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V2 Singapore Christian Leaders Engage National Leadership and Regional Delegates at Historic Timor-Leste Gathering

PRESS RELEASE

4/27/2026

SINGAPORE / DILI, TIMOR-LESTE — Singapore Christian leaders from a newly established local church took on active leadership, facilitation, and ministry roles during a historic international gathering in Timor-Leste that brought together government officials, international delegates, educators, youth leaders, professionals, and faith communities around conversations of societal transformation, leadership, and nation-building.

Representing Lion City Church (LCC), Alan Bright, Joy Bright, and Jael Tan were part of the international delegation and programme involvement at Transform Timor-Leste 2026 (TTL ’26), held in the capital city of Dili.

The gathering brought together more than 500 participants from nations including Singapore, Indonesia, Brazil, India, Ghana, and the United States alongside delegates from across Timor-Leste. Hosted at the Ginásio Desporto de Dili, the event centred on the theme “Transforming Society Through the Gospel and the Power of the Holy Spirit” and explored how faith, leadership, education, youth empowerment, and community engagement can contribute towards broader societal transformation.

According to Timor-Leste media outlet VIPTV, the initiative sought to empower “church leadership, business people and educators as well as the youth” to become transformative agents within society and their respective spheres of influence. (news-viptv.com)

The significance of the gathering was reflected not only through the presence of international delegates and senior national leaders, but also through coverage by Timor-Leste television network LeFaek News and regional media outlets documenting the wider societal and national themes surrounding the event.

For many observers within Timor-Leste, TTL ’26 carried broader significance beyond a traditional church conference. VIPTV described it as the first international Christian gathering of its scale held during the nation’s post-independence era, reflecting the increasing intersection between faith communities, civic engagement, leadership development, and national transformation conversations taking place within the young Southeast Asian nation. (news-viptv.com)

Engagement at National Level

During the programme, the Singapore delegation had opportunities to engage with His Excellency Eng. Mariano Assanami Sabino Lopes, Deputy Prime Minister, Coordinating Minister for Social Affairs and Minister for Rural Development and Community Housing of the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste, as well as His Excellency Sérgio de Jesus Fernandes da Costa Hornai, Minister of Justice.

The interactions took place within a broader atmosphere of dialogue involving governance, youth development, family support, social resilience, and the role civic and faith-based institutions can play in national transformation.

Opening the gathering on behalf of the Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Justice Dr. Sérgio Hornai remarked that the conference theme aligned with “national development objectives,” while highlighting the role faith communities can play in strengthening peace, transparency, social responsibility, and community development. (news-viptv.com)

“We all know that the church is not only a place to pray, but also a school that teaches us to help each other,” Dr. Hornai said during his address. (news-viptv.com)

His remarks reflected a growing sentiment increasingly visible within Timor-Leste’s national discourse — that faith-based communities can contribute not only spiritually, but also socially and developmentally in shaping the future of the nation.

For Timor-Leste, one of Southeast Asia’s youngest nations and a country entering a significant new chapter through its ASEAN membership, conversations surrounding leadership formation, youth resilience, social development, and nation-building carry growing importance as the country navigates its evolving role within the region. In recent months, Timor-Leste’s admission into ASEAN has drawn wider regional attention, with many viewing the milestone as a defining step in the nation’s diplomatic and developmental journey. (asean.org, straitstimes.com)

A Young Church with an Outward Vision

Observers noted that the involvement of a young Singapore-based church within such an environment reflects a broader shift taking place across the region, where emerging Christian leaders are increasingly engaging beyond traditional ministry settings into areas involving leadership development, social transformation, community building, and cross-border collaboration.

The Singapore delegation was supported and commissioned under the leadership of Evangelist Richard Kwakye, who serves as National Head in Singapore and Regional Missions Secretary. Those familiar with the initiative noted his instrumental role in equipping, guiding, and sending the team into Timor-Leste as part of a broader framework of missions partnership, accountability, and regional collaboration.

Beyond attendance, members of the Lion City Church team also carried programme responsibilities during the gathering.

Founded in Singapore within the past year, the church has quickly developed a reputation for combining spiritual ministry with active community engagement, while remaining connected to wider missions leadership and regional church relationships.

The involvement of the Singapore delegation extended beyond attendance. During the conference, members of the Lion City Church team also served in programme responsibilities and workshop facilitation roles.

