In July 2004, the Lord opened a door for us to spread the Gospel in Cebu City, the Philippines, through Reggor Galarpe, a then recent graduate of Far Eastern Bible College. He was ordained in 2007, during our 2nd Missionary Conference, to be the pastor of Gethsemane Bible-Presbyterian Church in Cebu. To this day, the Lord has graciously strengthened Pastor Reggor to continue ministering faithfully and fervently in the ministry of the Word. Like all dedicated ministers of the Gospel, he has laboured diligently to care for the flock that God has brought to Gethsemane B-P Church, Cebu. Despite various personal and ministerial challenges, the Lord has enabled Pastor Reggor to provide pastoral leadership to the congregation in Cebu and to oversee the ministries that the Lord has opened in Bohol, Bogo and San Antonio, where Pr Edsel and Eld Eliezer are currently ministering the Word.
Today, the brethren are gathering in Cebu for the 20th Thanksgiving Anniversary Service. Let us, as a united body in spirit, join them to praise our God of salvation for the many Gospel doors He has opened over the past 20 years through the work begun by Pastor Reggor. Let us also pray for his family, co-labourers and the brethren of Gethsemane B-P Church, Cebu, that they will continually bear a good testimony for the Lord Jesus Christ through holy living and faithful preaching of the Word.
Below, we include Pastor Reggor’s recollection of the beginning of the work in Cebu, and an article, “Suffering Minister of Christ”, to stir us to remember and uphold, in our prayers, Pastor Reggor and all other servants of God in the Philippines and in all our mission stations around the world.
Pastor Reggor’s Recollection
As I ponder how the Lord has called me into the ministry, I cannot help but look back to 1999, when the Lord led me to a Christian drug rehabilitation centre. There, I came to know the Lord Jesus Christ and accepted Him as my Lord and personal Saviour. It was also there that I first met Pastor Koshy, who came for a visit after a mission trip to Leyte in the year 2000.
While I was about to complete my one-year rehabilitation programme, a door was opened for me to go and study at the Far Eastern Bible College in Singapore. It was the ministry leaders who encouraged me to be trained and equipped for the ministry. Upon my arrival in Singapore, I started attending church services at Gethsemane B-P Church and was subsequently baptised by Pastor Koshy. I then became a member of the church on 17th September 2000.
As a Bible college student, Pastor Koshy ensured that I was involved in various church ministries. I praise God for all the opportunities to serve in different areas, from ushering to teaching and preaching God’s Word in different fellowship groups. These experiences helped me understand and appreciate the work of the ministry.
In 2001, the Gethsemane Filipino Fellowship started, opening another opportunity to serve. It was during that time that I began to have a serious burden to reach out to people, especially to my fellow countrymen working in Singapore, share the Gospel with them, and lead them to a saving knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. From this ministry came the burden of bringing the Gospel to my country through a Bible-Presbyterian witness.
After completing my studies in 2003, I came back to Cebu with the zeal to start a mission church, but only after my one-year commitment to serve in a Christian drug rehabilitation centre where I came from. With much prayer and encouragement from Pastor Koshy and the “mother” church in Singapore, I was commissioned to be Gethsemane B-P Church’s missionary to the Philippines. And by God’s grace, the mission church in Cebu was inaugurated in July 2004.
I thank the Lord for His grace when, in November 2007, I was ordained to the pastoral ministry, together with Rev Ephrem Chiracho (Gethsemane B-P Church of Ethiopia), during the 2nd Missionary Conference held in Cebu City, the Philippines.
I praise and thank the Lord for His leading and guidance upon me and for blessing the church with a fruitful harvest of souls and a flourishing ministry, which includes The Gethsemane Care Ministry and Gethsemane Bible Institute. I am also thankful to the Lord for raising up faithful men to co-labour with me in the ministry. Praise and glory be unto His Name!
(An edited version of his testimony in our 25th Anniversary publication.)
Ephesians 3:13 – “Wherefore I desire that ye faint not at my tribulations for you, which is your glory.”
Herein, we witness the thoughts of a faithful and compassionate pastor deeply concerned for his flock’s spiritual well-being, even amidst his own afflictions. Paul wished that the Ephesian believers, upon hearing of his imprisonment and sufferings (Eph 3:1), would not be distressed or weakened in their faith and service to the Lord. This reflects his tender and caring pastoral heart, which prioritised the spiritual progress of God’s people above his own relief from personal burdens and troubles.
Though Paul was a prisoner, he thought and wrote as a free man. In his heart, he was indeed the Lord’s free man. Although the enemy confined him, they could not suppress his godly desires and prayers for God’s flock.
To many believers in Ephesus, Paul’s arrest and subsequent imprisonment seemed like a significant setback for the church and the cause of the Gospel. They grieved over his prolonged imprisonment and intense, ongoing suffering. Paul’s mind was consumed with concern for the steadfastness and progress of the church in the Lord’s work. He earnestly desired that they would not lose heart because of his tribulations. Even in his afflictions, Paul thought and acted as a loving, responsible and fervent pastor of God’s flock. His heart reflected the same concern for the church as that of Jesus Christ. What an exemplary model for all ministers of Christ, especially in these times of declining pastoral ministry!
Two expressions denote the purpose of his suffering. The phrase “my tribulations for you” indicates that a significant portion of his sufferings, both before and during his imprisonment, was for the benefit of the Ephesian believers. Just as it pleased God to save them through the suffering and death of His Son, Jesus Christ, it pleased Him to minister divine truths, nourishment and comfort to them through the sufferings of His servant, Paul. In 2 Corinthians 1:6, Paul wrote, “And whether we be afflicted, it is for your consolation and salvation, which is effectual in the enduring of the same sufferings which we also suffer: or whether we be comforted, it is for your consolation and salvation.”
The second expression, “which is your glory”, portrays his sufferings as having an exalted dignity that reflects glory on the believers. Paul was saying that his sufferings were permitted because God regarded them as worthy of bestowing honour and glory upon the church. Although suffering in itself is not glorious, suffering on behalf of Christ and His people holds a special honour due to His glorious purposes. God mightily uses His servants, who willingly labour and endure many afflictions, to bestow spiritual blessings upon His people. Let us give thanks for all His faithful and fervent servants everywhere who endure their many afflictions to nourish and protect God’s people, so that they may be presented to Christ as a glorious church.