Khua Khai, Chin2019-09-252019-09-252016-04-1620010118-8534http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/237030"Although small and often unnoticed, Myanmar has had its share of great leaders. The late Reverend Hau Lian Kham, often referred to as the “John Wesley” of Zomi (Chin) because of the similar characters and patterns seen in his leadership, is a noted pastor-evangelist and teacher among the evangelical Pentecostal believers in Myanmar. From the early 1970s until his death in 1995, he was the key figure and leader of a renewal movement among the Zomis. The renewal began on a small scale in the early 1970s and has spread throughout the region to many parts of the country through evangelism and cross-cultural mission efforts.1 It has resulted in the planting of new churches in both rural and urban regions and to the establishment of leadership training schools. Kham has left his legacy as a revivalist, equipper, and transformer."engWith permission of the license/copyright holderZomi-ChinPentecostalchurchesevangelismChristianityCommunity ethicsEthnicity and ethicsIntercultural and contextual theologiesMissiologyChristian denominationsEvangelicalLegacy of Hau Lian Kham (1944-1995)Article