P. J. Thomas (pastor)
Rev. P. J. Thomas (Painnumoottil John Thomas) | |
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Born | April 15, 1914 |
Died | July 24, 1999 |
Education | Master's degree in Comparative Religion |
Church | Indian Pentecostal Church & Sharon Fellowship Church |
Rev. Painnumoottil John Thomas (April 15, 1914 – March 24, 1998) was an Indian pastor.
Pastor Thomas's father Pastor P V John (Ayyapilla Sar)came to know the Lord through a native missionary (Kappiar Upadesi)who taught him John 3:16. The love of a living God so compelled his young mind that he left his Hindu Brahmin background. He married Sossamma and they had five boys(John,Daniel,Thomas,Jacob,George) and one girl(Leelaamma). P J Thomas is the third oldest among the siblings. Pastor Thomas attended Seampore University and earned a Diploma in Theology. He became the principal of the IPC free School. Following his marriage to Aleyamma (Keezhvaipur, Mallappally), he left for Australia for higher studies. He went to England from Australia and to the U.S, where he attended Wheaton College (Illinois) and got a Master's degree in Comparative Religion. He taught at Wheaton for a short time before returning to India in 1952. Before he went back to India, he was instrumental in bringing the then three senior Indian Pentecostal Church pastors, Pastor K.E. Abraham, K.C. Cherian, and P.M. Samuel to the U.S. He also traveled with Pastor K.E. Abraham and interpreted for him across the U.S.
Following his return to India, the late Pastor J. Varghese (Kochusar) Persuaded him to settle down at Tiruvalla. Pastor and Mrs. Thomas purchased the present Sharon property in March 1953 and made it their home. The fame of "Sharon" came with two revival meetings and the opening of the Bible College at Sharon compound. On Nov. 30, 1953 missionaries arrived who conducted 30 days of revival and healing ministry, the last week's attendance was over 100,000 a night. These meeting were conducted without any foreign money only from the free will offering of the people who attended. Hundreds turned to the Lord and were baptized. Many were healed of their illnesses. Rev. John E.Douglas and Rev R. W. Schambach who were instrumental for this meetings. With the completion of the Sharon Hall, Sharon Bible College was born in 1955 where several pastors have been trained.
Unfortunately the 1950s were a period of unrest within the Indian Pentecostal Church. During the split in Indian Pentecostal Church, the Sharon Hall was often used as a place of mediation, but Pastor Thomas remained neutral. Several independent churches approached Pastor Thomas to help them with building churches and buying burial grounds and to give them a hand in common fellowship. As a result Pastor Thomas decided to remain independent. Although it had a small beginning the church began to grow in leaps and bounds beginning the middle of the 60's He called it a fellowship of churches thus it is called Sharon Fellowship Churches of India, but commonly called as Sharon Church.
Pastor Thomas was a man of God with a vision, faith, honesty, humility, integrity and compassion. He was a prophet for the modern day with practicing theology. [1] [2] [3] [4]
See also
References
- ^ Bergunder, Michael (2008). The South Indian Pentecostal movement in the twentieth century. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. pp. 297–298. ISBN 978-0-8028-2734-0.
- ^ Philip, P.S. (1991). North American Malayalee Pentecostal Churches: Beginning and Growth. 9th Pentecostal Conference of North American Keralites - Souvenir. pp. 37–52.
- ^ Hollenweger, Walter J. (1997). Pentecostalism: Origins and Developments Worldwide. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers. p. 2.
- ^ Philip, P.S. (1997). The Four Decades of North American Malayalee Pentecostal Churches. 15th Pentecostal Conference of North American Keralites - Souvenir. pp. 97–114.