humility and clarity. For the church, it strengthens teaching, prayer, responsible support, and the refusal to publish unsupported claims.
