
Daniel Ritchie, who was born without arms, will share his inspirational testimony in northern Kentucky in November.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Daniel Ritchie has lived his entire life without arms, but he has never let that keep him from reaching others with the gospel.
As a teenager, the longtime evangelist and current Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) first vice president couldn’t imagine that God could love him. At 15, he was confused, angry and certain his circumstances had placed him beyond God’s care. That changed one night at a youth group lock-in.
“I’ve often said nothing good ever comes from a youth lock-in — except my salvation,” Ritchie said with a laugh. “I’m thankful God redeems even dodgeball lock-ins.”
During that late-night conversation, his youth pastor helped him see God’s love in a new way — through the beauty of His creation and the truth of His Word. “I saw God’s love on His terms that night, not mine,” Ritchie said. “It completely changed my life.”
Less than a year later, at 16, he felt God’s call into ministry. It was not an easy path for someone who described himself as a “recovering people hater” after years of bullying and ridicule. But God used even those scars to prepare him. “I’ve been taking the gospel to the world now for 25 years,” he said.
Ritchie recently sat down with Kentucky Baptist Convention Executive Director Todd Gray on Gray’s “Leadership Lessons” podcast to tell his story.
Ritchie went on to serve as a student pastor for 13 years before stepping into full-time evangelism. Today, he is a sought-after speaker known for his humor, honesty and powerful testimony.
What makes Ritchie’s story remarkable isn’t just what he preaches, but how he lives. Married with two children, he drives, mows the lawn, hunts and does almost everything others do — just with his feet instead of his hands. Still, he admits the greatest struggles are not physical but social.
“I can’t go out in public without being stared at or hearing comments,” he said. “Growing up in rural North Carolina, that meant being picked on and bullied a lot. But God has used even that.”
By nature, Ritchie is an introvert, something he admits makes ministry a constant act of faith. “God blesses my weakness and even my introvertedness,” he said. “It’s His strength that carries me.”
He doesn’t shy away from poking fun at himself, but his humor always leads to a deeper point. “Within the backdrop of my story is one of the greatest pictures of grace,” he said. “I am who God says I am. For students — and adults — that truth changes everything. We’re not defined by what we do, but by what Christ has already done.”
That message resonates in a culture where identity is often tied to performance, image or achievement. “For so many kids it’s touchdowns, grades or the label on their clothes,” Ritchie said. “It creates a trap where they feel they always have to perform. The gospel brings freedom from that.”
Ritchie says he chooses to focus on grace, even in difficult seasons. He keeps a journal of “little evidences” of God’s provision — moments he and his wife often look back on together. “It’s amazing to see, page after page, how God shows up,” he said.
(EDITOR’S NOTE – Mark Maynard writes for Kentucky Today, where this article first appeared. Kentucky Today is a news resource of the Kentucky Baptist Convention.)