Answer box

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.

Data note. Public translation and people-group figures change as source organizations update their snapshots. This article is written as an educational explanation and links readers toward source review rather than unsupported claims.

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.