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Democratic Republic of Congo

General Conference

Organized Free Methodist Churches: 855
FMC Membership: 150,427
Ordained Ministers: 735
Ministerial Candidates: 78
Bishop: Joshua Luhe’ya W’Elongo

Origins

In 1963, 7000 Christians of the Bembe tribe voted to join the Free Methodist Church. The missionary group that had been working among them had withdrawn three years earlier when independence in the country brought upheaval. Two Free Methodist missionary couples then moved to the Democratic Republic of Congo, but were forced to leave after a few months because of renewed political problems. 1964 to 1966 was a time of starvation and terror. Three thousand Free Methodist members were killed or reported missing. In the 1970s, with some return to political stability, missionaries and VISA workers returned and established residency.

Numerous Free Methodist schools were established throughout the conference on both elementary and high school levels. A hospital was built at Nundu near Lake Tanganyika. A rural health network was established, expanding to include 38 health centers. Workers trained at the hospital nursing school staffed many of these health centers.

In 1989 DRC became a Provisional General Conference electing Reverend Jason Bya’Ene as bishop. In September 1991, as the economy collapsed and the country became politically unstable, Free Methodist missionaries were withdrawn. One missionary returned in 1994 and was joined by two couples in 1996 only to evacuate several months later as ethnic tensions increased and turned into full-scale war. Thousands of Free Methodist families fled to neighboring Tanzania or were displaced within the country.

Present Ministries

Although war has ravaged eastern Congo since 1996, the Free Methodist Church continues to minister over a large area comprised of 38 different tribes, speaking many different languages. Original choir compositions and fervent preaching characterize services. Much of the work is rural, but churches are also located in six provincial capital cities, as well as in Kinshasa, the nation’s capital.

The church became a full General Conference in 1995. In 2003 Reverend Joshua W’Elongo was elected bishop. The Democratic Republic of Congo FMC remains the largest Free Methodist general conference in the world.

Nundu Hospital continues to refurbish its facilities and strengthen its medical staff.

Outreach

Members of the church have crossed the border into the Republic of Congo (Brazzaville) to plant a church there.