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The 2015 Presbyterian Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 67
Rev. Karla Ann Koll
Mission co-worker in Costa Rica since 2013
previously in Guatemala
Serving at the Latin American Biblical University (UBL)
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Contact: Karla Ann Koll (karla.koll@pcusa.org)
Karla will next be in the US, based in Colorado Springs, May - July 2016. Email her to extend an invitation to visit your congregation or organization.
About Karla Koll's ministry
The Latin American Biblical University (UBL) is an ecumenical institution located in San Jose, Costa Rica, that offers programs in Biblical Studies and Theology. UBL prepares church and community leaders for service to the church and as agents of transformation in their communities and countries. Its students and professors come from various Protestant traditions as well as Roman Catholic communities. UBL was founded in 1923 as a Bible institute and is now accredited as a university. The students, who come from throughout Latin America and the Caribbean, study in both residence and distance programs. UBL offers theological education that focuses on contextualized learning, helping students affirm God’s desire for fullness of life for all. At the invitation of UBL Karla Koll serves on the school’s faculty as professor of history, mission, and religions.
In the UBL's classrooms Pentecostal pastors learn next to Roman Catholic nuns. People with years of leadership experience in these faith communities study together with new believers whose intellectual curiosity has led them to study theology. Students from indigenous cultures and communities of African ancestry share their perspectives. All students are encouraged to reflect theologically out of the contexts from which they come. Together with faculty members, they seek to construct theological responses to the urgent challenges facing the peoples of Latin America.
Country context
Costa Rica borders the Pacific Ocean to the west, the Caribbean Sea to the east, Nicaragua to the north, and Panama to the south. It has one of the highest life expectancies in Central America. Tourism and commerce are Costa Rica’s main industries, accounting for 68 percent of its GDP. It has a growing technology/computer chip industry, and its main agricultural products include bananas, coffee, sugar and beef. Although it is one of the most prosperous nations in Central America, a substantial portion of the population lives in poverty. About three-quarters of Costa Ricans are Roman Catholic and approximately 15 percent are Protestant.
About Karla Koll
For Karla Koll, the Latin American Biblical University campus in Costa Rica is a place God's Word and God's presence in the world can be encountered in new ways. That was her experience in 1984 when she went there as a theology student. “The institution that was then the Latin American Biblical Seminary offered me the opportunity to learn from and with Central Americans about what it meant to follow Jesus Christ in the midst of the struggles for peace with justice in the region,” she says. “At the same time I also discovered my calling to serve in Central America in theological education and to build relationships between Christians in the U.S. and Central America.”
Today she is helping UBL’s students discover how they can more faithfully and effectively serve Christ’s church. “I have the joy of guiding women and men into deeper understandings of their faith in Christ as my colleagues and I provide them with tools for working in God’s mission in ways that transform lives and communities.”
In addition, Karla's work at UBL gives her the opportunity to help Presbyterians in the United States “be drawn to greater commitment to work in God’s mission for the fullness of life for all.”
“My study of the history of Christianity in the region helps people understand the religious field today and see where there are possibilities for transformation,” Karla notes. “I offer people tools for analyzing mission efforts as we seek to be faithful to God’s call.”
As she pursues her work, Karla says she is inspired by 2 Corinthians 5:17–21, which describes our calling as Christians to be engaged in reconciliation. “As followers of Christ, we are called to be ambassadors for the new creation God is bringing about,” Karla emphasizes. “The call to work for reconciliation has been central to my ministry.”
Karla, a member of Pueblo Presbytery in southeastern Colorado, began her ministry as a theological educator in Latin America in 1986 when she accepted a PC(USA) mission appointment to Nicaragua.
After eight years in Nicaragua, she returned to the United States to pursue doctoral studies in mission, ecumenics, and the history of religions at Princeton Theological Seminary. As she was completing her doctorate, she re-entered mission service in 2000 and began work in Guatemala, where she served until June of 2013. Karla holds an undergraduate degree from St. Olaf College in Minnesota and two master’s degrees from Union Theological Seminary in New York.
Karla is married to Francisco Javier Torrez Bermudez, a native of Nicaragua. They are the parents of an adult daughter, Tamara Torrez-Koll, a college student in Oregon.
Birthdays:
Karla - May 3
Javier - December 20
Tamara - December 15