A Nigerian Megachurch in Ukraine Print E-mail
Written by Rachel Zoll, AP   
Saturday, 24 November 2007

Nearly every week, new visitors arrive. They want to see the megachurch that was built in the unlikeliest of places by the unlikeliest of men.

The Embassy of the Blessed Kingdom of God for All Nations was founded 13 years ago by a Nigerian immigrant, Sunday Adelaja, in Kiev, Ukraine. In a predominantly Orthodox Christian country where racism is pervasive, Adelaja created a Pentecostal church with 30,000 members.

But the church aims to be far more than a curiosity. Like the pastors who travel to Kiev to see him, Adelaja believes God's Embassy can be a model worldwide.

The next stop in his bid for global reach is the United States.

"America is fast becoming a mission ground again," Adelaja said in a phone interview from Sacramento, Calif., during his latest trip through the country. "We are surprised that the Americans who preached to us, the passion they had is almost already gone."

Adelaja is among a stream of pastors from Africa and other countries starting hundreds of churches in the U.S. Their congregations back home are bursting with worshippers as Christianity advances through the developing world. The clergymen see American churches as floundering — focused more on money than God and filled with stale preaching and sinfulness.

They hope to save the country that brought them the faith.

"When the values are crashing, you have the largest number of abortions, divorce and school shootings. These things are very sad," Adelaja said. "As America goes, so goes the world. We shouldn't allow the Christian influence to diminish in this country."

His goals may seem unrealistic, but researchers who study global religion are already calling this the "African century" of Christianity. African churches — with their zeal and resourcefulness — are poised to become a force not just in America but around the world.

Adelaja trains mission workers in Ukraine and, through them, he says he has already started more than 600 churches in dozens of nations. In the past few years, he has been traveling around the U.S., building ties with pastors, especially leaders from the Pentecostal and charismatic traditions, known for spirited worship and speaking in tongues.

"At present, he doesn't have great influence," in the United States, but has a "network of fans," said Tony Carnes, who studies African churches in the New York area and beyond. "This current trip is a sustained effort to bring Adelaja to the greater church audience."

God's Embassy claims 20 churches in America, built mainly through Ukrainian and Russian-speaking immigrants and their U.S.-born children and friends. Last year, he started History Makers Bible School in New Jersey and says 200 or so pastors from around the country attend the weekend classes.

The Kiev megachurch funnels about $200,000 each year to its American offshoots, which serve an estimated 5,000 people, Adelaja said. In sharp contrast to other African-led churches in the U.S., Adelaja says his American congregations, usually called God's Embassy, are overwhelmingly white.

The pastor's big push comes in January when he joins a conference of American and overseas pastors and business leaders in Atlanta to improve leadership in churches. Shortly after, he plans to release his book and workbook called "Church Shift," to help U.S. pastors learn his strategies for reaching nonbelievers.

"I'm not bringing cultural particularities of Africa or Ukraine here," Adelaja said. "I'm using biblical principles to make headway."

Adelaja, 40, certainly sounds like many conservative Christians in the U.S.

He says secular Americans are discouraging Christians from sharing their beliefs. "You want to give minorities the freedom to talk, but you want to make the majority quiet," he said.

Social ills — from teen pregnancy to government corruption — can be solved through the values that Christianity teaches, about love, purity, fear of God and honesty, the pastor said.

He considers Muslim extremism one of the biggest threats facing the world. In Nigeria, which Adelaja left as a young adult to study in the Soviet Union, the population is nearly evenly split between Muslims and Christians, and violence between the two groups is common.

Despite the deep involvement of Christian conservatives in American public life, he also believes American churches should do more to influence government policy.

His Kiev megachurch played key roles in get-out-the-vote efforts and protests meant to strengthen Ukraine's young democracy. He says too many American Christians are focused more on career than creating a ministry for God.

"We're not saying we should go back to the medieval age when the Christian church used to be the government. That was a mistake of the medieval time in Europe," Adelaja said. "We're only saying anybody who has a value system shouldn't be ashamed of it."

"If we don't engage the culture," he said, "the culture is going to overrun the church."

