Blantyre Synod started as a mission of the
Church of Scotland. The first missionary was
Henry Henderson accompanied by a freed slave. He chose a mission ground suggested by
David Livingstone. The Blantyre Mission was founded in 1876, with a church and school. It became a refuge for slaves. The number of Christians grew, and in 1891 the
St Michael and All Angels Church was dedicated. The Mission’s superintendent
David Clement Scott believed in racial equality and was called a "negrophile" for his outlook. Scott picked seven men to become deacons they were Harry Kambwiri Matecheta, John Macrae Chipuliko,
Mungo Murray Chisuse,
John Gray Kufa, Thomas Mpeni, James Gray Kamlinje and James Auldearn Mwembe. Matecheta became a deacon on 4 November 4, 1894. Scott's aim was to increase the role of Africans in the church's leadership, and one woman was also made a deacon. In the late 1920s, responsibility for the church shifted from Scottish missionaries to African leaders. In 1962 Rev.
Jonathon Sandaya became the first African to be the Synod's General Secretary. He had been born locally and educated at the
Henry Henderson Institute. In January 2020 the head of Malawi's prisons
Wandika Phiri went to the prison in Ntcheu where a new water system had been installed. The facility had been paid for by this synod and Phiri thanked the CCAP synod for their generosity. == Partner churches ==