Alan Bright and Jael Tan also served as Session Managers during the conference, contributing to workshop sessions centred on national transformation and missions engagement. Alan Bright coordinated a youth empowerment workshop focused on raising young leaders for societal impact, while Jael Tan oversaw a missions and evangelism session aligned with The Church of Pentecost’s Vision 2028 emphasis on outreach, discipleship, and transformation beyond church walls.

Alan Bright, together with Joy Bright and Jael Tan, participated in song ministration during the clergy and Christian workers service, representing COP Singapore and Lion City Church within the wider international gathering. Through the song Fall Like Rain, the team reflected on the shared resonance between Singapore and Timor-Leste as small nations shaped by histories of colonisation, independence, resilience, and national development.

Photographs from the gathering captured moments of interaction and exchange between the Singapore representatives and national leaders, highlighting a level of engagement not commonly associated with a church established less than a year ago.

Observers note that such opportunities and connections typically develop over time, making this early involvement particularly significant.

“We came simply to serve, learn, and stand alongside what God is doing in Timor-Leste,” one of the team members shared. “What unfolded became much bigger than we expected.”

Beyond the Conference Grounds

Beyond the formal programme environment, the Singapore delegation also participated in outreach and ministry engagements involving prayer, worship, encouragement, and relational connection with local communities and youths.

Delegates were also exposed to broader grassroots and community initiatives connected to local partnerships within Timor-Leste, including educational support programmes, youth empowerment efforts, counselling services, English-language initiatives, recovery support work, and social assistance projects established through missions collaboration and community partnerships.

These initiatives reflected a wider emphasis repeatedly expressed throughout TTL ’26 — that faith-based engagement can extend beyond worship spaces into practical areas of leadership formation, reconciliation, social support, and community transformation.

A Singapore Expression with Broader Reach

While TTL ’26 took place overseas, Lion City Church’s work is not limited to international initiatives.

Through its community outreach arm, Lion City Hope Centre, the church has been actively engaging local communities in Singapore through outreach and support initiatives, building a foundation of service that complements its growing regional involvement.

This combination of local and regional expression is shaping a model that is both grounded and outward-looking.

In an increasingly interconnected region, initiatives like TTL ’26 also raise broader questions about the role Singapore churches can play beyond their own borders — not only spiritually, but also in contributing towards leadership development, community transformation, and meaningful regional partnerships.

A Sign of What May Be Emerging

For Singapore’s Christian landscape, the significance of TTL ’26 may ultimately extend beyond a single international gathering.

What unfolded in Dili was not simply a conference experience for a visiting Singapore team, but a rare intersection of ministry, leadership, governance, youth empowerment, and regional engagement taking place within one of Southeast Asia’s youngest nations.

At a time when many churches remain primarily inward-facing, the involvement of Singapore representatives within conversations surrounding societal transformation, national development, missions collaboration, and community impact reflected a broader shift quietly emerging across the region. Increasingly, younger Christian leaders are stepping beyond traditional ministry settings into spaces shaping culture, leadership, and society itself.

What began with a small delegation from Singapore evolved into participation within moments carrying diplomatic, societal, and generational significance.

For Lion City Church and its representatives, Alan Bright, Joy Bright, and Jael Tan, TTL ’26 may prove to be an early milestone in a much larger journey still unfolding.

As Southeast Asia becomes increasingly interconnected through leadership exchange, regional cooperation, and people-to-people engagement, gatherings such as these may offer a glimpse into the emergence of a new generation of outward-looking Christian leadership rising from Singapore. One seeking not only to minister within church walls, but also to engage the deeper questions shaping nations, communities, and the future of the region itself.

Singapore representatives Alan Bright, Joy Bright, and Jael Tan with His Excellency Eng. Mariano Assanami Sabino Lopes, Deputy Prime Minister of Timor-Leste, in Palácio do Governo, Dili.

In conversation, the Deputy Prime Minister shared his personal affection for Singapore, describing it as “a second home” and that he frequently chooses to transit through Singapore during his international diplomatic travels.

Official address by Apostle Dr. G. Mike Portuphy, Regional Missions Coordinator (RMC), at the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister of Timor-Leste during Transform Timor-Leste 2026 (TTL ’26) in Dili, alongside international delegates, local press, and media coverage.

Many Timorese youths stepped forward in tears during the altar call at TTL ’26 - reflecting both the spiritual hunger and personal struggles many young people continue facing amid rapid social and national transition.

Jael Tan, Alan Bright, and Joy Bright representing Singapore at TTL ’26, carrying the flags of The Church of Pentecost and Timor-Leste as a symbol of partnership, missions, and regional collaboration.

