The Ethiopian Kale Heywet Church (የኢትዮጵያ ቃለ ሕይወት ቤተ-ክርስቲያንYä-'itəyop̣əya Qalä Ḥəywät Betä-Kərəstiyan "The Ethiopian Word of Life Church") is an evangelical denomination, headquartered in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
The first missionaries had initially planned a trip into the western part of Ethiopia, but after prayer felt that they were being led to the South Central area.[2] The early missionary work was concentrated among the HadiyaWelayta, Kambaata and Sidama peoples, which are the three most densely populated awrajas (regions) in Ethiopia. At Dembi Dollo, Lambie worked with an Ethiopian evangelist named Gidada Solon.[3]
The few missionaries who entered the country all had to leave during the country's invasion by the Italians. They left a handful of believers with the translation of portions of scriptures and the Gospel of Mark.[citation needed] What the missionaries returned after the five-year occupation of the country, the handful of believers had become thousands, and the fledgling congregation was very strong.[citation needed] Planting this church in Ethiopia cost the lives of three of the earliest missionaries.[citation needed] Nearly 100 missionaries worked for about ten years before they left the country during the invasion.[citation needed]
Returning missionaries, aside from church planting in unreached areas, provided biblical and theological teachings to the growing church.[citation needed] Since 1974, the Ethiopian Kale Heywot Church Development Commission, a church-related humanitarian aid organization, has had an supported schools in the south and west of the country by providing teacher salaries, books, tables and chairs.[4]
Statistics
In 2013, it had a reported 7,774 churches and 6.7 million members.[5] In 2020, the Church had 9 million members, 10,000 churches, nine theological schools and 145 Bible schools.[6]
^Aklilu Dalelo, Till Stellmacher, Faith-based Organisations in Ethiopia: The Contribution of the Kale Heywet Church to Rural Schooling, Ecological Balance and Food Security, V&R unipress, Germany, 2012, p. 64-65
^David H. Shinn, Thomas P. Ofcansky, Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia, Scarecrow Press, USA, 2013, p. 154-155
^"About us", Ethiopian Kale Heywet Church. Retrieved 9 May 2020