
reflections and observations on life and ministry in Thailand, from a Reformed perspective
| Theological Education in Thailand: An Interview with Daniel Kim |
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| Monday, 14 February 2011 08:00 | |||
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To get some more insight into the nature and challenges of theological education in Asia (and Thailand in particular), I recently interviewed Daniel Kim, director of Chiang Mai Theological Seminary and a missionary church planter in Thailand with OMF International.
DK: Korea is my physical birth place. U.S.A. is my spiritual birth place. And Thailand is my missional place. My life has been an exciting journey like the life of Daniel in the OT. I am a trilingual and multicultural person.
KD: What is the vision and mission of Chiang Mai Theological Seminary (CTS) and what is your role in that?
DK: CTS’ Mission is to Glorify God by equipping leaders through biblically centered education to effectively demonstrate authentic Christian living and to engage in God’s work both locally and globally.
DK: My heart has always been with local churches, envisioning to equip many lay pastors and to assist local pastors to train their own lay leaders without sending them to seminary. In reality, the majority of lay leaders cannot move to Chiang Mai to study at our seminary. Like the Great Commision, our seminary cannot just sit and wait for local churches to send their people to us. Our seminary should go to equip them where they are. This dream motivated us to launch “Mobile Seminary” which is different from typical TEE. The concept of Mobile Seminary came from Acts 19. The church in Ephesus had a training center in the church, Paul teaching church members at Tyrannus Hall for two years.
So, Mobile Seminary is an idea to encourage each local church to open a Bible Training Center in her church, rather than sending them to theological institutions. Mobile Seminary is an informal training suitable for the local church to meet the need of raising up local leaders in the church.
KD: How would you compare theological education in Thailand with that in the U.S.? How is teaching in the Thai context different from teaching in the U.S.?
DK: Theological education in the U.S. is like learning through libraries, while that of Thailand is like learning on the streets. Theological education is floored with books in the libraries. The library is the well of knowledge. Students of theological education in the the U.S. gain second hand experience through people who wrote books. On the other hand, theological education in Thailand does not happen in or through libraries of books due to a couple of crucial facts. First of all, there is a severe poverty of theological books in the Thai language. Secondly, Thai do not consider the library as the source of learning. The general learning happens on the streets, meaning gaining first-hand experiences through teachers and in the arenas of real life.
DK: It is true that Thais are oral and visual more than literate. The modern education system has changed, in some degrees, Thai people to read books more than previous generations, but still reading is not their culture. Compared to students in a bachelor’s degree program in Bible colleges, students in our graduate-level program are reading books more. The higher education, the higher degree of reading books.
DK: I think, in the mission arena, orality and bible storytelling themselves are not the most crucial issue as is being promoted by some advocates, but the real issue is how effectively missionaries and teachers use orality and bible storytelling. They appear to be another methodology that mission practioners promote. Although one can tell a Bible story very accurately to local people, the listeners might have no understanding about the culture of the Bible. Then it’s ineffective. People can misunderstand or cannot understand the story at all.
Having said that, I recognize that most Thai people love to listen stories. CTS is offering seminars to train students to know how to tell Bible stories in their cultural context.
KD: What has been your greatest challenge in teaching students at CTS?
DK: Jesus prepared thirty years of his private life for three years of public life. CTS can only have two to three years of students’ lives to effectively equip them and then we unrealistically hope that they can serve the church effectively for next thirty years. This is the greatest dilemma we are facing. We tend to hurry in equipping God’s workers, by teaching so much so fast within three years. They cannot even digest the materials fully.
KD: What advice would you give to a prospective missionary who is interested in theological education in Thailand?
DK: Since the seminary is the place of equipping local church pastors, any prospective missionary should have the following preparation:
KD: What advice would you give to a pastor or seminary professor from the West who comes to Thailand to teach a short-term Bible course?
DK: I personally don’t favor at all teaching through translators. Having said that, if a Westerner has an opportunity to teach in Thailand, please consider the following. The character of the person who teaches a Bible course is more important than the content of the course. Thai people learn from people, not necessarily from the content. Building the trust-bond relationship with students is most important in class and outside of class. Any Westerners who desire to teach in Thailand for a short course should be intentionally willing to open their life and experiences to students in correlation with the content of their teaching. People are touched by the life of people, not the content of their teaching.
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