| Charisma
& Christian Life Magazine: February 2003 edition
Revival
in Ethiopia Rooted in Unique National Missionary Movement
Ethiopians
are being trained to evangelize their own country
amid a belief that they stand in the way of an Islamic
takeover
Revival
is sweeping Ethiopia as missionaries carry the gospel
to a people devastated by drought, famine and war. Evangelical
church leaders in Ethiopia report that the gospel has
been preached to at least 1.2 million people in the
last six years, resulting in 50,000 conversions to Christianity
and 500 new churches.
This
move is primarily the work of national missionaries
who have been trained and sent out through a partnership
of the Evangelical Churches Fellowship of Ethiopia (ECFE)
- which represents 97 percent of the Protestant churches
in the country - and Accelerating International Mission
Strategies (AIMS), a Virginia-based organization.
"It's
been encouraging to see the Ethiopian leaders mobilizing
their churches and owning the missionary task,"
said Howard Foltz, founder and president of AIMS.
ECFE,
which was forged in 1974 when Ethiopia first cam under
communist rule, represents 17 denominations. The churches
have remained together to reach Ethiopians with the
gospel.
"It's
the greatest unity I've seen anywhere in the world,"
Foltz told Charisma. "There's a price
to pay for that unity, but they are paying it."
The
foundation for the Ethiopian partnership was laid in
1989 when Calvary Temple in Denver opened its doors
to a congregation of Ethiopian believers that had come
to the United States to escape persecution by the communist
regime in their homeland.
When
the socialist government of the country fell in 1991,
Calvary Temple pastor Charles Blair was invited to Ethiopia
to help local church leaders make the transition from
underground cell groups to thriving, visible congregations.
Foltz
accompanied Blair in 1996, helping to train Ethiopian
church leaders, pastors, and missionaries. Today, the
ongoing partnership continues to yield a harvest of
new believers and churches.
According
to Pamella Foster, AIMS director of operations, the
evangelical church in Ethiopia faces many challenges.
In addition to persecution from Muslims, Ethiopia's
Orthodox church leaders have joined forces with the
Islamic movement to persecute evangelical Christians.
"Leaders
from the evangelical church in Ethiopia believe they
alone stand between their government and a total Islamic
takeover," Foster reported.
In
spite of these obstacles, more than 8,000 Muslims in
one region alone have come to Christ during an 11-month
period.
"A
Muslim man who converts to Christianity will have his
wife taken from him and given to another Muslim man.
In addition, he may be disinherited and even stoned."
National
woes present yet another crisis for the Ethiopian church.
Ethiopia has the third largest HIV-positive population
in the world. There are 1.2 million AIDS orphans in
the country.
During
a recent AIMS training conference in Awasa, in southern
Ethiopia, Christian leaders repented for the Ethiopian
church's silence on this issue and vowed to take action.
"The
AIDS pandemic gives us an opportunity for a redemptive
turnaround," Foltz insisted. "The compassion
ministry [of the church] can be a way of reaching families
and communities with the gospel."
Foster
reported that in 2001, the alliance trained more than
100 top Ethiopian leaders, giving them tools to further
mobilize Ethiopian churches.
The
alliance expects its work to have an impact on some
8,400 congregations - 70 percent of Ethiopia's churches
- through this training program. It also expects to
dispatch and support 6,000 new missionaries over the
next two years.
"Our
motto has always been, 'Don't just give a fish; don't
just teach how to fish; but train teachers of fisherman,"
Foltz said.
-Written
by Sandra K. Chambers
For
reprint information, please call the AIMS publication
office at (757) 495-5850 or email the editor at aims@aims.org.
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