WEEK OF PRAYER: Circuit riders

BAR NUNN, Wyo. – Baggs, Bairoil, Glendo, Granger, Medicine Bow, Meeteetse—race past them at the posted interstate speed limit of 80 miles per hour, and one after another, every tiny town in Wyoming can easily look like the same blink-and-you’ll-miss-it blur out the passenger-side window.

Unless you’re Tyler Martin.

“You can go pretty much an hour in any direction from where I live and you’ll see absolutely nothing—no gas stations, no subdivisions, no shopping centers—nothing,” Tyler says. “But every hour or so you’ll come to a tiny town that most people have never heard of. And just because you may not have heard of these places or know where they are on a map, that doesn’t mean these small towns aren’t important. Each one of them is a small pocket of 100 or 200 people and every one of those people has a soul that Christ died for. That means these places matter to God, and because they matter to Him, they matter to us.”

When God called Tyler and Ashley Martin to move to Bar Nunn, Wyoming and plant a church, they knew they would need all the help they could get. “Our family has everything we need to make Jesus known here,” says Ashley, “because churches from all over are giving to Annie Armstrong.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

When Tyler says “us,” he’s referring to Outfitter Church in Bar Nunn, where he and his wife Ashley serve as church planting missionaries. Outfitter is step number one in a boldly creative plan to take the gospel to tiny towns all over the state.

“Wyoming is remarkably unchurched and unreached,” Tyler says. “Here, there are 203 cities and towns you can have as a mailing address. And over 60 of those don’t have a church of any kind—not Baptist, not Methodist, not Lutheran—nothing. And we realized when we started Outfitter in Bar Nunn that if we really want to see churches planted in all these other small towns, the planters are going to have to come from congregations right here in Wyoming. These small towns are so hard to get to and so expensive to do ministry in; that’s just the way it is. If we want to get the gospel to these places, it’s going to be up to local churches like ours.”

Sixty baptisms—that’s a big number when you’re planting a church in the tiny town of Bar Nunn, Wyoming. Because Southern Baptists give to the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering, church planting missionaries Tyler and Ashley Martin are seeing God change lives at what is now Outfitter Church. (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

Tyler went back to the 19th-century for a plan on how to do that. “In Wyoming, you can’t just start a small group in the town next to you. There is no town next to you,” he says. “So what we and some other churches here see God priming us to do is raise up men and then send them out to be a part of a circuit preaching rotation. We’re so spread out and have so few resources, it’s the only way we’re going to be able to start churches in these towns that’ve never had a church in them, ever in the history of that town.”

Outfitter, just like the handful of other Wyoming churches Tyler’s working with, has lots of church planting raw material to draw from. Since he and his wife Ashley launched the church a couple of years ago, he’s baptized more than 60 people.

“We have a lot of new believers here, so that means in many cases we’re starting from ground zero, but it’s amazing how the men in our church have really caught on to this idea,” Tyler says.

Tyler Martin is looking for a few good men. Tyler started a church in Bar Nunn, Wyoming, but there are still 60 more towns all over the state that have no church of any kind. “If we’re going to take the gospel to Wyoming,” he says, “it’s going to be up to local churches like ours. We’re going to have to lead people in our communities to Jesus, disciple them, raise them up as church planters and send them out.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

“We’re building into them the DNA of what a gospel leader is, and our prayer is that one day very soon, each of these men will be preaching once a month in a town one or two hours from here that needs a church. This is affordable. We can keep it going for years to come because people aren’t getting burned out, and Lord willing, God’s going to call multiple church planters out of this group of men.”

Trent Fetherston is one of those men. Fetherston was known around town for all the wrong reasons. He had been a frequent visitor at a local bar. Now, he’s a follower of Christ who is training to be one of Outfitter Church’s circuit riding planter/pastors.

Your gifts to the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering helped Tyler Martin start Outfitter Church in Bar Nunn, Wyoming. Outfitter is step number one in a boldly creative plan to take the gospel to unchurched communities all over the state. “We’re planting the DNA of a gospel leader into our men,” Tyler says, “and praying that God will call some of them to be part of our circuit preaching rotation that’ll plant churches all over the state.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

“Hearing Tyler preach the gospel opened my heart,” he says. “And if he and Ashley hadn’t answered God’s call to plant a church, I don’t know where I’d be. That’s why I want to do the same thing they did. I want to show people Jesus is real and see this whole state turned upside down with the gospel.”

“When I think about how we can get the gospel to all these small towns in Wyoming, I think about Trent,” Tyler says. “What we always say is, ‘our future church planters are getting drunk at the bar, and we’ve got to lead them to Christ, disciple them, and then let the Lord call them to ministry.’ That’s what’s happened with Trent and so many other men here. Now, I know they’re going to be Wyoming’s gospel trailblazers because I see that they have a growing passion and desire to preach and teach God’s Word. When they start riding that circuit, they’re going to be the ones to take the gospel to small towns all over this state.”

Tyler Martin, a church planting missionary in Bar Nunn, Wyoming, is raising up circuit riding teams who will take the gospel to small towns all over the state. “We’re so spread out and have so few resources here, it’s the only way we’re going to be able to start churches in these towns that’ve never had a church in them, ever in the history of that town.” (NAMB photo by Ben Rollins)

The Annie Armstrong Easter Offering® provides half of NAMB’s annual budget, and 100% of the proceeds go to the field. The offering is used for training, support and care for missionaries, like Tyler and Ashley Martin, and for evangelism resources.


Published March 7, 2025