Missionaries
Many of our praying and supporting friends have asked to see more pictures and updates on the Kimas than we are able to do in the monthly Missions Banner. So we have prepared this photo journal to chronicle some of the highlights of 2007 and give some ideas on the year to come. Thanks for your prayers and interest in the Kimas' ministry!
For the past 8 months Rev. David Quisbert and the La Paz Bible Presbyterian Church (La Paz, Bolivia) has been building a new sanctuary to replace the old one crushed by heavy snows several years ago. With assistance from PMU and churches of the Great Lakes Presbytery, the congregation has sacrificed and labored to ready the new sanctuary for its official dedication on December 2. Dr. Pine, Dr. Kevin Backus (Grand Island, NY), Rev. Tim Miessler (Cincinnati, OH), and Elder Philip Resnick (Cincinnati, OH) traveled to La Paz to participate in the celebration. The attached photo journal of the construction progress will bless your heart as you view it! Please pray for the congregation as they continue on in their building project all the way to completion, as the Lord wills.
If you have been watching the news in recent weeks, the name "Myanmar" has become familiar to you. The Southeast Asian country is in great turmoil due to the totalitarian military junta in power there. To date, the military has killed or imprisoned many, and made great efforts to silence voices within from sending information to the wider world. What information has leaked out is not good. Human rights abuses have been prevalent ever since the junta refused to acknowledge democratic elections of ten years ago that would have removed them from power. Now, curfews, meeting restrictions, price increases, the use of force to quell demonstrations are the substance of the news on the subject. They massacred thousands of Buddhist monks in the uprising ten years ago: the situation is ominously similar today. In the midst of this turmoil sits a small minority of Christians. Among them is our own minister, Rev. Kima, his wife and family, and the church which the Lord has allowed him to gather. The chaos is the most severe in Yangon, apparently, but is also widespread throughout the country. Restrictions have now been placed upon believers trying to meet in Inle Lake by the local authorities, and the fledgling church can no longer meet out on the lake in Kay Lar village. [Personal visits by our evangelist in the area in homes are still able to take place, and the church has been meeting on boats out in the floating farms.] Communications have been cut off nearly entirely thus far as the government tries to shut down the Internet and all outgoing media. Many have asked about the status of the Kimas and the churches they are trying to establish, and we can confidently say that they are in God's hands. They are all fine, though burdened with the doubling of the prices of all commodoties that are affected by the price of fuel, which the junta doubled arbitrarily to raise funds for their military action against the freedom movement. We have just received word that the Kimas are the proud parents of a new baby girl, born on September 28! So we rejoice with them. For the time being, we will refrain from providing pictures of our friends, since the military is now regularly photographing anyone suspected of being in the opposition party. Myanmar reportedly has the most severe and thorough censorship on the Internet of any nation on earth at present. We do not wish to provide faces for the enemies of God's people. ("Kima", by the way, is a shortened version of our brother's name which he has used for our benefit -- we wouldn't be able to pronounce his legal name! -- and so in God's providence it is safe enough to use the name with which we have become familiar.) Please pray for the Kimas and all believers in Myanmar. Pray for their safety, and for their courage as they seek to find ways to meet in spite of the restriction of no more than five persons meeting at any one time in any one place. [This restriction has now been lifted, and Sunday services are able to take place -- praise the Lord!] We will keep our constituency informed of developments as we learn of them. Pray, too, for the Kimas' support. They need regular monthly supporters badly. We are still able to get funds to them so far: pray that no obstacles would arise to that situation. Thank you.
Ed and Lehia Paauwe are serving
the Lord in Perth, Western Australia, at Bible-Presbyterian Church of
Western Australia. Since arriving in Perth on October 1, 2004, they
have ministered at the church and, together with church leaders, started Evangel Bible Institute in early 2005. About 50 students
attend the part-time classes at the Bible Institute.
In addition to preaching at the church and teaching at Evangel Bible
Institute, Ed conducts several Bible studies. Lehia conducts Bible
studies for the ladies and helps in the Sunday School and Junior Youth
Fellowship. Together they evangelize the lost, visit the sick, do
counseling, and minister for the Lord as He gives them opportunities.
