The Missionary Spirit of Dag Heward-Mills: Sending Labourers into the Harvest

The gospel is not limited by borders. The heart of Jesus beats for the world, and those who truly follow Him carry that same heartbeat. Bishop Dag Heward-Mills is one of those men. From the early days of his ministry, he has had a global vision. He never settled for just building a strong church in one city. He was driven by the desire to see the gospel preached in every nation, every region, and every corner of the earth. That vision birthed the strong missionary wing of his ministry—a wave of trained, sent, and sacrificial men and women who now serve across continents.

The missionary work of Bishop Dag’s ministry is not symbolic. It is not occasional. It is central. It is deliberate. Churches have been planted in remote towns, rural communities, Muslim-dominated areas, and hard-to-reach territories. And behind every missionary is a spiritual father who believes in their calling and supports their sacrifice. Bishop Dag has personally trained and released hundreds of missionaries—many of whom have left everything behind to preach Christ where He is not known.

A Culture of Sacrifice and Obedience

Missionary work, as taught by Bishop Dag, is not glamorous—it is costly. It demands everything. It calls for young men and women to lay down comfort, delay personal dreams, and step into unfamiliar lands for the sake of the gospel. But they go willingly, because they have been taught that there is no higher calling than to obey the command of Jesus: “Go into all the world and preach the gospel.”

He teaches that real love for God always leads to action. And for many, that action is going. He does not sugarcoat the realities of missions. He speaks plainly about hardship, loneliness, rejection, and spiritual warfare. But he also speaks with conviction about the joy of obedience, the glory of soul-winning, and the eternal reward that awaits faithful servants.

This is not a ministry that keeps its best for itself. Bishop Dag has always been willing to send his strongest leaders, his most fruitful pastors, and his most gifted sons into faraway places. That is true apostolic vision—multiplying ministry, not centralizing it. He has reminded the Church that we are not called to gather only—we are called to go.

Through this missionary movement, the gospel is being preached in villages and cities that once had no light. Souls are being saved. Churches are being built. And entire regions are being transformed. And at the heart of it all is a man who said yes to the nations—and raised others to do the same.


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