COLLEGE EVENTS
21st
Century Reformation Movement on the Move in East Africa
by Dr Jeffrey Khoo

The 21st
Century Reformation Movement is on the move in the great continent of
Africa by the grace of God with the East Africans taking the lead. On
August 29, 2006, I departed for Kenya with 36 kilogrammes of luggage full
of Biblical and Christian literature for the participants of the East
Africa Christian Alliance (EACA) Conference, August 28-September 1, 2006.


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Fellowship
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Discussions
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Special lunch hosted by Elder Lyu
Myung Ha
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Rev Gary Johnson presenting a
gift to
Dr Choi Kwang Jai on behalf of the EACA |

Dr Choi Kwang Jai's closing message
The
EACA is an affiliate of the International Council of Christian Churches (ICCC).
Annual conferences are convened to take an uncompromising stand “for the
Word of God, and for the testimony of Jesus Christ” (Rev 1:9), and
“earnestly contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints”
(Jude 3). The beautiful 10-acre sylvan campus of the Bible College of East
Africa (BCEA) in Nairobi was a most suitable conference venue.
It was
my privilege and joy to be invited by the EACA to speak on a most pertinent
theme, “Discerning the Spirits.” Using 1 John 4:1-6 as my text, I spoke on
how to discern the spirits by asking the right questions. Specifically, I
dealt with discerning the spirits of Docetism, Gnosticism, Arianism, Roman
Catholicism, Charismatism, Modernism, Neo-Evangelicalism, and
Neo-Fundamentalism (a synopsis of my messages was published in the previous
weekly). The conference speakers included FEBC alumni, Rev Dr Mark Kim
Kyung Soo (Principal of BCEA), Bishop Richard Kivai, Rev Stephen Masila.
Others were Rev Gary Johnson, missionary of the Independent Board for
Presbyterian Foreign Missions (IBPFM, USA), and Rev Dr Choi Kwang Jai,
pastor of Glory B-P Church (Korea) and ICCC president, who gave the closing
message. Select messages will be published in the Morning Star which
is the official organ of the EACA. The conference drew an attendance of 200
African pastors representing 22 member denominations. The Q&A sessions were
especially spontaneous and edifying. Without question, the participants are
looking forward to the next meeting scheduled for April 2007 (DV).
September 2,
2006 saw the inauguration of BCEA Tanzania. The inauguration service was
held in the college chapel with a seating capacity of 200. The new college
is located on the fertile fields of Usa River in the city of Arusha. The
college campus is scenically sandwiched between
two majestic mountains—Mount Meru (14980 ft) and Mount Kilimanjaro (19340
ft, Africa’s highest). The building project began in 2003, and there are
now 5 buildings on campus, namely, the office and classroom block, the
chapel, the dormitories, the dining hall, and the guesthouse. Glory B-P
Church, Korea, gave money to purchase the land, and funds for the buildings
came mainly from Singapore churches (True Life, Calvary Pandan, Calvary
Tengah, Berean), and other well wishers. US$200,000 have thus far been
spent, a most profitable investment for God’s Kingdom. The new BCEA is
established as a reformed and fundamental college independent of any
denomination. It is to be an international Bible College, not just
Tanzanian or African, in obedience to Christ’s Great Commission (Matt
28:18-20). BCEA Kenya and Tanzania with FEBC are part of the Bible College
movement. FEBC is training young men and women not only for national but
also international missions. Our international alumni, namely, Mark Kim,
Stephen Masila, Peter Elibariki, Eben Yoon, Richard Tiu, Christine Kendagor,
and Violet Malongo form the backbone of the BCEA faculty.

