“…[U]nited in spirit, intent on one purpose.”
Philippians 2:1-2
The mission of The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church is to increase our love for God and to help meet the needs of humankind by "Loving God with all our heart, with all our soul, and with our entire mind, and to love our neighbor as ourselves." Implicit in this statement is the belief that the church should have a positive relationship to humankind horizontally.
We also share the mission of His Son, Jesus Christ, in "healing the sick, helping the blind to receive sight, the lame to walk, the leper to be cleansed, the deaf to hear, the dead to be raised, and the poor to have the Good News preached to them." - Luke 4:18. We actualize this mission by praising God, being obedient to the demands of the Gospel, telling the story of God's gracious acts in creating and redeeming the world, inviting persons to commit their lives to Jesus Christ, and by serving as ministers of God's liberating and reconciling grace.
Along with its emphasis on ministry and social change here in the United States, the denomination has focused much of its attention and energies on outreach abroad. To date, the AME Zion Church has member churches on all continents except Australia. In West Africa, in particular, the denomination has set up numerous schools and clinics throughout Ghana and Nigeria. The Church also has facilities in Liberia, though some of its main structures have been destroyed by civil war. Overseas missions are a crucial component of the AME Zion Church's outreach, but the denomination believes in charity starting at home.
That is why, over the years, several individual churches have implemented programs to help families to find low-income housing, jobs, financial planning assistance, health care and day care services. "Our concern is for the whole person," says Bishop Cecil Bishop, the (retired former) senior bishop of the AME Zion Church. "We have a holistic approach and a holistic gospel. We don't feel that we live in a kind of compartmentalized sense, but that life is a complete whole. So we have to be concerned about all of those amenities of life that help make up wholeness in an individual!" The outward person is important, but the primary focus of the AME Zion Church remains spirituality and "sharing the good news of the gospel," says the former senior bishop.
As we, the AME Zion Church, continue to expand and diversify its ministry, we are also preparing to lead an ever increasing youthful church body into the next century.