BMS World Mission

End of an era

30/04/2008

This year will see the retirement of four BMS World Mission personnel who have notched up 144 years’ service between them.

Church planters John and Norma Clark and nurses Mary Parsons and Ann Bothamley all come to the end of their service with BMS this year.

John, Norma and Ann were among the very last BMS mission workers to travel to their service locations by boat.

John and Norma Clark left Tilbury on 16 August 1967 on the SS Amazon bound for Santos, Brazil. They worked in many different parts of Brazil and in 2005 relocated to Ecuador, where they have been developing a country-wide mission leaders’ training programme.

“We have nothing but thanks for the care we have received over the years,” says John. “We have trusted that God was working before we arrived, has worked with us all these years and will carry on working now we have left. We have never been let down by his love."

They have returned to the UK and will retire in August 2008.
John & Norma Clark John and Norma in conversation with a church leader in Ecuador
Ann Bothamley recalls how it took her nearly seven weeks to reach India. She recalls, “The Suez Canal was closed and we travelled from Italy through the Mediterranean and down the coast of Africa to the Cape, up to Mombasa and then Karachi and Bombay,” she said.
Ann Bothamley
Ann (pictured left) was also appointed in 1967 and worked for many years at the Christian Medical College Hospital (CMC) in Vellore, India. When she ‘retired’ from nursing, she ran a hostel for children whose parents were working in remote parts of India.

Since 2006 she has been back at the CMC Hospital on a part-time basis, helping in the haematology department. She works with families, many of whom are coping with children undergoing cancer treatment.

Ann has written a book, ‘Rahul’s Challenge’ about a boy and his family who come to terms with leukaemia.
Ann says, “Looking back over the years it has been a journey of faith, faith in a God who promised to walk beside me whatever happened and who told me that he wanted me to show his love in this incredible country from when I was 11 years-old. Being with BMS has been great because BMS is not static. BMS has been seeking new challenges under God’s guidance and opportunities to share his love with the people of this world. I have found this exciting and encouraging.

"BMS has given me the freedom to pursue the Spirit’s leading for which I am grateful. As an individual I have known and experienced a caring concern and support from BMS which has meant much, especially as out of 40 years, 35 have been without BMS colleagues to share and sometimes that was a lonely road.”
Ann finally retires from her work in November 2008. With her departure comes the end of BMS long-term personnel working in India, though short-term personnel and Action Teams continue to serve there.

Mary Parsons (pictured right) was appointed in 1972. She worked with BMS in five different locations in Brazil. From there she was temporarily seconded to help out with a BMS volunteer team who went to Albania to help with Kosovan refugees. Another location change in 2001 sent her to Luanda, Angola, where she has worked at our partner IEBA’s health centre, till her retirement in February 2008.
Mary Parsons


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