SINGAPORE / DILI, TIMOR-LESTE — Singapore Christian leaders from a newly established local church took on active leadership, facilitation, and ministry roles during a historic international gathering in Timor-Leste that brought together government officials, international delegates, educators, youth leaders, professionals, and faith communities around conversations of societal transformation, leadership, and nation-building.

Representing Lion City Church (LCC), Alan Bright, Joy Bright, and Jael Tan were part of the international delegation and programme involvement at Transform Timor-Leste 2026 (TTL ’26), held in the capital city of Dili.

The gathering brought together more than 500 participants from nations including Singapore, Indonesia, Brazil, India, Ghana, and the United States alongside delegates from across Timor-Leste. Hosted at the Ginásio Desporto de Dili, the event centred on the theme “Transforming Society Through the Gospel and the Power of the Holy Spirit” and explored how faith, leadership, education, youth empowerment, and community engagement can contribute towards broader societal transformation.

According to Timor-Leste media outlet VIPTV, the initiative sought to empower “church leadership, business people and educators as well as the youth” to become transformative agents within society and their respective spheres of influence. (news-viptv.com)

The significance of the gathering was reflected not only through the presence of international delegates and senior national leaders, but also through coverage by Timor-Leste television network LeFaek News and regional media outlets documenting the wider societal and national themes surrounding the event.

For many observers within Timor-Leste, TTL ’26 carried broader significance beyond a traditional church conference. VIPTV described it as the first international Christian gathering of its scale held during the nation’s post-independence era, reflecting the increasing intersection between faith communities, civic engagement, leadership development, and national transformation conversations taking place within the young Southeast Asian nation. (news-viptv.com)

Engagement at National Level

During the programme, the Singapore delegation had opportunities to engage with His Excellency Eng. Mariano Assanami Sabino Lopes, Deputy Prime Minister, Coordinating Minister for Social Affairs and Minister for Rural Development and Community Housing of the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste, as well as His Excellency Sérgio de Jesus Fernandes da Costa Hornai, Minister of Justice.

The interactions took place within a broader atmosphere of dialogue involving governance, youth development, family support, social resilience, and the role civic and faith-based institutions can play in national transformation.

Opening the gathering on behalf of the Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Justice Dr. Sérgio Hornai remarked that the conference theme aligned with “national development objectives,” while highlighting the role faith communities can play in strengthening peace, transparency, social responsibility, and community development. (news-viptv.com)

“We all know that the church is not only a place to pray, but also a school that teaches us to help each other,” Dr. Hornai said during his address. (news-viptv.com)

His remarks reflected a growing sentiment increasingly visible within Timor-Leste’s national discourse — that faith-based communities can contribute not only spiritually, but also socially and developmentally in shaping the future of the nation.

For Timor-Leste, one of Southeast Asia’s youngest nations and a country entering a significant new chapter through its ASEAN membership, conversations surrounding leadership formation, youth resilience, social development, and nation-building carry growing importance as the country navigates its evolving role within the region. In recent months, Timor-Leste’s admission into ASEAN has drawn wider regional attention, with many viewing the milestone as a defining step in the nation’s diplomatic and developmental journey. (asean.org, straitstimes.com)

A Young Church with an Outward Vision

Observers noted that the involvement of a young Singapore-based church within such an environment reflects a broader shift taking place across the region, where emerging Christian leaders are increasingly engaging beyond traditional ministry settings into areas involving leadership development, social transformation, community building, and cross-border collaboration.

The Singapore delegation was supported and commissioned under the leadership of Evangelist Richard Kwakye, who serves as National Head in Singapore and Regional Missions Secretary. Those familiar with the initiative noted his instrumental role in equipping, guiding, and sending the team into Timor-Leste as part of a broader framework of missions partnership, accountability, and regional collaboration.

Beyond attendance, members of the Lion City Church team also carried programme responsibilities during the gathering.

Founded in Singapore within the past year, the church has quickly developed a reputation for combining spiritual ministry with active community engagement, while remaining connected to wider missions leadership and regional church relationships.

The involvement of the Singapore delegation extended beyond attendance. During the conference, members of the Lion City Church team also served in programme responsibilities and workshop facilitation roles.

