Background
His father, Joost Kam, was a leather merchant in "s-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands. Kam helped his father in the leather trade, but was eager to preach the gospel to the nations which did not yet not know Christianity.
His father, Joost Kam, was a leather merchant in "s-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands. Kam helped his father in the leather trade, but was eager to preach the gospel to the nations which did not yet not know Christianity.
In 1811, his preparatory education for was finished, but he was not yet able to be dispatched to the mission field because of the war between England and France.
Kam then joined Nederlandse Zendeling-Genootschap and moved to Rotterdam to received the preparation of Zendeling candidate there. In Rotterdam he received the education of Zendeling candidate, together with Gottlob Bruckner and Johann Church Supper from Germany. NZG then tried to post Kam to the mission field by smuggling him into Britain.
They were then sent to Gosport to receive further educational preparation, while serving churches there.
In 1813, he was ordained a priest in London. In 1814, he arrived in Batavia with his two colleagues, Bruckner and Supper.
At that time, Kam and his colleagues became Indische Kerk employees. Since the Indische Kerk prioritizes maintenance of the congregations that already exist.
Therefore, Supper remained in Batavia to serve the congregation there, Bruckner was stationed in Semarang, and Kam himself stationed on Ambon.
Mid-1814, Kam traveled to Ambon but ended up stopping in Surabaya because no ships were sailing to Ambon. While in Surabaya, he worked in Indische Kerk"s congregation there. In March 1815, he arrived in Ambon, and immediately started working with congregations in the Maluku Islands which had long been abandoned by the Dutch.
In the Maluku Islands, Kam perform all the duties of a pastor, such as preaching, visiting the congregations, arbitrate disputes and quarrels, and served sacraments.
He is also active in developing Christian readings, like the Bible, Psalms, Catechism, and sermons for congregations without ministers or teachers. Kam is considered by the Protest Church in the Moluccas to be one of the significant shapers of their history.
In his trip to Southeast Maluku, he became seriously ill, and was forced to return to Ambon. After 20 years service in the Maluku Islands, he died on July 18, 1833, and was buried in Ambon.