Norwegian missionaries John Engh and Niels Nilsen, sent by the
Norwegian Missionary Society, arrived first in Madagascar (
Antananarivo) in 1866. The same year, they founded the first Lutheran church in
Betafo in the south of the central region of the island. Then the American Lutheran mission began work in the southwest in 1888. The church became autonomous as one body in 1950 under the name Malagasy Lutheran Church (or FLM: ) and the first Malagasy pastor elected to preside to this unified church was the pastor Rakoto Andrianarijaona. Among the first churches founded in Madagascar by the first missionaries are: •
Betafo (1867) • Masinandraina and
Antsirabe (1869) • Loharano, Soavina Ambohimasina and Manandona (1870) •
Antananarivo Ambatovinaky et Fisakana (1871) • Ilaka, Ambatofinandrahana and Fihasinana (1875) • Soatanana Fianarantsoa (1876) • Masombahoaka
Fianarantsoa (1878) At its founding the Malagasy Lutheran Church had around 18,000 members; today it has approximately 3 million and is the 9th largest church in the
Lutheran World Federation (LWF). It was the first former "mission field" church to be accepted into the LWF. The FLM opened the
Lutheran Graduate School of Theology or SALT) on November 12, 1989, at
Ivory Avaratra,
Fianarantsoa. SALT is the successor to the former Lutheran Theological Seminar" ( STL) which existed at the same location. The first four women who graduated, in 1977, are Mariette Razivelo, Hélène Ralivao, Noëline Lucie Rasoanandrasana, and Esther Razafindraketaka. ==Relations with other churches==