FAREWELL INTERVIEW WITH REV DR ISAAC LIM
Twelve good years,
fruitful
and challenging
By PETER TEO
TWELVE good and fruitful years
on the whole, although the first few years were "challenging
years".
The Rev Dr Isaac Lim said this at a recent farewell interview
with Methodist Message after he retired as President of TRAC last
November. He announced his early retirement at the 29th Session
of TRAC at Faith Methodist Church on Nov 23 last year.
Throughout the interview, the one topic that kept cropping up
was leadership, an area, he said, he was concerned about.
"As I led TRAC these past 12 years, I learned a lot about
leadership myself, and I was glad I was able to share these insights
on how God has blessed our leadership.
"For example, I have put in place a leadership development
structure that will guide a person or a young leader to fit into
the life of the church. Thus, the Conference of Young Methodist
Leaders, which serves as an important feeder for church leadership,
has in fact provided pastors as well as leaders from among the
laity."
He said he had also put in place a mentoring programme for pastors
and another for newly-appointed pastors-in-charge.
"We spend time discussing issues raised by local churches,
issues relating to ministry, theology and administration, and
looking at how we could handle them.
"The younger pastors, especially the MOTs, find the guidance
and advice given them helpful. And these sessions help them to
jell as a team and make their contribution to the Conference."
The Rev Dr Lim said that the institution of the "Four By
Four" meetings to further strengthen TRAC has proved to be
very meaningful. He and top conference officers would meet from
time to time to discuss conference matters and to keep each other
informed of what was happening within TRAC.
Perhaps his greatest joy these past 12 years, he said, was the
building up of a culture of prayer and raising the profile of
prayer in TRAC churches, culminating in the International Prayer
Conference for Wesleyans in Renewal in June last year. He highlighted
the importance of guiding church members to lead spiritual lives,
and said that leadership could facilitate spiritual renewal and
"oases of worship".
He described the International Prayer Conference supported by
leaders from 22 countries as the "high point" of his
12 years at the helm of TRAC.
There is another area of leadership for the Singapore church to
be involved in, he said. "Many people believe that Singapore
is the Antioch of the East, and the Singapore church can help
make this a reality by playing its part."
He also found it "very gratifying" that whenever there
was a call for funds for church building and other projects, all
TRAC churches had always responded. Even the smaller churches
would stretch their resources and help, and "this is very
commendable". In his term of office, several churches and
preaching points were started.
Asked for his views on restructuring and streamlining The Methodist
Church in Singapore (MCS), he said: "If we are thinking of
merging the three Annual Conferences into one conference, we must
study carefully the issues of finance and administration and other
implications, and see how they can be handled.
"However, if the restructure is to share resources and synergise
the work and ministry of the MCS, then it is a good idea and is
worth exploring."
Asked what his plans were now that he has retired from the MCS,
he said he would want to move into leadership development of pastors
and lay leaders in the Asia-Pacific region. To this end, he would
want to realise his dream of setting up a leadership centre in
Singapore.
Peter Teo is the Editor of Methodist Message.
QUOTE: GREATEST JOY
'My greatest joy these past 12 years is the building up of a culture of prayer and raising the profile of prayer in TRAC churches, culminating in the International Prayer Conference for Wesleyans in Renewal in June last year.' -- THE REV DR ISAAC LIM (above).