Passing the Faith on to the Next Generation with Lloyd Kim

How can we ensure that the gospel is faithfully passed on to future generations?

In this short presentation, Lloyd Kim explores the biblical mandate of passing the faith as a fulfillment of the Great Commission. Drawing from Hebrews and Matthew 28, he highlights the urgency of making disciples and warns of the eternal consequences of unbelief. As each generation receives the baton of faith, the call remains the same—proclaim the good news until Christ returns.

This video forms part of The Theological Foundation Papers series, bridging the insights of the State of the Great Commission Report with the biblical call to disciple-making across generations.

Watch now to be encouraged and challenged in your role in God’s mission.

00:00 Introduction
00:09  How does the Bible describe the importance of passing on the faith to the next generation as a fulfillment of the Great Commission?
00:56 Understanding God’s Rest
01:49 Mankind’s Work and the Fall
03:02 Passing on the Faith through The Great Commission
04:17 The Urgency of Passing the Baton

For a deeper look at the ideas shared in the video, read

Lausanne Occasional Paper No. 85

The Theological Foundation Papers video series connects the State of the Great Commission Report with biblical truths, equipping Christians to navigate global mission challenges while staying rooted in Scripture.

Speaker's Bio

Lloyd Kim

Dr. Lloyd Kim is coordinator of Mission to the World (MTW), the mission-sending agency of the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA). MTW focuses on making disciples and multiplying churches in over 100 countries and under his leadership has been sending an increasingly diverse, multi-national missionary force across the globe. A native of California, Dr. Kim got his engineering degree from UC Berkeley, M.Div. from Westminster Seminary California, and his Ph.D. in New Testament studies at Fuller Theological Seminary. He was associate pastor with New Life Mission Church (PCA) before joining MTW. He and his wife, Eda, a physician, served as missionaries for 10 years, first in the Philippines and then Cambodia.