Alan Bright and Jael Tan also served as Session Managers during the conference, contributing to workshop sessions centred on national transformation and missions engagement. Alan Bright coordinated a youth empowerment workshop focused on raising young leaders for societal impact, while Jael Tan oversaw a missions and evangelism session aligned with The Church of Pentecost’s Vision 2028 emphasis on outreach, discipleship, and transformation beyond church walls.

Alan Bright, together with Joy Bright and Jael Tan, participated in song ministration during the clergy and Christian workers service, representing COP Singapore and Lion City Church within the wider international gathering. Through the song Fall Like Rain, the team reflected on the shared resonance between Singapore and Timor-Leste as small nations shaped by histories of colonisation, independence, resilience, and national development.

Photographs from the gathering captured moments of interaction and exchange between the Singapore representatives and national leaders, highlighting a level of engagement not commonly associated with a church established less than a year ago.

Observers note that such opportunities and connections typically develop over time, making this early involvement particularly significant.

“We came simply to serve, learn, and stand alongside what God is doing in Timor-Leste,” one of the team members shared. “What unfolded became much bigger than we expected.”

Beyond the Conference Grounds

Beyond the formal programme environment, the Singapore delegation also participated in outreach and ministry engagements involving prayer, worship, encouragement, and relational connection with local communities and youths.

Delegates were also exposed to broader grassroots and community initiatives connected to local partnerships within Timor-Leste, including educational support programmes, youth empowerment efforts, counselling services, English-language initiatives, recovery support work, and social assistance projects established through missions collaboration and community partnerships.

These initiatives reflected a wider emphasis repeatedly expressed throughout TTL ’26 — that faith-based engagement can extend beyond worship spaces into practical areas of leadership formation, reconciliation, social support, and community transformation.

A Singapore Expression with Broader Reach

While TTL ’26 took place overseas, Lion City Church’s work is not limited to international initiatives.

Through its community outreach arm, Lion City Hope Centre, the church has been actively engaging local communities in Singapore through outreach and support initiatives, building a foundation of service that complements its growing regional involvement.

This combination of local and regional expression is shaping a model that is both grounded and outward-looking.

In an increasingly interconnected region, initiatives like TTL ’26 also raise broader questions about the role Singapore churches can play beyond their own borders — not only spiritually, but also in contributing towards leadership development, community transformation, and meaningful regional partnerships.

A Sign of What May Be Emerging

For Singapore’s Christian landscape, the significance of TTL ’26 may ultimately extend beyond a single international gathering.

What unfolded in Dili was not simply a conference experience for a visiting Singapore team, but a rare intersection of ministry, leadership, governance, youth empowerment, and regional engagement taking place within one of Southeast Asia’s youngest nations.

At a time when many churches remain primarily inward-facing, the involvement of Singapore representatives within conversations surrounding societal transformation, national development, missions collaboration, and community impact reflected a broader shift quietly emerging across the region. Increasingly, younger Christian leaders are stepping beyond traditional ministry settings into spaces shaping culture, leadership, and society itself.

What began with a small delegation from Singapore evolved into participation within moments carrying diplomatic, societal, and generational significance.

For Lion City Church and its representatives, Alan Bright, Joy Bright, and Jael Tan, TTL ’26 may prove to be an early milestone in a much larger journey still unfolding.

As Southeast Asia becomes increasingly interconnected through leadership exchange, regional cooperation, and people-to-people engagement, gatherings such as these may offer a glimpse into the emergence of a new generation of outward-looking Christian leadership rising from Singapore. One seeking not only to minister within church walls, but also to engage the deeper questions shaping nations, communities, and the future of the region itself.

Singapore representatives Alan Bright, Joy Bright, and Jael Tan with His Excellency Eng. Mariano Assanami Sabino Lopes, Deputy Prime Minister of Timor-Leste, in Palácio do Governo, Dili.

In conversation, the Deputy Prime Minister shared his personal affection for Singapore, describing it as “a second home” and that he frequently chooses to transit through Singapore during his international diplomatic travels.

Official address by Apostle Dr. G. Mike Portuphy, Regional Missions Coordinator (RMC), at the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister of Timor-Leste during Transform Timor-Leste 2026 (TTL ’26) in Dili, alongside international delegates, local press, and media coverage.

Many Timorese youths stepped forward in tears during the altar call at TTL ’26 - reflecting both the spiritual hunger and personal struggles many young people continue facing amid rapid social and national transition.

Jael Tan, Alan Bright, and Joy Bright representing Singapore at TTL ’26, carrying the flags of The Church of Pentecost and Timor-Leste as a symbol of partnership, missions, and regional collaboration.

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