

Jim came to know Christ through the ministry of Cocolalla Lake Bible Camp in the summer of 1987. He graduated from Sandpoint High School in 1990. They are all 49er fans! You can contact Jim through Kootenai Community Church () or by writing to him at Osman was born in May of 1972 and has lived in Sandpoint, Idaho since he was three years old. Jim and Diedre have four children: Taryn, Shepley, Ayden and Liam.

He enjoys bike riding and watching football, especially his favorite team, the San Francisco 49ers, for whom he has cheered since childhood. Jim loves to be outdoors, whether it is camping, hunting, or working in his garden. You can follow his preaching at the Kootenai Community Church website and his writings at. He is the author of Truth or Territory: A Biblical Approach to Spiritual Warfare and Selling the Stairway to Heaven: Critiquing the Claims of Heaven Tourists. Now he counts it his greatest privilege to be involved in ministering in the church that ministered to him for so many years.

Jim and Diedre returned to Sandpoint where Jim began working in construction as a roofer until he was asked to take over as the preaching elder of Kootenai Community Church in December of 1996. He was inducted into the Honor Society of the Association of Canadian Bible Colleges and appointed a member of Pi Alpha Mu.

He returned to Millar to further his education in September of 1994 and graduated from the Fourth Year Internship Program with a Bachelor of Arts in Strategic Ministries in April of 1995. Jim graduated with a three-year diploma in April of 1993 and married Diedre in August of that same year. It was at Bible College that Jim met his wife-to-be, Diedre, who was also enrolled as a student. After graduating from High School, Jim attended Millar College of the Bible in Pambrun, Saskatchewan. Kootenai Community Church has always been his home church, attending Sunday School, Vacation Bible School, and Youth Group. Jim Osman was born in May of 1972 and has lived in Sandpoint, Idaho since he was three years old.
