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      • A Buddhist Monk Becomes an Ordained Minister
      A Buddhist Monk Becomes an Ordained Minister

      Photo by Kharom Promutit

      A Buddhist Monk Becomes an Ordained Minister

      May 4, 2022

      Kharom Promutit dreamed that one day he would get a bachelor’s degree and work as a professional agriculturist.  He planned to study at one of the state universities in Chiang Mai, in the northern province of Thailand.  Soon enough, after high school, he decided it was time to pursue his ambition.  While preparing to travel to Chiang Mai he met an accident that prevented him from leaving home.  So, he decided instead to study at a nearby school in his home province of Saraburi. Mission College, now Asia Pacific International University, was the closest college to where he lived, so, he decided to give it a try. This school is located in Muak Lek, part of Saraburi province, and is run by the Seventh-day Adventist Church.

      Most people in Thailand are Buddhists, and Kharom was no exception.  He was taught early in life that he was responsible for his karma, and that he alone can determine the journey that will lead him closer or further away from nirvana.  So, he focused on being a good Buddhist by performing rituals, giving alms, doing sacred rites, learning the sutra, getting amulets, and so on. 

      While in Mission College Kharom observed that the residents living inside the campus embraced separate sets of truth, completely different from what he believed in.  He was shocked to be in a Christian community!  Perhaps he was enrolled in the wrong school, he reckoned.  But the teachers and students were so nice, welcoming, and accepting.  “So, it is possible to be a loving and caring person even though one is not a Buddhist,” Kharom thought.  The Christians residing on the Mission College campus showed him that it is possible. 

      Because Kharom stayed in the dormitory, he found himself enrolled in a Bible study group. For the first time in his life, he encountered the truth about a creator God who lovingly created this vast universe, and he learned too that one can actually communicate with Him through prayer anytime.  It was far different from his Buddhist beliefs! Also he believed in a repeated cycle of birth, life, death, and rebirth which is diffrent from what the Bible teaches about being born again and eternal life.  He shared this new teaching with his Buddhist religion teacher from the school where he attended before.  His teacher challenged him, “If you know more about Buddhism, I can guarantee you will never change your religion to Christianity!” Kharom trusted his religion teacher and he believed that Buddhism is a good religion.  Since then, he quit thinking about this God that the Christians believe, and he stopped staying in the dormitory to avoid undue influence from his Christian friends. 

      Photo by Kharom Promutit

      To reinforce his buddhist faith, he decided to be ordained as a Buddhist monk and strived to be a good follower of Buddhism.

      One day, he was invited by his teachers and friends from Mission College to attend an evangelistic camp meeting.  It was there that the yearning for God was rekindled, and it became so intense that he decided to spend more time in prayer. One Sabbath, there was an old man who gave a powerful testimony about how God changed his life and how he struggled to become a follower of Jesus. He mentioned that he should have accepted Jesus a long time ago when he was yet young and did not have to wait for old age before deciding to accept Him as Lord and Savior of his life.  Kharom thought, “why should I wait for old age to follow Jesus!”  He made the decision to be baptized before his graduation from Mission College.

      In 2000, Kharom graduated from Mission College with a degree in Business.  In 2003, he took his Master of Divinity at the Adventist International Institute of Advanced Studies (AIIAS), and in 2015 he was ordained as a gospel minister of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.  At present Pastor Kharom serves as Communication Director of Thailand Adventist Mission (TAM).  

      Mamerto Guingguing, SSD Communications

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      Photo by Kharom Promutit