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Jin S. Kim is second candidate for GA moderator


From Worldwide Faith News <wfn@igc.org>
Date Mon, 05 Jul 2010 10:08:16 -0700

Jin S. Kim is second candidate for GA moderator
Minneapolis pastor is endorsed by Twin Cities Area Presbytery
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The Rev. Jin S. Kim

The Rev. Jin S. Kim
Posted at
January 12, 2010 10:05 a.m.
by Jerry L. Van Marter
The Rev. Jin S. Kim, founding pastor of Church of All Nations in 
Minneapolis, was unanimously endorsed January 9 by the Presbytery of 
the Twin Cities Area to stand for moderator of the upcoming 219th 
General Assembly (2010). The Assembly will be held July 3-10 in Minneapolis.
Kim joins Elder Cynthia Bolbach of National Capital Presbytery as 
candidates for the top elected post in the Presbyterian Church 
(U.S.A.). The winner will succeed the Rev. Bruce Reyes-Chow of San 
Francisco, moderator of the 218th General Assembly.
Kim, 41, was born in Korea and came to the United States with his 
family in 1975, grow up in a multi-ethnic environment in Columbia, SC 
and Atlanta. He holds degrees from Georgia Tech (1990), Princeton 
Theological Seminary (M.Div., 1993), and Columbia Theological 
Seminary (D.Min., 2005).
He is currently moderator of the Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area, 
serves as a PC(USA) delegate to the National Council of Churches, and 
sits on the boards of the Minnesota Council of Churches and the 
Greater Minnesota Association of Evangelicals. He is also a part of 
the Jewish-Presbyterian Dialogue and the Special Committee on the 
Belhar Confession.
Kim speaks widely on the renewal of the church at conferences, 
colleges, seminaries, presbyteries and congregations, both in the 
U.S. and abroad.  He was a preacher at the 2004 and 2008 General 
Assemblies, is adjunct faculty at Dubuque Theological Seminary and 
has also taught at Princeton Seminary, Columbia Seminary, and Duke 
Divinity School, as well as at seminaries in Brazil, Argentina, 
Egypt, Russia, and Korea.
His household includes his wife Soon Pac; children Claire Nicea, 10, 
and Austin Athanasius; and his parents.
On his Web site, Kim reflects on one of his campaign themes: "This is 
an age that requires a new conceptualizing of leadership.  How can 
churches be re-oriented from institutional management to the kind of 
leadership that is daring, imaginative, prophetic, countercultural, 
yet peace-full?  In a time when many of the historic mainline 
churches find themselves on the brink, how might we reinterpret this 
de-centering as a gift and an opportunity for transformation?  Is it 
possible to lead our local congregations and presbyteries into an 
embodiment of both radical diversity and deep intimacy that counters 
the homogenizing and commoditizing impulses of the dominant culture?" 






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