Africa Inland Mission

Africa Inland Mission

Infobox Non-profit
Non-profit_name = Africa Inland Mission (AIM)
Non-profit_
Non-profit_type = Evangelical Missions Agency
founded_date = 1895
founder = Peter Cameron Scott
location =
origins =
key_people =
area_served = 13+ African Nations
focus =
method =
revenue =
endowment =
num_volunteers =
num_employees =
num_members =
owner =
Non-profit_slogan =
homepage = [http://www.aimint.org AIM International site] , [http://www.aimint.org/usa AIM USA Site] , [http://www.aimint.org/can AIM Canada Site] , [http://www.aimint.org/eu AIM Europe Site]
dissolved =
footnotes =
Established in 1895, Africa Inland Mission (AIM) is a nondenominational Protestant Christian mission organisation focusing on Africa and islands in the Indian Ocean. Their stated mission is "seeking to spread the good news of Jesus Christ to the Peoples of Africa". [http://www.aim-us.org]

History of AIM

Africa Inland Mission had its beginning in the work of Peter Cameron Scott (1867-1896), a Scottish-American missionary who served two years in the Congo before being forced to seek medical care in Britain in 1892 because of a near-fatal illness. While recuperating, he developed his idea of establishing a network of mission stations which would stretch from the southeast coast of Africa to the interior's Lake Chad. He was unable to interest any churches in the idea (including his own), but managed to captivate several friends in Philadelphia. In 1895 they formed the Philadelphia Missionary Council.

Beginnings

More important than specialized training, AIM found acceptance among tribal people based on Christian commitment and moral standing. The Council was headed by Rev. Charles Hurlburt, president of the Pennsylvania Bible Institute, the organisation which provided most of the mission's workers in its very early years.

First mission party

On August 17, 1895, AIM's first mission party set off. The group consisted of Scott, his sister Margaret, and six others. They arrived off the east African coast in October, and in little over a year they established a network of mission stations which would eventually stretch from the southeast coast of the continent to the interior's Lake Chad.

The mission had four stations — at Nzawi, Sakai, Kilungu, and Kangundo, all in Kenya. Additional workers arrived from Canada and the United States and the small group expanded to fifteen.

cott's death

In December 1896, Peter Scott died of blackwater fever. The mission almost disbanded the following year when most of the workers either died or resigned. The Council began to take more responsibility for the work and appointed Hurlburt director of the mission. He and his family moved to Africa and for the next two decades he provided strong, if not undisputed, leadership for the headquarters, established in 1903 at Kijabe, Kenya.

Ministry expansion

From Kenya, the mission expanded its work to neighboring countries. In 1909, a station was set up in what was then German East Africa and later became Tanzania. In 1912, Theodore Roosevelt pulled some strings, persuading the ruthless Belgian government to permit a mission station in colonial Congo. Work began in Uganda in 1918; in French Equatorial Africa (Central African Republic) in 1924; Sudan in 1949; and the islands of the Indian Ocean in 1975. Besides evangelism, workers of the mission ran clinics, hospitals, schools, publishing operations, and radio programs. The Rift Valley Academy was built at Kijabe for missionary children. Scott Theological College in Kenya helped train African church leaders. The churches founded by the mission in each of its fields were eventually organised into branches of the independent Africa Inland Church which continues to work closely with the mission today.

AIM's goals

Africa Inland Mission's stated mission is "to declare the Glory of God to the peoples of Africa". Their goal is to introduce those who have never heard to the One who died to save them – Jesus Christ. AIM seeks to help new believers grow strong and healthy in their faith and to see new believers enfolded into a maturing church. The organization aims to invest in the lives of current and future church leaders so they can effectively affect the lives of others who can in turn reach out to the vast population of Africa and beyond.

AIM's goals include establishing maturing churches through the evangelization of unreached peoples, and through the effective preparation of church leaders.

ee also

* Rift Valley Academy
* AIM AIR, an aviation branch of Africa Inland Church ( [http://www.aimair.org/ Homepage] )
* TIMO, two-year Training in Ministry Outreach ( [http://www.timo-aim.com/ Homepage] )
* Synergy, is the name given to the Aim International (Europe) short-term mission programme ( [http://www.synergyafrica.com/ Homepage] )

References

* D. Anderson, "We Felt Like Grasshoppers", Crossway Books, September 1994. ISBN 1-85684-106-5.

External links

* [http://www.aimint.org AIM International site]
* [http://www.aimint.org/usa AIM USA Site]
* [http://www.aimint.org/can AIM Canada (English)]
* [http://www.aimint.org/que AIM Canada (Français)]
* [http://www.aimint.org/eu AIM Europe Site]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Africa Inland Church —    The Africa inland Church is a conservative Evangelical church whose membership extends across Central Africa. it dates to the 1890s and the creation of an independent missionary agency by Peter Cameron Scott (1867 96), an American then… …   Encyclopedia of Protestantism

  • China Inland Mission —    The China Inland Mission (CIM) was the most geographically expansive Protestant missionary endeavor in pre World War II China. It was founded in 1865 by James Hudson Taylor (1832 1905), who had previously served in China with Karl Gutzlaff s… …   Encyclopedia of Protestantism

  • Mission Africa — Part of a series on Protestant missions to Africa Robert Moffat Background Christianity Protestantism Missions timeline Christianity in Africa Peop …   Wikipedia

  • Mission (Christianity) — For other uses, see Mission (disambiguation). Part of a series on Christianity …   Wikipedia

  • Mission (Christian) — A Christian mission has been widely defined, since the Lausanne Congress of 1974, as that which is designed to form a viable indigenous church planting movement. This definition is motivated by a theologically imperative theme of the Bible to… …   Wikipedia

  • World Gospel Mission — The World Gospel Mission (WGM) is an interdenominational Christian holiness missionary agency headquartered in Marion, Indiana, United States. From its inception, WGM has been aligned with the Wesleyan Holiness tradition of Protestantism. It was… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Protestant mission societies in Africa — This is a list of Christian missions in Africa. * Africa Inland Mission* Apostolic Faith Mission of South Africa* Church Mission Society* Cowley Fathers* Imkulu Swedish Evangelical Mission* London Missionary Society* Mission Aviation Fellowship*… …   Wikipedia

  • Africa — /af ri keuh/, n. 1. a continent S of Europe and between the Atlantic and Indian oceans. 551,000,000; ab. 11,700,000 sq. mi. (30,303,000 sq. km). adj. 2. African. * * * I Second largest continent on Earth. It is bounded by the Mediterranean Sea,… …   Universalium

  • Africa, sub-Saharan —    Brought to sub Saharan Africa largely as a by product of British imperialism, Protestantism today counts more than 170 million followers. A huge variety of Protestant churches together account for half the Christian population of the continent …   Encyclopedia of Protestantism

  • Africa, Scramble for —    The term Scramble for Africa defines a 30 year period stretching from 1884 to 1914 during which European nations abandoned their earlier preference for informal rule and instead engaged in a frenzied race to carve up the continent of Africa… …   Encyclopedia of the Age of Imperialism, 1800–1914

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”