![]() | This article includes a list of general references, but it remains largely unverified because it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations . (November 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) |
The Keetmanshoop Reformed Church is a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in southern Namibia. It is the third oldest NGK congregation in the country after Mariental (founded in 1898 as Gibeon) and Otjiwarongo (founded in 1902 as Moria). Up until the founding of the Keetmanshoop congregation, the entire area known then as South West Africa (SWA) was divided between the two mother churches.
Before Keetmanshoop was given its current name, it was known as Swartmodder (in Khoekhoe Nu Gôias) and was known for the many murders committed there. The name Keetmanshoop replaced Swartmodder in 1866, courtesy of the Rev. Schröder who founded a mission here that year on behalf of the Rhenish Missionary Society (RMS). He named the town in honor of the RMS chairman, a Rev. Keetman from Elberfeld, who contributed 1,000 thalers (£150). Hence the name: literally "Keetman's hope."
The first pastor of the Keetmanshoop Reformed Church was the Rev. H.J. Potgieter, who was in office from 1925 to 1930, followed by S.P. Fouché (1931-1937), S.H. van der Spuy (1938-1944), J.R. Holzapfel (1944-1947), G.N.P. Cloete (1948-1949), and the Rev. D. Brink (1950-1954).
Until March 1951, when the Windhoek Reformed Church (NGK) was founded, Keetmanshoop was the only NGK congregation with a tower church in the territory. It was also the first NGK church to have a pipe organ when a 35-register one was installed in November 1950. Prior to the church's building, the congregation used a former smithy donated by the Gibeon church for its daughter and later shared the Keetmanshoop Reformed Church (GKSA) building, that congregation having been founded in 1936.
In 1950, the town already boasted one of the few high schools in SWA, the Hoërskool P.K. de Villiers, as well as a large primary school in town and three more in the congregational district. After the institution of English as a teaching language from grades 4 through 12, Afrikaner parents in Keetmanshoop founded the Keetmanshoop Private School, which in 2013 educated around 250 pupils in those grades employing 19 teachers. [1]
Keetmanshoop-North separated from the mother church in 1958, but was reincorporated into it in 2000. With 578 confirmed members and 149 baptized members in 2012, Keetmanshoop was one of the largest congregations in Namibia. At the end of 2014, the numbers were 534 and 125 respectively.
In the first decades of the congregation's existence, the town and district's population grew rapidly, as did that of the greater SWA population. In 1930, the Gibeon mother church had 700 confirmed members, Moria 800 (growing to 1,560 by 1932), Keetmanshoop 1,352, Warmbad (founded in 1928 south of Keetmanshoop) 850, and Windhoek (founded in 1929) 800 (1932 number). These were the only five congregations in SWA at the time. In 1952, congregations had so multiplied in the mandate area that they had to be separated into the nine in the Otjiwarongo Ring and the eight in the Gibeon ring. The Bethanie Reformed Church (NGK) opened in 1938, northwest and west of the mother church's area, and both it and Warmbad were daughter churches of Keetmanshoop.
Given the two separations and several later ones, Keetmanshoop was left by 1950 with around 1,000 confirmed members and a total of 1,800 people including those baptized. Warmbad by then had 1,086 confirmed, Bethanie had 370, and Lüderitz (a daughter church of Bethanie) had 490, meaning that an area that had around 1,350 confirmed members in 1930 had around 3,000. With the depopulation of the Namibian countryside, the Southern Ring (to which the Mariental church belonged) had 2,600 members in 2012, compared to around 5,800 members in 1952, before congregations were added in Karasburg (1952), Stampriet (1955), Aroab (1955), Kalkrand (1960), and Ariamsvlei (1962). By 2016, the Southern Ring only included 2,135 members.
Warmbad is a settlement located in the ǁKaras Region of southern Namibia. It is situated south of Karasburg at the Homs River, close to the border with South Africa, and belongs to the Karasburg electoral constituency.
Aus is a settlement in the ǁKaras Region of southern Namibia. It lies on a railway line and the B4 national road, 230 km west of Keetmanshoop and about 125 km east of Lüderitz and belongs to the ǃNamiǂNûs electoral constituency. Trains from Keetmanshoop now terminate at the village but formerly continued on to Lüderitz. The settlement is small but has a number of amenities including a hotel, police station, shop and garage. It is located in the Aus Mountains above the plains of the Namib Desert. The climate is usually hot and arid but snow has been recorded in winter in 1963, and the area features the coldest winters recorded in Namibia.
The Reformed Churches in Namibia is a confessional Reformed church in Namibia. Reformed people come from Angola to Namibia in 1929. The Dorslandtrekkers were mostly Reformed people who had settled in Angola but later moved to Namibia. The Dorslandtrekkers were originally from Transvaal, South Africa, and migrated northwestward starting in 1874 in two large and one smaller group, starting the Humpata Reformed Church under the Rev. Jan Lion Cachet. Later in 1930 3 congregations were established. More farmers came and the church grew. Missionary work was started in 1969 under the Bushmans of the Gobabis region, Botswana. It has 2,757 members and 14 congregations, and adheres to the Apostles Creed, Nicene Creed, Heidelberg Catechism, Belgic Confession and the Canons of Dort.There's no women ordination. Official languages are Afrikaans, Bushman, Gobabis-Kung.
