Here you will find information about the people and the ministries of the BWC Order of Deacons. We hope this will give you an sense of who we are and our call to word and service.
Ministers/Ministries Highlighted
-
Chiewlen Teo at Katsu
-
Lynn Nulton and Redeemed Riders of the Christian Motorcycle Association
Another Cup of Tea by Sharifah Fatimah, The Star Online
From the moment she made up her mind to devote her life to serving God, Pastor Serena Teo Chiew Len knew that preaching was not her cup of tea. Yet, she could not ignore her calling or her love for teaching.
She solved the problem by combining both vocations and became an education pastor.
Unlike regular pastors who preach Sunday sermons, attend to the spiritual needs of members of their parish and perform religious ceremonies like baptisms, weddings and funerals, Teo's work is focused on special education.
She serves the community, regardless of race or religion, by providing hope and comfort to parents of children with dyslexia and other learning disabilities (LD) such as attention deficit disorder (ADD), attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and even autism.
Unobtrusive in her favourite everyday wear of jeans and T-shirt, the 48-year-old is easy to talk with whether you are a child or a grandparent.
She is not only adept at dealing with LD children but is also used to comforting distraught parents who are at their wits‘ end over what to do with their children who are struggling in school. "Parents of dyslexic children usually start to panic after their child fails miserably in Year One or Two as a result of their inability to read. Some realise their child's affliction even later.
"I know of parents who tried enrolling their kids at expensive learning centres but to no avail. It's not that these places are no good, it's just that children with dyslexia need to be taught to read using techniques that are different from those used to teach normal kids," she said.
Before she started the remedial reading programme at Katsu (Japanese for "champion") in 2002, Teo too had minimal knowledge about teaching children with dyslexia.
"I had just returned from a 10-year stay in the United States in 2000 and was helping my brother (former pastor Teo How Ken) to run Rumah Charis for the Children when I discovered that a number of the kids there could not read and were doing badly in school."
So Teo set out to do what she loves most - teach.
The public soon heard about her efforts with the Rumah Charis children and was approached by parents of dyslexic children who pleaded for her help in dealing with the children."As an education pastor, I am trained in the teaching of Christian religion, not reading. But my heart goes out to those parents and I wanted so much to help them," said Teo.
Her prayers for a solution was answered when her intensive research into the teaching of children with dyslexia brought her attention to a book called Why Our Children Can't Read and What We Can Do About It by Diane McGuinness, a reading consultant and Emeritus Professor of Psychology at the University of South Florida.
Katsu officially began its classes with 60 children in January 2003 in Taman Tun Dr Ismail, Kuala Lumpur, Malysia.
For Teo, there is no joy like seeing her charges making headway in overcoming their disability. "It's the kind of happiness that money can't buy," she said.
Yet, even a pastor has moments of frustration, and for Teo this happens when the fees received are just enough to pay the centre's teachers and cannot cover the rent or the utility bills.
Sometimes, donations arrived in the nick of time to erase her financial worries while at other times she had had to dig deep into her personal resources for a temporary solution.
The couple met in the US where Teo graduated with a Master's degree in Christian Education at the Scarritt Graduate School in Tennessee and was later ordained an education pastor in 1992. She had earlier obtained her Bachelor's degree at the Taiwan Theological Seminary after deciding to pursue her calling at the age of 24.
Teo, who became a Christian when she was 18, worked as director of education and youth, at two American churches in Florida and Maryland before returning to Malaysia in 2000.
Click here to visit the Katsu website.
Redeemed Riders By Linda Worthington
Rockville UMC motorcyclists rode with the Redeemed Riders of the Christian Motorcycle Association on their annual 100 mile "Run for the Son", on Saturday, May 3, 2008. They stopped at Lisbon UMC in Lisbon, Maryland at 1:00 p.m. to be in prayer with CMA riders nationwide. More than forty riders from several CMA groups had lunch together in Thurmont.
Funds raised on this national event provide funds for mission. Forty percent of the funds provide evangelistic efforts within the USA. The remaining sixty percent is donated to three ministry organizations that purchase motorcycles for native pastors and Bibles for Christians who are living in difficult circumstances in other countries among other missions. CMA riders attend motorcycle rallies and runs to witness, bless bikes and pray with other riders. They love Jesus and they love motorcycles. Redeemed Riders will have a booth at the Montgomery County Fair in August.
Photo caption: Rockville UMC riders (left to right): Rick Saunders, Rev. Lynn Nulton (member of the BWC Order of Deacons), Valerie Tourtlotte, and Al Tourtlotte (President of Redeemed Riders)
