Lausanne Canada Leadership
Bosco Tung
Associate Director, Strategic Development
Bosco develops infrastructure and supports systems that enable Lausanne Movement Canada’s digital learning, volunteer engagement, and collaborative mission efforts. His work focuses on building capacity for intergenerational and cross-network partnerships through tools, processes, and team coordination.
At the Fourth Lausanne Congress (L4) in Seoul (September 22–28, 2024), which brought together 5,394 in-person participants from 200 countries and 2,000 more online, Bosco coordinated logistical support for the Canadian delegation and served as the lead facilitator for Gap 22: Ethnicism and Racism, a multi-day collaborative session focused on confronting ethnic division and advancing reconciliation and disciple-making across church, mission, and workplace settings.
Following L4, he helped lead the 2025 Greater Toronto Area (GTA) Mission Conference, a major collaborative initiative that brought together over 1,100 participants from more than 100 churches and featured 45 mission-focused exhibitors.
Bosco serves globally within the Lausanne Movement as a bridge leader, an Ambassador for the Fourth Younger Leaders Gathering (YLG 2027), and an active member of the Freedom and Justice, Diasporas, and Ministry Collaboration Issue Networks.
With over 15 years in church engagement, nonprofit strategy, and intercultural ministry, he has worked in mobilization, communications, pastoral leadership, and organizational development across both local congregations and national organizations.
He holds a Master of Theological Studies in Urban Leadership & International Development (MTS.D) from Wycliffe College (University of Toronto), with earlier studies in Publicity & Public Relations and an Honours BA in Philosophy and Religion.
Bosco also serves as Intercultural Development Advisor at Tyndale Intercultural Ministries (TIM) Centre, and sits on the boards of Christians Against Poverty (CAP) Canada, the Toronto Prayer Breakfast, and the Canadian Christian Communicators Association (CCCA). He is part of the Evangelical Missiological Society (EMS) Canada leadership team.
Raised between Hong Kong and Toronto, two of the most multicultural cities in the world, Bosco lives intergenerationally and interculturally in Scarborough, ON, with his wife, NYT bestselling author June Hur of Korean historicals, and their two young children.