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The United Brethren denomination includes national
conferences in nine countries, all of which are entitled to
representation at General Conference. They are, in the order in which
they were founded: the United States, Canada, Sierra Leone, Jamaica,
Honduras, Hong Kong, and Nicaragua, Mexico, the Philippines. These nine
national conferences comprise the Church of the United Brethren in
Christ International. Each national conference chooses its own leaders
and is totally in charge of its own work.
| Conference |
Year
Started |
Churches |
Attendance |
| United States
|
1767 |
250 |
26,000 |
| India |
1990 |
33 |
435 |
| Haiti |
2000 |
40 |
Not available |
| Canada |
1827 |
11 |
858 |
| Sierra Leone
|
1855 |
84 |
5,200 |
| Germany |
2006 |
1 |
Not available |
| Hong Kong |
1932 |
9 |
500 |
| Macau |
1987 |
2 |
50 |
| Thailand |
1993 |
2 |
Not available |
| Myanmar |
1998 |
0 |
Not available |
| Jamaica |
1945 |
30 |
2,500 |
| Honduras |
1945 |
76 |
3,500 |
| El Salvador |
1999 |
6 |
170 |
| Nicaragua |
1965 |
32 |
850 |
| Costa Rica |
1995 |
3 |
125 |
| Guatemala |
2000 |
1 |
160 |
| Mexico |
1999 |
420 |
2,200 |
| The Philippines |
2005 |
NA |
NA |
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The conferences in bold are the national
conferences. The countries listed under them are mission
districts under the supervision of that national conference.
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Several mission districts also operate under the
supervision of an established national conference. The United States
oversees work in India and Haiti. Hong Kong provides oversight of the
work in Macau, Thailand, and Myanmar. Honduras oversees new churches in
El Salvador and Guatemala, and Nicaragua supervises the churches in
Costa Rica. A mission district can become a national conference by
developing its own governing documents, meeting other requirements, and
being accepted as a national conference by the General Conference of the
Church of the United Brethren in Christ International.
Prior to 2001, nearly all United Brethren work
worldwide was considered to be under the authority of the General
Conference, with all ministry outside of North America under the
supervision of the Department of Missions. The headquarters in
Huntington, Ind., was named the International Headquarters. But this was
largely a colonial pattern, with the United States, in effect,
supervising the rest of the world. This pattern ended in 2001 with the
establishment of a truly international structure. Now, all national
conferences are on the same administrative level. And whereas before the
US bishop was considered the superior of the leaders of other national
conferences, the United States bishop is now the peer of--on the same
level as--the leaders of all other national conferences. The US bishop
and the US Global Ministries director have no administrative authority
in other national conferences.
The international structure created an international
executive committee which includes the highest leader of each national
conference. Each national conference also chooses delegates to the
General Conference based their worship attendance.
Here is an overview of some of our worldwide work
and how it developed.
Sierra Leone
Through the years, Sierra Leone has been our largest
and most prominent mission field. Missionaries were sent in 1855, and
the first two churches were organized in 1876. Over the years, it grew
to include a hospital, dozens of schools, and over 50 churches. The
conference also co-sponsored, with several other denominations, the
Sierra Leone Bible College, where many of our pastors have been trained.
In 1985, the work in Sierra Leone was nationalized;
missionaries continued serving in Sierra Leone, but under the leadership
of Sierra Leoneans. In 1994, all UB missionaries were evacuated from
Sierra Leone because of a blossoming rebel war, which continued
throughout the 1990s and devastated the country. By 2001, thanks to the
intervention of Nigerian, British, and United Nations forces, a high
degree of peace had returned to the country. The Mattru Hospital was
reopened, and our churches began rebuilding and expanding their
ministries.
China
For several decades, we operated a school for
Chinese people in Oregon. The school closed in 1931, but it served as a
bridge for opening a school near Canton, China, in 1932. This work was
discontinued after the communist takeover of China in 1949. Dr. Y. T.
Chiu, the original contact in China, then moved to Hong Kong and started
United Brethren mission work there in 1950. The Hong Kong Conference was
officially organized in 1962. On July 1, 1997, Hong Kong became part of
China (it had been governed by Great Britain).
Hong Kong's leaders have been aggressive in reaching
out to neighboring countries. Their initiative led to the establishment
of work in Macau (1987), Thailand (1993), and Myanmar (1998). No
missionaries have ever served in Hong Kong; it has always operated fully
under the leadership of nationals.
Jamaica
Our work in Jamaica goes back to 1945. Originally,
Rev. James B. O'Sullivan was recruited to head up new mission work in
the Bahamas, but on his way there, a hurricane shipwrecked him off the
coast of Cuba. Several weeks later, he arrived in Jamaica. By then, the
mission board had decided not to proceed with expansion into the
Bahamas. Instead, they invited O'Sullivan to begin working in Jamaica.
