As a fifteen year old Ernest (Molyvann) Ung heard the gospel presented in a church in Phnom Penh and during a song of invitation angrily stormed from the church. The son of the Commander of the Kings Army was proud and resistant to a 'foriegn' faith.
In April of 1975 the time of the “Killing Fields” began in Cambodia. Ernest Ung's parents, and six of his seven brothers and sisters died of starvation. Ernest concealed his identity and survived, eventually escaping to Thailand and the Kao I Dang Refugee Camp.
There, for a second time in his life, Ernest attended a Church service. Again, he was invited to receive Jesus Christ as his Savior. This time on his knees he tearfully opened, his now humbled heart to Christ. As he prayed, he recognized that same unknown song being sung in the background. The words were, “Take my life and let it be consecrated Lord to Thee.”
Ernest went on to pastor a church in Brooklyn New York before answering the call and moving back to Cambodia. There he serves with his wife Yvonne and their adopted daughter Jacquline as the director of Cambodian Christian Embassy. In this capacity he functions before the leaders of that nation as the "Special Advisor to the Ministry Council of Cambodia in Charge of Religious Affairs."
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