Photo Essay: Dr. Dan’s Teaching Visit to Hill Light Seminary

From February 2nd through February 14th I was invited to teach the third year students at Hill Light Seminary. This was my first visit to Hill Light, a Karen Seminary, about 25 kilometers South of Mae Sot Thailand along the Burmese border. The school was recently established five years ago in the wake of the Karen diaspora. The school serves around 80 Karen Baptist Students from ages 18 to 24 all Myanmar refugees. By request I was asked to teach an ethics course based on my new book. What follows is a photo essay documenting my experiences at Hill Light.

1. These first two photos are from the Burmese Market a large open market dominated by Burmese immigrants, legal as well as undocumented, who have crossed the border into Thailand. Every morning almost before the roasters crow it is a teeming chaotic throng. My Bus to Hill Light Seminary left from this location.

At the Burma Market
At the Market-
2. The photo below is another shot at the Burmese market – the blue pick up with the cap is a bus, my bus which took me to a place called Ban Mae Kon Ken and from there I took a motor cycle taxi to the camp. Total Cost – 30 Baht per ride ($1.80)
Burmese Market Blue Line BUs

3. This next shot I took from my bus in route to the seminary as we were leaving the Burmese Market. It was about 6:30 AM and these young monks in training were out for to give the local Mae Sot citizens an opportunity to acquire some fresh merits by supplying them food stuffs – mainly rice. The big fellow, not yet fully groomed and cultured in the soulful monk decorum sported a wide gleeful smile for me.

On an earlier occasion walking on an empty stretch of road I passed two young monk candidates about 9 and 11 years of age. As I passed my phone rang but I had set the ring to a frog tone which in the early morning air sounded true to life. The eleven year old remained expressionless and didn’t blink but the nine-year was over come with amusement and burst out laughing.

On the way to Hill Light School
4. The next picture was taken at the general assembly which meets every Wednesday morning at 8 AM. In the early morning it is still cool this time of year in Northern, Thailand so many students come bundled up. I am speaking on a New Testament passage which the director requested. These are all 18 to 24-year-old Karen students from Burma who have come across into Northern Thailand seeking sanctuary from in the Myanmar military who invaded their villages killing, abusing and plundering. Myanmar is changing and hopes are high that a return from exile will soon come.

General Assembly Hill Light Seminary

5. I was asked to preach at the Wednesday morning General Assembly on Colossians 1:15-23. Colossians is about fullness – “pleroma.” Holding a cup with water I opted to introduce the point by asking the proverbial question “is the cup half empty or half full?” After sorting out how many pessimist and optimists I was preaching to I proceeded to make my point. The Colossians were being suckered into a religion in which they were told that they could realize pleroma i.e. “fullness” here and now. But in this letter Paul’s testimony can be heard. Christ was indeed filled with all the fullness of God (2:10) but here and now we, on the other hand, suffer much emptiness and only enjoy a small measure of this fulness of the Spirit and life (just a taste of this promised fullness of Hebrews 6:5, Ephesians 1:12 & 13). By faith and hope in and through the Christ we are regarded as full (1:27 & 28)but when the fullness of time comes we will indeed enjoy this fullness in reality full and over flowing.

Now we suffer faith and hope – faith connects to unseen things as they exist by promise and by the word of the Gospel that declares the existence of unseen and even things not felt and experienced directly to be so. And hope lives with a measure of emptiness and suffering with courage waiting for this pleroma. We like the Colossians are tempted to break the tensions inherent in faith and hope and sucker after pseudo fulfillment, spiritual and secular.

Hill Light Seminary Daniel Age
6. Here is a shot of my class of third year students. The actual campus is really very beautiful, sitting on a hill-top overlooking a fertile valley. The campus is situated inside an old Karen Thai village called Kway Nam Ku. The building housing this class room, one of seven rooms, was donated by Korean Christians who retain the title and a degree of control over its use.Note the young lady in the front. Before her lies a copy of my book – a gift to each one who came to class and did the assignments. Fifteen students received books (I am in search of donors to back the cost at the discounted student price of $15, please email me if interested).
Third Year Karen Students at Hill Light Seminary

7. Below is a photo of my class and I on the last day of the seminar along with some of the feedback I received from the students on the lectures .

