History
Mission to Asia
The Church of the Lutheran Brethren faithfully continued its mission to China until the communist takeover in 1949 closed the country’s door to international mission. Nearly 50 years later, four men returned to the region for a visit. They were blessed to discover that the indigenous Church had not only survived, but had increased approximately 70 times in size. Today, our mission work in Asia continues, with missionaries serving in Japan and Taiwan, and national church bodies having been planted in both.
Mission to Africa
When the first Lutheran Brethren missionaries sailed for China in 1902, very few members of the Church of the Lutheran Brethren were aware of the vastness of Africa or of the great spiritual darkness of her millions. After the great Edinburgh Missionary Conference in 1910, a mighty and swelling wave of concern for Africa’s lost souls swept over the Church of the Lutheran Brethren, and in 1918 the Church of the Lutheran Brethren sent the first missionaries to serve in the interior of the continent—a place that previously had no access to the Gospel. Today, the Church of the Lutheran Brethren is predominantly African, with national church bodies planted in both Cameroon and Chad, and over 275,000 worshiping each Sunday.