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Eswatini

Lusendvo: The Digital Kingdom of Light· July 2024 – June 2029

Know Eswatini

Eswatini is a small, landlocked kingdom in Southern Africa, bordered by South Africa and Mozambique. It is one of the last absolute monarchies in the world and was formerly known as Swaziland. The country has two capitals: Mbabane (administrative) and Lobamba (royal and legislative). Eswatini is known for its strong cultural traditions, colorful festivals, and scenic landscapes. Its economy relies on agriculture, manufacturing, and services, though it faces challenges such as unemployment and public health concerns.

Mission Section
COUNTRY SNAPSHOT
Nation at a Glance
1.2M
Population
Population Card
21.7
MEDIAN AGE
Population Card
87%
MOBILE PENETRATION
Population Card
580K
INTERNET USERS
Population Card
~90%
MUSLIM
~8%
Christian
Urban youth engaged digitally
Missional Vision

Reaching Eswatini's Vulnerable and Digitally Connected

Despite a near-total Christian majority, Eswatini faces deep social wounds that traditional ministry has failed to reach. Staggering rates of poverty and HIV/AIDS have left an entire generation of youth, women, and orphaned children in need of spiritual and emotional healing — many digitally connected but spiritually isolated. As one local leader put it: “Our youth are on their phones, and if the church isn’t there, we’ll lose them.”

Eswatini’s small geographic size and 87% mobile penetration make it uniquely suited for full national digital coverage. The ADD strategy turns this into an advantage — reaching every corner of the kingdom through focused, student-led digital evangelism and trauma-informed discipleship tools.

Priority target groups:

  • Youth and university students
  • Women and single mothers affected by poverty and HIV/AIDS
  • Orphaned and vulnerable children (OVC) needing digital discipleship

"The Spirit of the Lord is on me... to proclaim good news to the poor... to bind up the brokenhearted." — Isaiah 61:1 NIV

Floating Table Layout
1
Student-Led Digital Evangelism (150 Missionaries, High Schools & Universities)
2
Women & OVC Ministry Support (WhatsApp Counseling, Audio Bibles, SD Cards)
3
National Media Engagement (3 Radio Stations, Facebook Watch, Influencers)
4
Follow-Up & Digital House Churches (60 WhatsApp Discovery Groups)
5
Online Training via Zoom
6
Tablet Evangelism (Pre-loaded Evangelistic Videos)
7
Digital Fellowships (Micro-Fellowships, Trained Leaders)
8
Gospel Film Production (Identity, Forgiveness & Healing)
9
Audio Devotionals (Low-Literacy Audiences)
10
Solar Projectors for Film Screenings
11
Christian Music Videos & Gospel Animations for Youth
12
Online Apologetics (Addressing Faith Skepticism)
13
Live Streams (Facebook & YouTube, Virtual Worship & Q&A)
14
SMS Evangelism (Bible Verses & Online Event Invitations)
15
Collaborative Networking (16 African Nations)
Mission Section
DIGITAL STRATEGY
15 Ministry Channels
Mission Section
GOALS AND OUTCOME
July 2024-June 2029
Responsive Table
ObjectiveYear 1Year 2Year 3Total
Gospel Exposures100,000120,000130,000350,000
Decisions for Christ10,00015,00015,00040,000
Youth Missionaries Trained505050150
WhatsApp Discovery Groups15--60
Digital House Churches Plantedd15202560
MONTORING & EVALUATION
Data-Driven Accountability

A digital dashboard tracks key metrics across all 15 channels in real time. Eswatini's small size and strong connectivity make national-level M&E particularly effective. Quarterly reviews drive continuous improvement, and ten short plus two documentary-style testimony videos are produced annually. The national CCC office provides oversight and alignment with national strategy.

TRANSFORMATIONAL STORIES
Lives Being Changed
Testimonial + Support
Sibongile Dlamini
19 · High School Student, Mbabane · Student Digital Missionary
Sibongile lost her mother to HIV/AIDS at age twelve and was raised by her grandmother. She grew up going to church but described it as "going through motions." A short siSwati gospel film on Instagram — depicting a teenage girl navigating grief and identity — stopped her scrolling. "That girl was me," she said. A link connected her to a WhatsApp Discovery group facilitated by a student missionary at her school. Over eight weeks, she worked through the Bible series and began to understand that her faith was her own. She made a personal decision for Christ and enrolled in the digital missionary training program three months later.
"I watched the church my whole life. This was the first time I felt it was actually mine." Today, Sibongile leads a WhatsApp group for fourteen girls at her school, most of whom are OVC navigating similar journeys.
TRANSFORMATIONAL STORIES
Lives Being Changed