“I like this book very much because it provides many examples to understand. Jesus also used examples in His teaching.We don’t fully understand God and His ways, sometimes not even a little. But this book opened my eyes to walk by faith and not by sight (blindness is not a big deal).” Thit Sae

“I learned so many things from these lectures. Two weeks are too short of a time but we received an advantage from this time….This was strong spiritual food. It encouraged us to deal in God. It also encouraged us to steady our faith… Today we face many challenges and we know we can overcome these when we walk by faith not by sight…” Hsa Klay

“In this class I learned about faith and sight, faith and sight you explained very well and I understand more. I like this class so much because you tell us the teaching using short stories and then I read the chapter in your book which follows the lecture. I want to say thank you that you came and taught our class may the grace of the Lord be with you… the blessing of the Lord over flow you.” Naw Moo Christ

Daniel Age with Students at Hill Light Seminary

New Teaching Invitation at Hill Light Seminary

I have recently received and accepted an invitation to teach third year students at Hill Light Seminary at Klee Thoo Klo (Huay Nam Khun) village which is seventeen miles south from Mae Sot, Thailand. The appointment commences on February 2nd.

Hill Light is a new seminary that has been in existence for only a few years. It has an excellent reputation of being well run with good student teachers from Naga Land, India as well as local Karen teachers and excellent leadership. Hill Light trains Karen Baptists from the “Golden Triangle” many exiled from Burma.

Attached is a picture sent to me of last year’s students. This will be my first time teaching at Hill Light. I have been asked to bring my new book on faith and ethics and lecture from it. I will have 15 students. If any one would like to purchase a book for a student at the Southeast Asian student price of $15.00 per copy,  please email me at Daniel.Age@gmail.com for more information.

Hill Light Seminary 2013

My experience at Bangkwang Central Prison by Nai Thaung Myint

Psalm 62:5-8, “Find rest, O my soul, in God alone’ my hope comes from him. He alone is my rock and my salvation; he is my fortress, I will not be shaken. My salvation and my honor depend on God; he is my mighty rock, my refuge. Trust him all times, O people; pour out your hearts to him for God is our refuge.” (NIV)

Bangkwang Central Prison is located in Nonthaburi Province, just the north of Bangkok City, Thailand. When I was transferred from Kanjanaburi Province Prison to Bangkwang Central Prison, in January 1989, it was the only place where they kept the worse and big criminals and the heavy sentence prisoners, such as those who were sentenced from 30 years to life or death sentences. There were 13 sections or buildings and I was sent to live in building#6. It was detained building and high security building and did not allow to go and work or visit outside the building and it was not allowed to contact the other buildings as well. Most prisoners were life sentence and the remaining were those who committed crime or committed inside cases from other buildings. I knew that I was one of the criminals in the sight of the law but my problem that moment was I was in the middle of the worse of the worst prisoners.

Nai in his bedroom/study room/prayer room

Nai in his bedroom/study room/prayer room

Since I was arrested in Three Pagoda Pass Village, Ampur Sankharaburi, Thai and Burma Border, I was lost all my money and properties. So when I came to Bangkwang Prison, I owned one old blanket, 2 shorts, and 2 T. shirts and an old New Testament in Burmese without cover which I brought from Kanjanaburi Prison. Other than those I had nothing including my daily necessities such as toothpaste, washing powder, soap, shampoo etc. I lived in Burma, all my family, relatives and friends were there. They did not know where I was.  Even though they knew where I was, there was no way to reach me. I did not have any stamps, envelopes to contact my family in Burma. No one could visit and help me from outside world.