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Rev Dr
Mark Kim and Rev Peter Elibariki
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Sermon
by Rev Dr Jeffrey Khoo with Rev Elibariki interpreting
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Rev
Gary Johnson reading Dr William Leroy's (IBPFM) greetings
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BCEA
faculty introduced
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International congregation at inauguration service
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Church
choir and worshippers
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Pioneer students
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Ribbon
cutting ceremony
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Dr
Howard Carlson with Dr Jeffrey Khoo
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Elder
Lyu Myung Ha, Dr Choi Kwang Jai
and Mr Park Seon Ki (UN Judge) |

Rev Dr Choi Kwang Jai, Rev Dr Jeffrey Khoo, Rev Dr Mark Kim, Elder Lyu
Myung Ha
A
multinational congregation comprising local Tanzanian pastors, and
missionaries from USA (Dr and Mrs Howard Carlson, Rev Gary Johnson, and
Sunmin Kim), Korea (Rev Dr Choi Kwang Jai and Eld Lyu Myung Ha), Kenya and
Singapore, graced the occasion with their congratulatory words and prayers.
I preached a sermon on the need to lay right and solid foundations which
are Christ and His Word (Ps 11:3, Eph 2:20), forever infallible and
inerrant (Ps 12:6-7, Matt 5:18, 24:35, Mark 13:31, Luke 21:33, 1 Pet
1:23-25), quoting the late ICCC President—Dr Carl McIntire—on the perfect
preservation of the inspired words of the Holy Scriptures (in his January
11, 1992 sermon on Psalm 12). The Dean Burgon Oath that the Bible is 100%
perfect without any mistake to the last word, syllable and letter in the
original languages was reaffirmed and taken, and translated into the
Swahili tongue by Rev Peter Elibariki, BTh and
MDiv graduate of FEBC, and academic dean of the new Bible college.
On the
Lord’s Day, September 3, I preached in the Africa Missions and Evangelism
Church (AMEC) at Karangai formerly pastored by Judah Kundael Pallangyo, now
an MDiv student at FEBC, who should return to Tanzania by 2008 to augment
the faculty. From September 4-6, I offered a course on the “Theology of
Salvation” to 15 pioneer students, teaching 5 hours a day for one credit
with exams.
On the
way back to Nairobi on Thursday, September 7, I stopped by to visit the
Kiluani clinic of Chan Pui Meng, missionary of Life B-P Church. Half a
dozen Maasai women were sitting outside the clinic waiting to see her for
antenatal counsel. The clinic grounds have been transformed into a
botanical gardens with fruit trees and flowers. The Jacaranda tree our
pastor planted at the dedication of the clinic 4 years ago now stands 10
feet tall and doing well despite the harsh and dry conditions of Maasai
land. A beautiful red-stone church serves as the spiritual clinic. Stephen
Omweri, a BCEA graduate, is the resident preacher.
The Lord
mightily used the Rev Dr Mark Kim to build up BCEA Kenya and Tanzania. He
also had a hand in setting up the Kiluani schools and clinic. All this was
a result of his humble obedience to God’s directive will to serve in
Africa. Although he wanted to go to Indonesia, the Lord led him to Africa
(like He did the Apostle Paul who had planned to go north and eastward, but
was directed by the Spirit to head west in answer to the Macedonian call,
Acts l6:6-10). For the last 17 years, Rev Dr Mark Kim has been serving
faithfully at BCEA as an IBPFM missionary, and will continue to do so until
the Lord calls him home. He is ably helped by his beloved wife, Hannah.
They have two lovely daughters—Hayoung and Chanmi—who are spiritually
minded to follow after their parents’ footsteps.
My last
assignment was to preach at the morning chapel of BCEA Kenya on Friday. I
spoke from Philippians 3 about beginning well and ending well in the Lord’s
service. Twelve hours of uneventful flying saw me back home
in Singapore on Saturday, September 9, touching down at
1.05 pm only to hear that Eld Eric Mahadevan—founding elder of True Life
B-P Church and secretary of the FEBC Board of Directors—had just been laid
to rest that very morning. Eld Mahadevan stood solidly with Rev Dr Timothy
Tow and the FEBC faculty on the present perfection of the Holy Scriptures,
and readily took the Dean Burgon oath at every FEBC convocation. Without
question, Eld Mahadevan was faithful unto death. “Fear none of those things
which thou shalt suffer: behold, the devil shall cast some of you into
prison, that ye may be tried; and ye shall have tribulation ten days: be
thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown of life” (Rev
2:10).
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