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Mar 01

Across Time Zones: Truck Driver’s Bible Studies Connect Kentucky with India

Paola Mora Zepeda

Scott Smith of Leitchfield, Kentucky, Church, poses with his truck. From the truck, Smith conducts Bible studies with Santosh Jadhav, who calls in from India.

Xander Ordinola

Santosh Jadhav, and his wife, Meena, prepare food for children in their congregation. Living in a place where evangelism can carry serious consequences, Jadhav has found food to be an effective way to connect with his community.

Wendy-Lynn Dunn

Santosh Jadhav poses with children he feeds and teaches each Sabbath morning. Through this ministry, many families have begun coming to him with questions about the Bible.

Wendy-Lynn Dunn

Six individuals from Santosh Jadhav’s community were baptized November 6, 2025, following Bible studies with Jadhav. Four more community members are currently participating in Bible studies in preparation for baptism.

Photo Courtesy of Scott Smith

Jadhav and Smith FaceTime during one of their Bible studies. Smith also preaches to Jadhav’s study group on some days after long work shifts.

Photo Courtesy Scott Smith

Most mornings, Scott Smith begins his workday the same way many truck drivers do: waking up before sunrise, climbing into his truck, and preparing for the long miles ahead. But for Smith, those early hours have also become a meeting place that stretches nearly halfway around the world.

For months now, Smith has spent his mornings on WhatsApp calls with a man he has never met in person, leading Bible studies while driving the Kentucky highways. On the other end of the call, more than 8,000 miles away in Maharashtra, India, Santosh Jadhav listens, studies, and teaches others in his community what he is learning.

“It all started with a simple message,” said Smith. “[Jadhav] reached out and said, ‘Hello brother. God bless you and your family. Please pray for my ministry.’”

Beginning the Conversation

The message arrived through Facebook. Jadhav, a Christian preacher working in a region where Christianity represents only a small fraction of the population, had been introduced to Smith indirectly through Jayah Shah, an Indian national who previously attended the Leitchfield, Kentucky, Church where Smith is a member. Believing the two men would connect, Shah shared their Facebook information.

“She was right,” said Smith. “When [Jadhav] asked me to pray for his ministry, I wanted to know more, and he told me he taught children in his community about Jesus.”

Smith said the timing of the message stood out. He first received it while attending the Kentucky-Tennessee Conference Camp Meeting in 2025, where days of sermons and fellowship had already focused his attention on mission. When Jadhav reached out asking for prayer, Smith followed up almost immediately, calling him later that same week while Camp Meeting was still underway.

During one of their earliest conversations, Smith, who learned about the Sabbath through personal Bible study in 2016, asked Jadhav whether he was familiar with the biblical teaching. Jadhav was not, and he asked Smith to teach him.

“That was all I needed to hear,” said Smith, adding that the moment reminded him of the Ethiopian man in the Bible who asked for guidance as he studied Scripture.

Studying on the Road

With a 10-hour time difference between Kentucky and India, the two began regular Bible studies during Camp Meeting and continued them afterward, with Smith calling from his truck in the morning as Jadhav listened from his home late into the evening. The studies often lasted more than an hour, and within a week and a half, Jadhav reached a conviction that reshaped his personal ministry.

“When I first began studying the Bible with brother Scott, I didn’t understand the beautiful truth about the Sabbath,” said Jadhav. “I was eager to learn what it meant and why it matters for prayer and worship. As I studied Scripture every day with brother Scott, I came to understand its purpose and blessings, and I knew I needed to share what I was learning with my people.”

Smith said he was struck by how quickly Jadhav responded to what he was learning.

“He had a large sign made with Exodus 20:8 on it, ‘Remember the Sabbath to keep it holy,’ and had it hung inside his place of ministry,” said Smith. “I was impressed.”

Smith said he encouraged Jadhav to take the next step by sharing Scripture even more broadly.

“I told him, ‘You know what you need to do? Go back to the print shop,’” said Smith. “I told him I would send him Bible verses to print in English, Marathi, and Hindi, and hand out. But, he told me he couldn’t do that because of persecution in the area.”

Serving in a Vulnerable Place

According to Jadhav, his ministry operates under constant caution. In his region, openly evangelizing among adults can bring serious consequences, and distributing printed religious materials can be dangerous. Because of those risks, he and his wife, Meena, have focused much of their outreach on feeding children in their impoverished neighborhood, many of whom come from Hindu or Muslim families.

“There are limits to what we can do publicly,” said Jadhav. “We must think carefully about every step, so we serve families in ways that bring help without creating danger.”

Through the children, Jadhav has seen faith begin to reach entire families. Parents initially send their children because they know food will be available. Over time, as children return home talking about what they have learned, parents grow curious and begin asking questions themselves.

“Today we are seeing great blessings and growing in the Word,” said Jadhav. “It is a small beginning. Sometimes I struggle to answer people’s questions, so I fast and pray for guidance, and I see how God continues to help us, including through brother Scott, who also provides guidance.”

In addition, each Sabbath the couple prepares a warm vegetarian meal for adults in the village who come hungry. Along with the food, they share prayer and Bible lessons. In his village, Jadhav said, eating every day is considered a sign of wealth.

“So, I may be poor with food,” said Jadhav, “but I am rich in Jesus.”

As Smith learned more about Jadhav’s ministry and the challenges it faced, he decided the situation was something his own congregation needed to hear. After learning of Jadhav’s story, the Leitchfield Church members agreed to provide support by helping fund meals, school supplies for the children, and items needed for worship.

Continuing the Work

About six months after Smith and Jadhav first connected on Saturday, November 6, 2025, donations from members of Leitchfield Church made it possible for Jadhav to purchase a communion set and host a shared meal for his community. Later, the group traveled about an hour to the nearest Seventh-day Adventist church, where six people from Jadhav’s community were baptized.

“I know [God] is changing lives and that there is rejoicing in Heaven,” said Jadhav. “My family, and the people in my church have understood the blessing and truth. That day [of the baptisms] reminded me that God is with us.”

Litchfield Church members continue taking weekly offering to support Jadhav’s ministry, and as of January 2026, four members of his community continue to study the Bible in preparation for baptism.

Sometimes after Smith’s long workdays and hours of driving, he will arrive home, put on a suit and tune in as a guest preacher for Jadhav’s Bible study group. He said the experience has reinforced his belief that God works through those who are willing to respond.

“I’m nobody,” said Smith. “I’m just a rusty old nail on the wall that I pray people can see a picture of Jesus hung on …. I didn’t go looking halfway across the world [for Jadhav]. He came looking over here. He knocked on the door. All I did was open it.”

Those interested in supporting Jadhav’s ministry may contact Leitchfield Church through its Facebook page (Leitchfield Ky. Seventh-day Adventist Church).


Paola Mora Zepeda is media ministries director for Kentucky-Tennessee Conference.

Kentucky-Tennessee | March 2026

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