• Contact Us
  • Classifieds
  • About
  • Home

Pathway

Missouri Baptist Convention's Official News Journal

  • Missouri
    • MBC
    • Churches
    • Institutions & Agencies
    • Policy
    • Disaster Relief
  • National
    • SBC Annual Meeting
    • NAMB
    • SBC
    • Churches
    • Policy
    • Society & Culture
  • Global
    • Missions
    • Multicultural
  • Columnists
    • Wes Fowler
    • Ben Hawkins
    • Pat Lamb
    • Rhonda Rhea
    • Rob Phillips
  • Ethics
    • Life
    • Liberty
    • Family
  • Faith
    • Apologetics
    • Religions
    • Evangelism
    • Missions
    • Bible Study & Devotion
  • E-Edition

More results...

Malaysian pastor Raymond Koh has been missing since his February 2017 kidnapping amid death threats against him for spreading the Gospel in Malaysia, a Muslim country under Sharia law. His wife Susanna has pled for his release. Screengrab from KiniTV documentary.

Kidnapped pastor’s family ‘solid and secure in Jesus’

April 5, 2018 By Diana Chandler

 

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (BP) — A Malaysian pastor threatened with death for trying to convert Muslims to Christianity remains missing more than a year after his February 2017 kidnapping in Kuala Lumpur, a family friend confirmed to Baptist Press today (March 26).

The family of 63-year-old Raymond Koh has heard nothing of his whereabouts or health since his abduction by as many as a dozen masked men in broad daylight, family friend and Nashville-area pastor Greg Wilton told BP.

“They’ve really suffered, suffered psychologically,” said Wilton, who met Koh before becoming missions pastor of Long Hollow Baptist Church in Hendersonville, Tenn., in January 2017. “And yet through it all, God’s given them a tremendous amount of … assurance that even though they may not see him in this life, they are totally certain that they will see him in the next life.”

Koh pastored an Evangelical Free Church of Malaysia for 20 years before founding Harapan Komuniti in Malaysia in 2004, a community-based outreach to single mothers, drug addicts and HIV/AIDS victims, according to Open Doors USA. Workers at Harapan Komuniti were instructed not to try to proselytize people the outreach served, Koh’s wife Susanna Liew Soh Yoke has said, but days before Koh’s disappearance the family received death threats for spreading the Gospel.

Wilton communicates weekly with the family through texts, praying for Susanna and Koh’s three adult children, he told BP.

“The family has a tremendous faith in God right now, still believing and trusting that he could show up at any moment, [any] day,” Wilton said. “But they also find that their faith is most solid and secure in Jesus … knowing that Jesus takes care of them even in the darkest of situations.”

Many religious liberty groups are advocating for Koh’s return, but an official inquiry of the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia has been on hold since January, when Malaysian police arrested Lam Chang Nam as a suspect in the kidnapping. Koh’s wife and other advocates believe the arrest is a deliberate attempt to halt the inquiry, which Malaysian law prohibits as long as court proceedings are activated against a suspect. Lam, 31, was originally charged in March 2017 with trying to extort a ransom of about $8,000 from Koh’s son Jonathan, World Watch Monitor reported in January.

“Why is he being charged with kidnapping now, after a lapse of several months and just a day before the inquiry resumed?” his wife said in a plea for his release at OpenDoorsUSA.com. “If he really is involved, then he should know where Raymond is now. Bring him out and let the perpetrators be apprehended and justice served.”

Koh is among at least four missing persons the Human Rights Commission is investigating, including pastor Joshua Hilmy and his wife Ruth who were reported missing in March 2017, according to World Watch. In Malaysia, a Muslim country under Sharia law, trying to convert Muslims to Christianity is constitutionally illegal. The Open Doors World 2018 Watch List ranks Malaysia as 23rd among the 50 countries where Christians are the most persecuted.

Wilton encouraged Southern Baptists to support Koh’s family by praying for them and taking any available steps to spread the Gospel in Malaysia.

“Southern Baptists can do what Raymond always did, which is do everything that he can to love Malaysians and share the Gospel with them,” Wilton told BP. “Continue to pray and to love all people of Malaysia.”

Koh’s family maintains a webpage at FindRaymondKoh.com. The Human Rights Commission, Open Doors, World Watch and the World Council of Churches are among groups that have advocated for Koh’s return.

See BP’s 2017 story on Koh’s plight.

Comments

Featured Videos

A Video Story: Revitalization at Cross Keys Baptist Church

Cross Keys Baptist Church in Florissant, Mo. faced decline and recognized they needed to change in order to reach the local community. With an intentional revitalization effort, the Lord transformed the congregation and blessed their neighbors.

Find More Videos

Trending

  • Lifepointe, Fulton, reaches next generation
  • Missouri Baptist mission team shares Christ’s love, trains pastors in Africa
  • Pastor sees rural Dry Fork Baptist Church grow by intentional evangelism
  • HLGU legal settlement secures right of Christians to establish schools that reflect faith
  • Renew: Revitalization at Cross Keys Baptist Church
  • Let’s Worship!

Ethics

Protesting: How should churches respond?

Jeremiah Greever

The Evangelical world was shocked on Jan. 18, 2026, when a group of roughly 30 protestors invaded Cities Church in St. Paul, Minn., during a worship service. While Christians aren’t surprised when unbelievers sin, we were shocked to see the sacred space of religious worship attacked so blatantly. This remarkable action should lead Christians and churches to think clearly about what the Bible says regarding protesting and how churches should biblically respond.

Major medical group comes out against gender transition for minors

Scott Barkley

More Ethics Stories

Missouri

SBU expands radiography program to meet demand

Southwest Baptist University

Southwest Baptist University is proud to announce a significant expansion and curriculum enhancements for its Associate of Science in Radiography (ASR) program. Designed to address the increasing need for skilled medical imaging professionals, the program is increasing its total student capacity and streamlining the path to graduation, all while maintaining its core mission of preparing servant leaders in healthcare.

Copyright © 2026 · The Pathway