I Have Enough Money to Spend

An interview with classmate Liu Yuqiang and sister Lin Xiurong about the unforgettable words of "I am enough" more than ten years ago. It turns out that this sentence has always remained in Xiurong's heart. Yuqiang, who was studying business administration, chose to serve in a Christian organization after graduation. At that time, he didn't mind the meager salary and once said to Xiurong with satisfaction: "I am enough!"...
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With Two Ministers in the Family

Interview with classmate Fang Zhiqiang and sister Huang Ruiping. One weekend in June 2004, Zhiqiang returned to Hong Kong from Dongguan. He and his wife Ruiping reviewed God’s leading and calling in the past period. On that day, his search for more than a year finally came to an end. He was willing to respond to God’s call and prepared to enter the seminary to receive training and serve as a preacher throughout his life. ...
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“The Whole Family” Studies in the Seminary

In recent years, many brothers and sisters who have applied for admission are married. When the college meets them, it will also meet their spouses at the same time. This is because we believe that giving is not a one-way street. How do their families support theological students when they are studying hard? What struggles and difficulties will you face? What did their family pay, and how did they experience God’s favor? ...
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Two Early Baptist Women Missionaries to China and Hong Kong: Mrs. Henrietta Hall Shuck and Ms. Lottie Moon

Jerry E. Moye Emeritus Professor of our college I. Mrs. Henrietta Hall Shuck (Mrs. Henrietta Hall Shuck, 1817-1844) I embarked on the missionary journey at the age of seventeen. Thank God for giving us a book to record Uncle The biography of the Virgin Mother is written by Rev. Yeda of the First Baptist Church in Richmond, Virginia, USA....
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Do I Love My Lord with All My Strength, Soul and Mind?

Zhong Suxian, first-year Master of Divinity, the angel in white who accompanied me on my journey to heaven, I will offer my life as a sacrifice to God! Thank God, after I believed in the Lord in 1985, I gradually grew up in the Christian Nurses Fellowship of Pok Oi Hospital. Although I had to work shifts and was often unable to attend church meetings, there were several sisters in the nursing fellowship who supported me, cared for me, and accompanied me on my pilgrimage. During the holidays, they would invite me to retreat camps and teach me how to get close to God and read God’s words. The love these sisters have for me allows me to see their commitment to God; I also see the likeness of Christ in them - always giving without expecting anything in return. They let me know how beautiful a life is for a person who follows God, and they also inspired me to determine to follow God. Later, they each had different ministry positions, some became missionaries, and some entered seminaries to receive training. At that time, I really envied their "chicness", but I did not have the full confidence to follow them on that blessed road. ...
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Speak, for Your Servant Is Listening

Huang Baiming, a first-year master of divinity student, finally took the first step. "The Lord came and stood again, calling like the first three times: 'Samuel! Samuel!' Samuel replied, 'Speak, for your servant is listening!'" (Samuel) 3:10) Many years ago, I heard the pastor narrate the experience of Samuel in a sermon. At that time, I thought to myself: If God calls me, I will also be willing to say: "I am here, and my servant is listening!" Years later, I still have a deep impression of what I thought at that moment. Maybe from that time on, God put an "I do" heart in my life. ...
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A Visit to Shek Pik Prison

A Cold Wave, a Warmth Student Union Mission Department received help from Pastor Zheng Junye of the Renewal Society and arranged for nine students to visit inmates at Shek Pik Adult Men's Prison on January 17. A cold wave had just hit Hong Kong that day. After the students took a bus from Tung Chung to Shek Pik, they faced the biting cold wind and walked for more than ten minutes on a slope to reach the heavily guarded Shek Pik Prison. The meeting was divided into morning and afternoon sessions and was attended by more than 40 inmates, most of whom were young people who had not yet believed in the Lord. The following is what one of the seminarians shared:...
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