The Bible Society of Nigeria (BSN) is projecting to spend ₦943,020,600 in 2026 for Bible translations and organising impactful programmes that engage people with the Word of God to transform lives across the country.
The media manager of the organisation Mr. Ben Mordi made this known in a statement made available to Church Times.
He informed in the statement that this amount represents a significant increase of 97 percent from the ₦479,722,500 spent in 2024, underscoring the organisation’s commitment to making Scriptures accessible to all Nigerians, and helping people engage with the Bible.
Out of the projected expenditure, the sum of ₦288,386,300 will be spent on ten ongoing translation projects, which are at various stages of completion.
One of these projects is the Nigerian Sign Language Bible for the deaf community in Nigeria, which is expected to gulp ₦62m. Except for the Sign Language Bible translation which costs over four times the regular Bible translation, it costs a minimum of ₦150m to complete any other Bible translation project if achieved within eight years.
He said further in the statement that ‘BSN plans to spend the sum ₦306,392,700 to execute one of its intervention programmes, The Macedonian Call, which focuses on distributing Bibles and relief materials, including foodstuffs, gently used clothes, beddings, and back to school packs in Internally Displaced People’s Camps and slum areas across the country.’
So far, in the first quarter of this year alone, the organisation according to the statementhas spent ₦148,315,500 in its ongoing mission to make the Bible available to Nigerians in their preferred languages and formats, and in organising programmes that engage people with the Scriptures.
The General Secretary/Chief Executive Officer of the organisation, Pastor Samuel Sanusi, as quoted in the statement says that ‘BSN’s commitment to its mission of making the Word of God available to everyone is the driving force behind its passion, despite the harsh economic realities.
According to Pastor Sanusi, “Our resilience, accountability, and the fulfilment of our mission and vision statements, as well as the need to be more socially responsible as a corporate citizen, are our driving forces. Government is doing its bit, and we must do ours in fulfilment of our obligation to the people of God that we serve in line with the Great Commission.”
The Bible Society of Nigeria is a non-profit, non-denominational Christian organisation committed to making the Holy Bible available and affordable to Nigerians in their preferred languages and formats, and to helping them interact with the Word of God through programmes to transform lives.