Church Fellowship in Kathmandu

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One of our Global Partners in Nepal is a fellowship of believers in Kathmandu. The church was established a couple in the early 1980s, shortly after they moved to Kathmandu from the central foothills of Nepal. The Pastor, a paraplegic, was unable to access the Christian Fellowships that met in Kathmandu, which tended to meet in first floor rooms in the city. So he and his wife started to organise fellowship meetings for other wheelchair users.

Today, their ‘parish’ consists of up to 150 people, many of whom would be considered the outcasts of society – wheelchair users, leprosy sufferers, women who have been abandoned by their husbands, the blind, the poor.

The name of the church comes from Acts 3, which recounts the story of Peter and John’s encounter with the crippled beggar by the temple gate called ‘Beautiful’. The man, on being healed, responded with unabashed praise, ‘walking and leaping.’ This is the vision of the Church: that those who are crippled, outcast, sick and abandoned would be embraced by God, healed spiritually (and often physically) and would respond in heartfelt worship.

While not yet formally established as a CMS Ireland Partner, this Church embodies the very essence of mission and of partnership, and there are many strong links between Ireland and the little church in an old carpet factory in Kathmandu.

The mission department of Church runs a number of programmes, including Sponsor Care, Charity Care, Scholarships, Supporting Disabled or poor families and Pastoral care. One of the main activities involves the provision of accommodation, support, friendship and advocacy for people from rural regions in Nepal who come to Kathmandu for complicated or prolonged medical treatment. These patients are referred to the church fellowship from other mission organisations and tend to have little money and no family or friends in Kathmandu. Over 250 people have benefited from this service since its inception in 2004. They experience love, support and friendship and witness the reality of compassionate Christian service. Many of them find faith during their stay with the Church community and return to their homes baptised and keen to join or establish Christian Fellowships.

The Church also runs an Outreach and Church Planting Programme, a Compassion Programme and a Hamper Programme. They have recently decided to open a new Bible Training department.