Methodist Church

United Methodist Church now recognised in Albania

TIRANA (Albania)—The United Methodist Church officially exists in Albania. Formal papers were signed on Aug 20, 2007 in the capital city of Tirana by Bishop Patrick Streiff, leader of the denomination in Central and Southern Europe.

The United Methodist Church in Albania has about 150 members and friends in a nation of 3.8 million people.

“We praise God that The United Methodist Church is now officially recognised in Albania,” said the Rev R. Randy Day, Chief Executive of the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries.

“We owe a debt of gratitude to the German United Methodists and other German Christians who developed the recent contacts there and continue to provide spiritual support and material aid. We are deeply pleased that United Methodism in Albania is being developed in a spirit of collaboration with churches already present in the country.”

The small Balkan country has a highly diverse religious heritage including Albanian-Orthodox Christians, Roman Catholics, Muslims and now a slowly expanding Protestant presence. About 60 per cent of the people are Muslim, but there is a high degree of religious tolerance.

Bishop Streiff sees United Methodists working in close collaboration with other Christian groups and has made contacts with Orthodox, Catholic and other Protestant leaders.

How it all began

Through US missionaries, Methodist work began in Albania in the 19th century when the nation was part of the Ottoman (Turkish) Empire. The mission lasted only a few decades, however. After World War II, the country fell under a rigid, anti-religious brand of communism until the 1990s.

The transition from communism to a republic was not easy for Albania, and poverty was acute in many areas. Methodism was reintroduced from Germany in 1992, and Albanians began to show an interest in the Germans’ spiritual motivations. A United Methodist aid centre was established in 1997 in the mountain village of Bishnica. By 1998, the first 25 people were baptised and became charter members of The United Methodist Church of Albania.

In preparation for the church’s formal organisation, Bishop Streiff and his predecessor, Bishop Heinrich Bolleter, and a delegation from the Christian Association for Humanitarian Aid in Wismar, Germany, visited the Primate of the Albanian-Orthodox Church, representatives of the Roman Catholic Churches, the General-Secretary of the Evangelical Alliance, and other religious and humanitarian groups.

Bishop Streiff acknowledged all of the mission work that brought the church to this point.

“The signature for establishing a foundation of the UMC in Albania is not the first step as a church but the consequence of a presence of German Methodists who brought help to suffering people in the mountains of Albania since the 1990s,” he said.

“As often in history, the mission began with the initiative of devoted lay people and their pastor. It is my joy to see the fruit of their ministry and to build on it.”

Challenges and opportunities

Because the Albanian economy is weak, a primary challenge is migration from the mountains and other rural areas into cities and emigration to other countries to seek a better future. The migration factor has affected the congregation in Bishnica and created many changes, including new house groups in Pogradec and Tirana.

The United Methodist Committee on Relief is seeking to strengthen the Albanian economy by helping to create jobs through agricultural productivity.

Two young Albanians, Rigels Kasmollari and Englantin Lushka, have graduated from the theological seminary in Waiern, Austria, and are expected to return home in 2008 to provide indigenous leadership.

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