Evangelical Church Winning All
The Evangelical Church Winning All, previously known as the Evangelical Church of West Africa, is one of the largest Christian denominations in Nigeria, with about ten million members.[3] ECWA is a partner church of the international Christian mission organisation, Serving In Mission (SIM), formerly Sudan Interior Mission. ECWA was founded in 1954 when the SIM-related churches (initially in Nigeria) came together to form an indigenous body.[4] Since that time, mission stations, Bible Schools, academic schools, and medical programs have been transferred to ECWA leadership.
Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA) | |
---|---|
President | Rev. Dr. Stephen Panya Baba[1] |
Origin | 1954 |
Congregations | 6000[2] |
Members | 10,000,000 |
History
The Evangelical Church of West Africa was renamed "Evangelical Church Winning All" (ECWA) because of its wide spread beyond its initial scope. It was as a result of a history of ministry and the wide spread gospel of Jesus Christ in Africa by several missionaries, (Walter Gowans, Thomas Kent, and Rowland Bingham) who came from different parts of Canada and the United States of America in 1893 on what can be termed "evangelical suicide mission", a statement which was coined by Oji Chukwudimma Chukwudike because West Africa, at that time, was known to be heavily infested by malaria and there is almost a 100% possibility that a white man will not survive it as they even called the West African region "the white man's grave."[5] These missionaries braved malaria and yellow fever to preach the gospel of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ under the auspices of the Sudan Interior Mission (SIM) and planted several churches as they preached along like Paul the Apostle and around mid-20th century these churches became independent to carry on the gospel. ECWA has the largest mission organization of any African church living up to its name Evangelical[6] the Evangelical Mission Society (EMS) has sent out about 1,600 missionaries.
Throughout Nigeria, especially in the central regions, ECWA churches are growing rapidly. Some churches have experienced as much as 400% growth in the last several years. Churches in the Northern parts of the country are also growing.[4] There are currently more than six thousand ECWA congregations with more than ten million members. ECWA has over ninety District Church Councils (DCC's) hundreds of Local Church Councils (LCC's), thousands of Local Churches (LCs) and hundreds of Prayer Houses (PHs).
Bingham University, Karu was started in 2005 as a way of meeting the soaring need for not only quality, secular education, but education that recognizes and integrates the moral and spiritual values of the Christian faith that fueled its establishment. ECWA started three Theological Seminaries: ECWA Theological Seminary, Igbaja that started as a School of Prophets in 1918, ECWA Theological Seminary, Kagoro was established in 1931, and Jos ECWA Theological Seminary in 1980. There are also eight Bible colleges and fifteen theological training institutes. ECWA's Medical Department coordinates a wide network which includes four hospitals, a Community Health Program with over 110 health clinics, a Central Pharmacy and the School of Nursing and Midwifery.[7] It is also involved in radio, publications for outreach and discipleship, rural development, urban ministries, and cross-cultural missions.[8] There are more than 1600 missionaries from ECWA churches who serve in Nigeria and other countries with the Evangelical Missionary Society (EMS), the missionary arm of ECWA.[4]
There has been a serious confrontation between evangelical Christians standing in opposition to the expansion of Sharia law in northern Nigeria by militant Muslims since 1999.[9]
See also
- ECWA Evangel Hospital, Jos
- ECWA Hospital Egbe P. M. B. 202, Egbe, Kogi State
- Evangelicalism#Africa
References
- Bako, Friday (April 11, 2018). "ECWA New President: Rev. Dr. Stephen Panya Baba, Govt". ECWA. Retrieved April 11, 2018.
- "History". ECWA. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
- Smith, Samuel (11 August 2017). "Nigerian Pastor Kidnapped by Fulani Herdsman Freed After 5-Day Abduction". Christian Post. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
- "SIM Country Profile: Nigeria". Archived from the original on 2006-10-13. Retrieved 2006-09-20.
- Oji, Chukwudimma C. "White man's grave". Tiscali. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
- Oji, Chukwudimma C. "Evangelical Church Winning All". ECWAUSA. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
- "Camp of the Woods - ECWA". Archived from the original on 2006-08-26. Retrieved 2007-04-09.
- "ECWA". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-04-09.
- Terence O. Ranger, ed., Evangelical Christianity and Democracy in Africa (Oxford University Press, 2008), pp 37-66