The Africa Evangelical Presbyterian Church (AEPC) is a growing conservative Presbyterian and Reformed Church which adheres to the Westminster Confession of Faith started in Kenya,[1] later spread to the surrounding countries like Burundi, Tanzania, Congo and as far as Zimbabwe.
and Mrs. Sanders Campbell and other missionaries sent by the Independent Board for Presbyterian Foreign Missions (IBPFM) came to Kenya settled in Mulango, Kitui District.
Later the Mwingi station built church building, Bible school, water catchment system.
A presbytery was formed, that included 12 congregations in Mwingi, Kakuya, Ngui, Ngomeni, Itundua, Gai and Tyaa-Kamuthale.
In 1949, after a conflict with the district authorities, the Mwingi mission was forced to vacate the plot allocated to them.
After appealing to London colonial office the mission won back its plot in Mwingi and returned to it in 1952.
This section was the minority group, the majority become the Independent Presbyterian Church in Kenya.
Missionaries Jack Armes and Sandy and Grace Campbell joined World Presbyterian Mission.
[3] For long time the church concentrated in one area in Mwingi presbytery, and remained in one ethnic community.
James S. Park, a PCA missionary, came from USA to the country in 1987 and worked hard on outreach evangelism until 1997.
A theological institution known as Grace Bible College also was set up in Nakuru the same year with his assistance and expanded with the help of a missionary named Rev.
No longer restricted to Mwingi District, Africa Evangelical Presbyterian congregations can be found from Mombasa on the Indian Ocean to Nakuru in the Rift Valley.
Two AEPC representatives were present in the PCA 40th General Assembly in Louisville, Kentucky one of them is the current moderator of the Africa Evangelical Presbyterian Church.
[3] The Reformed Churches in the Netherlands (Liberated) financially supports the Trinity Bible Institute.