Greg & Molly Timmins

Career Missionaries from 2006-2011, serving the Great River People of Southeast Asia. Joining the Pnong Project in 2015.

We are Greg and Molly Timmins, and we and our children, Hannah and Caleb, are serving the Pnong people of Cambodia. Our missionary journey began in 2006 when our family served the Great River People of Southeast Asia until 2011. After this we served in New Zealand where Greg pastored two wonderful churches. As time went by, we missed our life in the foreign mission field and felt God’s call for us to take up the work again. So, in 2015, we rejoined AFM, this time with the Pnong Project.

The Pnong Project is a happening place! The school the Greenfields started is growing. Each year, we add another grade. Jonathan Nicholaides now serves as the principal, and the Greenfields are starting industries to support the financial needs of the project. They are also planning and overseeing the building projects. Our family has taken the role of Pnong village church planters. We are very excited to see what God is doing in the mountains of Cambodia! He is raising up leadership for the church plants. Our main task right now is to disciple these baby Christians who want to be missionaries to their own people. We have hired a man to head up literacy programs in several villages where we would like to plant churches in the future. We also have a student missionary who is teamed up with a young local worker. They live in a village where we have been working for the last couple of years. We are watching as God grows this into a church plant. More people are coming to our meetings. As families take steps to leave spirit worship and follow Jesus, all their extended family members and neighbors are watching. The Holy Spirit is moving, and we count it a great privilege to have a role in His master plan for the Pnong people. Praise the Lord!

Frontier Stories

Building Bridges

It was mid-afternoon, and we had taken a day to visit a Cham village with Sina, a church planter whose father was Cham. After visiting with his family, he had taken us across the road to the local mosque. Several men had gathered for afternoon prayer.

By: Greg Timmins
April 01 2007, 9:53 am | Comments 0

Teaching Love

Poverty. It affects every aspect of life here. Just yesterday, I was thrown into deeply disturbing culture shock. This is how it happened:
He was just a little boy, probably a year and a half old.

By: Molly Timmins
March 01 2007, 8:51 am | Comments 0

First Tastes of Cambodia

People were yelling across the market to each other with noises the human tongue was never meant to make (at least not to my way of thinking). Others scurried past along the narrow walkways with wares they were hastily preparing to sell.

By: Greg Timmins
January 01 2007, 8:50 am | Comments 0

Cambodia at Last

“Just think! No more snow! No more getting stuck or mending the mailbox that the snowplow routinely knocks over. No more freezing.” Greg and I often share these thoughts as we look toward our escape from the snow.

By: Hope Kiwi
December 01 2006, 8:47 am | Comments 0

Love, Our Motivation

“Please, please, PLEASE don’t go! You don’t know what you’re getting yourself into,” Paul said as I sat with him in our sunroom one evening.

By: Greg Timmins
November 01 2006, 8:45 am | Comments 0

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