BMS World Mission: missionaries bring the gospel to Peru's most isolated new town
Peruvian missionaries Margia and Ronal are sharing the gospel and providing pastoral care in the newly formed, desolate town of Carlos Quesquen Terri, supported by BMS World Mission workers Dave and Michele Mahon who encourage them in a challenging environment where mission work is often undervalued.

Analysis
Carlos Quesquen Terri is not on most maps. It is a newly formed town in Peru — raw, desolate, and full of people who have arrived with very little and are trying to build something from nothing. It is exactly the kind of place where the gospel has always found its most fertile ground.
Margia and Ronal are Peruvian missionaries who have chosen to be present in this no man's land. They are sharing the gospel, providing pastoral care, and doing the slow, unglamorous work of building a Christian community in a place that has no existing church infrastructure. BMS World Mission workers Dave and Michele Mahon are alongside them — not leading, but encouraging, affirming, and supporting.
That model of partnership matters. BMS has always understood that the most effective mission happens when international workers come alongside local missionaries rather than replacing them. Margia and Ronal know their culture, their language, and their community. Dave and Michele know how to encourage people who are doing difficult work in difficult places.
For those who support BMS World Mission, this story is a reminder of what your giving makes possible. Not grand programmes or high-profile initiatives, but two missionaries in a desolate Peruvian town, faithfully sharing the love of Christ with people who have never heard it.