This research is a qualitative study which analyses experiences of Indian local Sunday school teachers who participated in Handong University’s Counseling Program, which had been conducted five times in three years in Bihar, India. We interviewed ten teachers who participated in the eighteen–session. After the initial research, the data was then analyzed through Thematic Content Analysis method for understanding the participants’ experiences. The analysis shows some significant results. First, teachers had experienced overall self–awareness. Second, the participants’ attitudes and behaviors in their personal relationships had been changed. Third, the participants applied what they had learned into the children’s ministry fields. Finally, the participants’s views on God had changed differently from the past, making their relationship with God closer. Based on the findings and limitations of the research, this study opens up a discussion on the needs for psycho–emotional supports for native mission workers, calls for a change of recognition in implementing psychological support programs in the mission fields, and suggests the necessity of community for maintaining emotional support.