I also could not communicate with other prisoners; I could not speak Thai at all. My two case-partners could speak Thai but since they even could not stand by themselves well, they could not help me too. And there were another 4 Burmese in the same building but they too had to struggling badly to pass on day by day to help themselves, so how they could help me. One of them, named Ko Tint Lwin, murder case, with life sentence, from Southern Burma, told me about the missionary who have came and visited prisoners once a month and he introduced me Mailbox Club Bible lessons from Pattaya City and he also handed me an Old and New Testament Bible. He made me to see the ray of hope and it became like the seed of my hope to stand and going on toward my uncertain future even though I had no opportunity for that moment to meet the missionary because of the fetter in my legs. Any prisoners with fetters were not allowed to go and meet the missionary. I was fettered since the day I was judged by Kanjanaburi court into life sentence but the court reduced and approved my sentence into 33 years 4 months, in December 26, 1988. I had to carry the fetter during my new-comers training period and until the authorities in the building #6 satisfy on my behaviors and give the permission to free of it. It was took me time around two months and I was free from the fetter at last and I got the right to meet the missionary like other prisoners once a month outside the building at the prison hall. I started to know Pastor Randy Bell and later Dr, Jim Bryant from Calvary Baptist Church, Soi 2, Bangkok. I started hearing the great and unlimited love of God and the redemptive work of Jesus Christ through the message from the missionaries. And I also did the Mailbox Clab Correspondence Course through Pattaya City Church which ministered and running by Rev. Jack and Glad Martin together Ms. Jane Galle, the grader of the lessons. And I had learned about Jesus Christ and His great work through the missionaries and the lessons and I accepted Jesus Christ as my Lord and Savior and I was baptized in the pool near the prison hall, by Dr. U Kyaw Than who was given the authority to baptize from the Calvary Baptist Church, Soi 2, Bangkok, in June 26, 1989.

I have learned about the wonderful love of Jesus Christ who has given His life to the sinners through other missionaries as well especially who regularly visited the foreigners and later also Thai prisoners, as Charles and Lourdes Holmes and their team. They came and visited us weekly and taught us the Bible and also gave us the Rogma International Bible Correspondent two years Course for a diploma and other Bible courses and also helping us with our daily necessities that we need in prison. And there were also Burmese missionary groups from Calvary Baptist Church, Soi 2, Bangkok, leading by Pastor Too Jar, Pastor Zaw Min, Thramu Naw Tu Lu, Naw Mi Mi, Ko San Aung, pastor Parny Maung, including from the ministries of the Light of Mon People leading by Rev. Nai Tun Thein, Rev. Nai Tun Than, Ko Min Zaw Zaw and some other brothers and sisters in Christ as well came and visited regularly and occasionally and share the message of the love of God through their the words and deeds. I felt the love of God through the missionaries and I also longed and expected to receive the same love from the prisoners around me as well. But I found out that life in prison was just thoroughly different from the life of Jesus in the Bible. Prison taught and guided and pushed man directly or indirectly to be selfish. It looked like those who were more selfish were more suitable to live better life and to be survived in prison. Not only me, there were so many people, some people worse than me, who were in need. Many people wandered around and were talking alone in the building, eating rubbish from the cabbage, drinking dirty water from the drains. I had learned that all those men were just normal like us when they newly come to prison, and they later could not bear the situations and became like half crazy man.

When I was newly come to building #6, there were around 700 inmates and about 8 guards only looking at the prisoners. The guards were not always there; sometime there were only one or two guards and sometimes not even one guard in the buildings. The authorities appointed some prisoners to controls the remaining prisoners. Especially in the dormitory, there were no guards at all; we have to stay from 4:00 pm to next 7:00am. The building #6 dormitory was two stories building, and there was a corridor room at both stories and there were the cells both the left and the right side of the corridor. The trustees and those who can spend money were allowed to sleep in the corridor room and they were the persons who had broken the law. There were a few gangs moving around there especially the gang from Southern Thailand controlled the gambling party and drug (heroin) dealing and money lender in the building. The drug was so expensive in prison so they usually used needle to shoot into the veins to be effective with the small amount and it was one of the reasons transferring the HIV and AIDS to one another. And there were homosexual and man prostitutes as well transferring that kind of disease in the building. And there were many people who have suffered with T.B, Malaria, so many kinds of skin diseases, HIV and AIDS. For those who cause the disease seriously especially the TB, they had separated bed room for them but it seem could not control the infections.