Ed and Lehia would appreciate your prayers for wisdom and good health
as they serve the Lord.
.jpg) Rev. Khawl Ro Kim is a PMU missionary working in Myanmar. His Reformed faith and his burning desire to reach the unreached led him get in contact with Dr. Len Pine, the Field Representative of PMU. After two years of credential inquiries and exams, Kim was ordained as a PMU missionary on September 4, 2005.
Kim had the privilege of serving the Lord as a lecturer at different Bible seminaries for eight years and also as a pastor at the Reformed Presbyterian Church in Yangon for three years.
Kim has completed his M. Div. degree at New Life College in India and his Th. M. at Asian Center for Theological Studies and Mission in Korea.
In November of 2005, the Lord blessed Kim and his wife, Mawite, with a son named Lal Nun Siama (Nathan Andrew Kim) after eight years of marriage.
Kim is now actively church planting. He has planted one Bible Presbyterian Church in Yangon and hopefully will plant another church in the Inle Lake area of the Shan state among the Intha people. Kim has established an orphanage center and kindergarten school. He is also training the workers and leaders to be strongly rooted in the Reformed Faith.

It is hard to look at
any images from Cambodia
without seeing a temple, shrine, pagoda or idol as 95% of the nation's 13
million people are Theravada Buddhist. Unlike other forms of Buddhism this form
allows it's practitioners to maintain their worldly life and their religion
without conflict. As a teen Mark was
extensively exposed to America's
“New Age” movement and now sees great similarity in practice between New Age
adherents and Buddhists. He was not a Buddhist or a “New Ager” but rather a
belligerent atheist who has now experienced the omnipotent hand of the Living
God in his salvation.
Now, having worked
for 15 years in the computer field; having been saved by God; having completed
his Masters of Divinity degree at Western Reformed Seminary; and having been
called, it is time to serve the God who saved him by going to the mission
field. Mark has already
successfully served for ten months in Cambodia
on a temporary assignment; he will be in the US
from December 2005 through the spring or summer of 2006, raising funds,
standing for ordination, and taking care of health needs before he heads back
to the field for his permanent assignment in Cambodia. That assignment includes
teaching English, personal evangelism and discipleship, and church planting as
the Lord enables. Mark's home church
is Grace BPC in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Dr. Len Pine has served as the Field Representative for Presbyterian Missionary Union,
the home and foreign missions agency for the Bible Presbyterian Church, since 2002. He holds his doctoral
degree in preaching from Westminster Theological Seminary in California. Dr.
Pine travels extensively throughout the US and overseas promoting new church
development, discipleship training, and leading short-term mission teams. He
assists in the regular preaching and music ministry of the Bible Presbyterian
Church in Grand Island, New York, and serves as an Adjunct Professor in
Practical Theology at Western Reformed Seminary in Tacoma, Washington. An
accomplished vocalist, he also ministers to congregations through concerts,
seminars on church music, choral directing, and consultation. Dr. Pine and his
wife, Karen, celebrated their twentieth wedding anniversary this year. The Lord
has entrusted two children to their stewardship, Chelsea and Eli.
March, 2008, #226 In this issue:
- Memorial for Dr. Thomas G. Proctor
- Memorial for Rev. Clyde Field
- Ed and Lehia Paauwe Update from Australia
- Mark Baldwin takes a little ministry vacation in Thailand
- Dr. Pine's trip to Southern California
- Western Reformed Seminary 25th anniversary
- Team Timothy USA gets ready
February, 2008, #225 In this issue:
- VBS in La Paz, Bolivia
- Kima's Expanding Myanmar Ministry
- Baldwin Report from Cambodia
- Team Timothy USA Preview
- News to Know
January 2008, #224 In this issue:
- Paauwes Praise
- Team Timothy Bolivia Gets Ready
- Sanctuary Dedication in La Paz
- Report on Winter Youth Conferences
- Team Timothy USA Announced
- News to Know
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