  • Sunday Adelaja: http://www.godembassy.org/en/embassy.php
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    RobotRobot is offline 
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     # 1

    Posted by Robot| 24.11.2007 11:12

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    ula-lisaula-lisa is offline 
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     # 2

    Preach on Bros!

    Pastors also should be the voice of God speaking truth to power in Nigeria too!

    Da Bishop.

    Posted by ula-lisa| 24.11.2007 12:02

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    Mikky jagaMikky jaga is offline 
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     # 3

    Carry on, brother!

    But, as you export Christianity, please export our culture too. Your suit and tie do not convey the whole message, get them off. Change their culture and tradition to reflect your African heritage. Let them learn to eat eba with bare hands. Teach them that Christianity taught their forefathers is rubbish. Only the one brought from Africa is acceptable in heaven.

    Carry on, brother and heaven is your reward.

    Posted by Mikky jaga| 24.11.2007 12:43

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    denkerdenker is offline 
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    =Mikky jaga;2091822698>Carry on, brother!

    But, as you export Christianity, please export our culture too. Your suit and tie do not convey the whole message, get them off. Change their culture and tradition to reflect your African heritage. Let them learn to eat eba with bare hands. Teach them that Christianity taught their forefathers is rubbish. Only the one brought from Africa is acceptable in heaven.

    Carry on, brother and heaven is your reward.



    MJ, my dear, just imagine you could listen to yourself, then you must agree with me dat you're really a bushmeat/bushman.:D..!abeg carri go jare!:cool:

    Posted by denker| 24.11.2007 12:57

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    owo9jaowo9ja is offline 
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     # 5

    abeg, how is he a bushman? because he wants to export our culture, which i guess is bush, so by extension he i a bushman?

    Posted by owo9ja| 24.11.2007 13:32

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    AmyAmy is offline 
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     # 6

    One has to respect this Pastor for daring to overcome the impediments of soviet influence and a long history of orthodoxy in Ukraine of all places. His visionary stance is very impressive. I only pray he does not get distracted by the successes of the ministry as many others today are being tempted to do at the expense of the wholesome doctrine of Christ.

    Posted by Amy| 24.11.2007 13:45

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    Mikky jagaMikky jaga is offline 
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    =denker;2091822699>MJ, my dear, just imagine you could listen to yourself, then you must agree with me dat you're really a bushmeat/bushman.:D..!abeg carri go jare!:cool:



    denker, my dear, I expect this reply from you considering you grew up with a brainwash from your German benefactors. You obviously need deliverance. Contact any pentecostal pastor in your area, he will help you. There is poison mixed with that scholarship given you by the germans.

    I expect to read of your deliverance very soon.

    Thanx my amigo.

    Posted by Mikky jaga| 24.11.2007 14:08

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    FirmaFirma is offline 
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    =Mikky jaga;...
    But, as you export Christianity, please export our culture too. ...
    *
    Just my point of view with respect to others cultural values as well.
    Yes I agree with you to that point of african cultural values exportation. African wears can be great in the mega-church altar.
    Firma

    Posted by Firma| 24.11.2007 14:24

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    JAGA-JAGAJAGA-JAGA is offline 
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     # 9

    Adelaja,

    As you continue with your pastoral work in Ukraine and around the world, you must stay away from dipping your hands illegally into church funds. Make sure you do not live a life that will be questionable, for this is the root of the downfall of many church leaders.

    Stay away from ostentatious life style and live according to what the word of God says not what man says. Do not manipulate the congregation to your earthly advantage.

    Continue the good work, and may God strengthen you as you spread his ministry around the globe before the close of age.

    Posted by JAGA-JAGA| 24.11.2007 15:00

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    dele26dele26 is offline 
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     # 10

    Oktapia pia for real

    =Mikky jaga;2091822719>denker, my dear, I expect this reply from you considering you grew up with a brainwash from your German benefactors. You obviously need deliverance. Contact any pentecostal pastor in your area, he will help you. There is poison mixed with that scholarship given you by the germans.

    I expect to read of your deliverance very soon.

    Thanx my amigo.


    Posted by dele26| 24.11.2007 15:38

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