The education system was so weak in my early years in Bangkwang prison, and there were a lot of illiterates among the prisoners. I saw often the beating, fighting, stabbing, and sometimes killing one another or among the gangs. Right after 20 days I reached to Bangkwang prison, there was a murder case in front of me. The man with the fetter used a cement dumbbell and beat the head of another man who was turning his face to the wall and eating his breakfast and as the man fainted and fell down on the grown, he grasped and pulled his hair and lifted the head up and put on his lap and cut the throat with a small knife and at the same time the blood was spurting out and hit on the murderer’s face but it was not disturbed him to continue cutting the throat. After he satisfied what he had done, he just pushed the body down and walked away to the building gate in order to go outside the building and to be surrendered at the central office. All the guards and the trustees at the building gate were run away out of the building when they saw the murderer was walking straight toward them with blood painted face and the whole body. The place where the murder killed the man was far from me only about three meters and the murderer was the same man who was my roommate and who slept close to me and he was from the southern of Thailand with murder and robbery case who was sentenced to life.

Nai and Daniel

I realized myself that I was really in the mid of troubles, I had to worry for myself, for my daily need, for my family, for the secure of life and for my future and so many other things. And the shadow of fear was greatly control my mind and thoughts. I was asking myself and questioning in my heart, “Who can help me?” repeatedly—again and again. This question was pondered in my mind not just now in Bangkwang but since the first night I got my sentence in Kanjanaburi province. I was looking and searching for someone, the human being, who can help me but when I did not find anyone, my mind turn to looking for the supernatural things. I came from Buddha religion background and I seriously tried to practice the meditation to quiet my mind and anxiousness. I tried to pray the Buddha to help me, I tried to read the Bible and I tried to pray God to help me in the name of Jesus.

In Matthew 11:28-30, Jesus says, “Come to Me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.

I had read the Bible verses but I didn’t understand well the real meaning. I kept depending only on myself by the works, by meditation, by praying the Buddha, by reading the Bible, praying in Jesus’ name, by keeping the commandments, by doing the Bible lessons regularly, even after I was baptized. All the works that trying to carry the burdens by myself could not work well. But I still kept going on without realizing myself and just with my sincere heart until the day I met Jesus in my vision in the early morning in my quiet time in October21, 1990. This thing made me to believe and trust Him with all my heart, my soul and my body and had made me to accept Him as the only One Lord and Savior of my life. At the same time I have got the new life and I have been saved both mentally and spiritually. I could say I have been saved physically as well. I was born-again and received the Holy Spirit on that day. My perspectives of life also changed and there was a new hope for the future. I could start to live with a smiling face in prison and the Holy Spirit gives me strength to endure as I had to pass through all the sufferings and temptations and tasting in prison. After I had stayed near ten years in Bangkwang prison, I was moved to Klong Prem Central Prison in Bangkok in April 22, 1998. And I was transferred again to Klong Pai Prison, the Northeastern of Thailand and after that to Nang Rong Prison, near Cambodia’s border again. I had faced different kinds of difficulties and sufferings in the different prisons among the different people and cultures. My faith also sometime was going up and down during those years. But the love of God is never changed and He is with me always since the day I was born again and until now. I had served 18 years and 9 months in prison and at last God answered my prayer and saved me not only spiritually but also physically and God allowed me to enjoy the freedom of life again. I can’t describe by the word how much I thank God but I know that I thank Him never enough from the bottom of my heart for His protections and providences and encouragements during my hardest 18 years and 9 month in the lion den. Today I found out myself as a final year student in KKBBSC Bible College in Burma and Thai border. This thing also was possible, not by my own—but only by God alone, not by my might but by His.

I give this testimony, I just want my beloved readers to know that God of the Bible is a Living God—He is with us, and He listens and answers our prayers in His time. He is so good to all of us.

May God Richly Bless you all always.

Psalm 116: 1-6, “I love the Lord, for He heard my voice; He heard my cry for mercy. Because He turned His ear to me, I will call on Him as long as I live. The cords of death entangled me, the anguish of the grave came upon me; I was overcome by trouble and sorrow. Then I called on the name of the Lord: “O Lord, save me!” The Lord is gracious and righteous; our God is full of compassion. The Lord protects the simple-hearted; when I was in great need, He saved me.”

With Love In Christ

Nai Thaung Myint

Final Year

KKBBSC