That is how Jamaica Conference got started. A conference of eleven
churches was organized in 1952. James O'Sullivan died in October 2001.
Honduras
In 1929, Rev. James Elliott left his native Belize
to pastor several English-speaking churches for the English Methodist
Church on the north coast of Honduras. A year later, the Methodists
abandoned their work in that country, but Elliott remained to pastor
those now-independent congregations. During the next 15 years, he
searched for a group willing to assume supervision of his churches.
Finally, around 1944, he came in contact with the United Brethren
church, which took a great interest in starting something in Honduras.
Beginning in 1947, missionaries were sent to teach in Elliott's school
in La Ceiba and to help out in the churches.
The work took a major turn in 1952, after the Archie
Cameron family arrived in Honduras. Cameron, along with Honduran
coworker Eudaldo Mejia, focused major attention on the largely
unevangelized Spanish population. When Elliott's three English-speaking
churches (against Elliott's wishes) severed their relationship with the
United Brethren church in 1953, the Camerons stayed and focused entirely
on the Spanish-speaking population.
The first Spanish church was organized in 1953, and
Honduras Conference was officially organized in 1956. Over the next 20
years, Cameron helped start numerous churches in villages throughout
northern Honduras, the work expanded into the southern part of the
country, and the large Bethel School (now 2000 students strong) was
established in La Ceiba.
Archie Cameron retired as field director in 1985,
and since 1990, the country has been under national supervision. Today,
Honduras Conference continues to be a pace-setter for the denomination
in church planting, with around 80 churches.
Nicaragua
In 1965, Honduras Conference sent one of its
pastors, Juan Campos, to Nicaragua to start churches there. He was
joined a few years later by Rev. Guillermo Martinez, a native of El
Salvador who was expelled from Honduras following the 1969 Soccer War
(between Honduras and El Salvador).
The Sandinista revolution of 1979 started almost in
Martinez's back yard in Masaya. The UB churches in Nicaragua weathered
the years of Sandinista rule, and since the establishment of democracy
and national elections in the 1990s, the church has aggressively
expanded from less than 10 churches to over 30 churches.
The Nicaragua Conference was established in 1993. No
UB missionaries have ever served in Nicaragua.
India
In 1974, the United Brethren church began supporting
a couple working in India, primarily at a large Christian hospital and a
nearby leprosy hospital. Their work expanded to include various other
ministries, including a large Bible correspondence program, radio
ministry and, in the mid-1980s, church planting. The statistics for 2000
showed 33 UB churches in India, all located in Hindu "tribal" areas. The
US National Conference provides oversight.
Macau
In the late 1980s, Hong Kong Conference approached
the miission board about helping to start mission work in Macau, a
peninsula west of Hong Kong off of the Chinese mainland. The United
States provided two families, along with funding, while Hong Kong
provided a Chinese coworker and additional help.
The work focuses on two areas: schools for teaching
English, and church planting (mostly using contacts made through
teaching). Two churches function in the main part of the city, and a new
work began in 2001 on the island of Taipa, which is part of Macau. In
1999, Macau became part of China (it had been governed by Portugal).
Thailand
In 1993, Hong Kong began working among the Akha
people high in the mountains of northern Thailand, on the border with
Myanmar. The Akha are a group of people who migrated from China in the
early 1900s. The work now includes churches and schools in two villages.
Costa Rica
The work in Costa Rica began in 1995 as an outreach
of Nicaragua Conference. A Nicaraguan pastor who had married a Costa
Rican woman spearheaded the work in the capital city of San Jose. Today,
we have three churches in Costa Rica which operate under the supervision
of Nicaragua Conference.
Mexico
A group of churches in central Mexico affiliated
with us in 1997. The initial contacts with Mexico came through members
of our Hispanic churches in southern California. The Mexico Mission
District, which now consists of about 30 churches, operates under the
supervision of the US National Conference.
El Salvador
In 1999, the UB churches of Nicaragua, Honduras, and
the United States partnered to begin working in El Salvador. Six
congregations in El Salvador chose to affiliate with us. Honduras
Conference provides the primary oversight.
Haiti
United Brethren work in Haiti began when Rev.
Richard Oliam, a Haitian minister then living in Paris, France, learned
about the United Brethren church through the UB website. He was
supervising a group of churches in Haiti and wanted to find a group for
them to affiliate with. Contacts were made. In October 2000, our
missions leaders officially decided to launch into Haiti. Richard Oliam
has since moved back to Haiti to personally supervise the Haitian
churches. There are 20 churches in the southern part of the country and
three churches in the western arm. In addition, ten churches in the
northern part of the country have connections with our Haitian pastors
in Florida. They, too, have decided to affiliate with us, and Oliam is
providing oversight of them as well. |