The Christ for all Nations (CfaN) is an evangelistic organization created in 1974 by German-American missionary Reinhard Bonnke and his wife, Anni, then serving in Maseru, Lesotho.
[4] In 2009, after having served for several years alongside Reinhard Bonnke, evangelist Daniel Kolenda was appointed by the founder of CfaN as president of the organization, and named as his successor.
[5] CfaN's preaching did not only attract supporters: in 1990, protests took place in the predominantly Muslim city of Kano, in northern Nigeria, where Bonnke had been authorized to hold one of his crusades.
[6] According to Professor Esther Mombo, from the Center for Christian-Muslim Relations in Eastleigh (CCMRE), Nairobi, Kenya, the impact of Bonnke's crusades and CfaN in Africa is complex, and may require researchers some time to correctly evaluate.
[6]In 2003, CfaN was involved in a scam created by Gregory Setser, a self-declared "Christian investor" and founder of the International Product Investment Corp. (IPIC), which deceived several evangelical organizations by promising returns of 25% to 50% over periods of three to six months.