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Decades later, IMB work bears fruit in Singapore, SE Asia
Caroline Anderson, IMB
October 31, 2019
6 MIN READ TIME

Decades later, IMB work bears fruit in Singapore, SE Asia

Decades later, IMB work bears fruit in Singapore, SE Asia
Caroline Anderson, IMB
October 31, 2019

The scent of pine trees and roasting coffee beans permeates the Southeast Asian air. International Mission Board (IMB) worker Katelyn Summers* keeps careful track of the roasting time. Outside on the terraced hill, high school students, who have traveled from their home in Singapore, lug bags of freshly picked coffee cherries to be processed and dried.

The students came to this Southeast Asian nation to serve as part of their church’s partnership with Summers to help introduce the gospel to the people group among whom she is working.

Summers buys coffee cherries from her people group and processes, roasts, and sells the coffee beans. Her coffee sourcing and selling provide the community with a livelihood, and they provide Summers with an opportunity to share the gospel.

And when the Singaporean students help Summers, they carry on the missions legacy of their parents’ and grandparents’ generations.

Southern Baptist footprints in Singapore

The history between Singapore’s Calvary Baptist Church and the IMB began decades ago.

IMB photo

Three friends at Calvary Baptist Church in Singapore discuss the ways they’ve used entrepreneurship to create opportunities for others to share the gospel. These businessmen are using their influence and resources in missions.

“If you go back far enough, you’ll see the handprints and footprints of the Southern Baptist missionaries,” said Calvary pastor Koh Kok Chuan.

In the 1950s, many IMB missionaries came to serve in Singapore after being forced out of their former country of service due to the advent and acceleration of Communism.

“You can say that the door was closed to that nation, but it opened a huge door in Southeast Asia and the East Asian diaspora,” Koh, who goes by KC, said. “I think Singapore really benefitted from those missionaries that came down.”

Calvary was started in 1957 by missionaries from the Foreign Mission Board (now IMB). The church was the culmination of the pioneering work of a Sunday school class that met in the home of missionary Lydia Greene. The church building was constructed using funds from the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering, and the first service in the building was held Dec. 8, 1957. Calvary’s first six pastors, who served over the course of 15 years, were sent and supported by the Foreign Mission Board. Calvary has since been led by local leaders.

Now Calvary has a Mandarin service, a Hokkien-language service, and two English services. The church has grown through the years from 30 charter members to 700.

Partnership for the gospel

In 2011, through their contacts with Baptist Global Response and other missions organizations, leaders at Calvary connected with Summers, who serves in a Southeast Asian nation. Over time, through prayer and vision trips, a partnership developed.

Church leaders have made multiple trips to the country. Other teams, like the high schoolers, have traveled to work alongside Summers, and more trips are in the works.

At a recent church fair, Calvary members sipped coffee from Summers’ farm as they meandered past booths and stalls with a booklet relaying information about the people group and how they can pray and be involved in making the gospel accessible to this community.

Summers recently visited Calvary to share about her work, and the church formally voted to join her in a long-term endeavor to see the people group grasp the good news of the gospel.

In it for the long-haul

Calvary is diving deep into the partnership with a fortified missions strategy that includes educating the church on how each member has a role to play.

Calvary sees this as a generational commitment. Their desire isn’t to bounce from people group to people group, or from one strategy to another. They’re committed to this people group for the long run.

“We’re in it for generations. It’s not just one group of people. It’s the church moving through various generations [of members] to see how God is going to lead us into the work,” KC said.

Missions at your doorstep

Calvary’s goal is to integrate missions into their church’s identity so that it becomes more holistic rather than compartmentalized.

“If we can learn what we need to do overseas, here, it is very natural for us to do the same [abroad],” KC said. “What you do at home, you must also do outside. And what you are doing in a foreign land, you must bring back. We need to get a mindset that says, ‘Missions is everywhere, and whether it’s at your doorstep, or you’re going somewhere else, we should all be missional.’”

Good stewards

As electric fans work hard to circulate air in the open-air dining area, three middle-aged businessmen share how they’ve been involved in their church’s missions efforts, both financially and through short-term trips. The three friends believe they’ve been blessed for a purpose – to share the gospel and create opportunities for others to share the gospel. And they are using their influence and resources to do it.

Singapore’s influence has grown exponentially in its short history. In the 54 years since becoming its own country, Singapore has become a financial powerhouse with the third-highest per-capita GDP in the world.

“We are an amazing generation, not because we are amazing, but because of the way the country has progressed,” KC said.

Just as the past 50 years have been revolutionary for Singapore, they’ve also been revolutionary for Singapore’s churches. Calvary sees going to the nations as being good stewards of what God has put in their hands. When they are open to using their resources and time to serve the Lord, the church blossoms locally and internationally.

“We need to be out there,” KC said. “Our God is a big God. We serve out of that understanding.

“It’s not just about the church,” he added, “but also [about] my own life. When God calls me to do something, it’s no matter of my convenience – what I want to do, my comfort zone. It’s a matter of obedience.”

(EDITOR’S NOTE – Caroline Anderson is a writer with the IMB. She currently lives in Southeast Asia.)