The Reformed Church Windhoek-South is the second-oldest of the three Reformed Churches in South Africa (GK) congregations in Windhoek, the capital of Namibia, and the largest of that denomination in the entire country by number of professed members.
The Dutch Reformed Church Windhoek or NGK Windhoek is the oldest congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in Windhoek the capital of Namibia.
The Aranos Reformed Church was a congregation of the Reformed Churches in South Africa (GKSA) in Aranos in eastern Namibia. It left the denomination in 2016. With 16 confirmed and five baptized members at the end of 2014, it was the second smallest Reformed Church in Namibia, after the Karasburg Reformed Church, which had 12 confirmed and two baptized members. In 2015, the Aranos congregation grew to 19 confirmed and six baptized members.
The Gobabis Reformed Church is the oldest congregation of the Reformed Churches in South Africa (GKSA) in Gobabis in eastern Namibia. At the end of 2015, according to a poll of 300, it was the second-largest traditional Reformed Church congregation in the country.
The Grootfontein Reformed Church is a congregation affiliated with the Reformed Churches in South Africa (GKSA) and located in Grootfontein, Namibia. It was officially founded on May 29, 1943, and celebrated its 75th anniversary the weekend of May 26–27, 2018.
The Keetmanshoop Reformed Church is a congregation of the Reformed Churches in South Africa (GKSA) in southern Namibia, headquartered in the town of Keetmanshoop but also embracing members from the towns of Aroab, Aus, Bethanie, Koës, Lüderitz, and Rosh Pinah. Since the congregation is paired with the Mariental Reformed Church, where the Rev. Johan Dunn is the current pastor since 2017, it also serves members from Mariental, Kalkrand, Maltahöhe, Stampriet, and Gochas. The collective Keetmanshoop-Mariental area is enormous, almost the size of the United Kingdom. The distance between Lüderitz and Stampriet is 500 km, and the even the distance between the two congregational seats, Keetmanshoop and Mariental, is 230 km.
The Mariental Reformed Church is a congregation of the Reformed Churches in South Africa (GKSA) with its seat in the city of Mariental, Namibia, but the congregation members also hail from the towns of Kalkrand, Maltahöhe, Stampriet and Gochas. The congregation was founded in 1966, the same year as the Karasburg Reformed Church, and as of 2015 was the eleventh oldest GKSA congregation in Namibia.
The Walvis Bay Reformed Church is a congregation of the Reformed Churches in South Africa (GKSA) in the town of Walvis Bay, Namibia, but also includes nearby Swakopmund. The Henties Bay Reformed Church broke away in 2006, but the Walvis Bay pastor continues to handle it concurrently. Walvis Bay's membership was 267 in 2015, more or less evenly split between Walvis Bay and Swakopmund. Services are held in both towns every Sunday.
The Rev. Matthys Michielse du Toit was from 1905 until he accepted his emeritus in 1941 the pastor in six congregations of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK), including one in South West Africa, two in the Orange Free State, and three in Cape Province: Barrydale (1905-1912), Reddersburg (1912-1920), Excelsior (1920-1921), Moria, Hopetown (1922-1925), and finally Joubertina (1925-1941). According to his own grateful testimony, "the Lord's blessing must have shadowed the work for so many Souls to be brought to the light."
The Gobabis Reformed Church is a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in Gobabis in eastern Namibia. In 1961, the Gobabis-South daughter congregation was founded, which was reincorporated into the mother church on October 21, 2012, making Gobabis the seventh city in Namibia to have two NGK congregations.
The Gochas Reformed Church is a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK), located in Namibia with its capital in the city of Gochas, on the Auob River running through the Kalahari Desert.
The Maltahöhe Reformed Church is a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in Namibia. In 2010, the congregation had 143 confirmed members and was served jointly with the Bethanie Reformed Church (NGK) by the Rev. Gert Peens. In 2012, the membership had sharply declined to 96 and the Rev. Sarel Visser was helping out with services.
The Mariental Reformed Church is the oldest congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in Namibia and was founded in 1898 as the Gibeon Reformed Church.
The Outjo Reformed Church is a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in northwestern Namibia.
The Linden Reformed Church was a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in the northwestern Johannesburg suburb of Linden. On July 1, 2018, it merged with the Aasvoëlkop Reformed Church to form the Aan die Berg Reformed Church.
The Parkhurst Reformed Church was a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) that was active from 1944 to 1996 in the Johannesburg suburb of Parkhurst.
The Turffontein Reformed Church was a congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK) in southern Johannesburg, Transvaal. It was founded in 1906 and for years had a large membership, at times exceeding 3,000.