Initial Methodist mission work was pioneered by American Methodist missionaries already established in
Malaya and
Singapore. The first Methodist service was conducted in 1904 by the Rev. George F. Pykett, a missionary and educationalist with the Methodist Mission in Malaya. He was then followed by the Rev S. S. Pakianathan who planted churches as well as schools from 1905 to 1918 in
Medan,
Buitenzorg (present day Bogor), and
Palembang. Pakianathan's pioneering work provided the foundation from which American Methodist missionaries who came later were to build upon. Within the first decade, the Methodist mission grew rapidly in
North Sumatera,
Palembang,
Java and parts of
Kalimantan. Due to the vast distances involved, the lack of well developed transportation infrastructure, as well as localised opposition from the
Dutch authorities and local Christians who were mainly from the
Calvinist tradition, mission work was eventually restricted to North Sumatera and Java by 1928. The Methodist missionaries stationed in Medan started by reaching out the ethnic Chinese migrant community but initially found little success compared to their counterparts working in Java. Conversely, they had better success working with the
Batak community. The Batak Christians were initially evangelised through the mass conversion by the
Lutheran Rhenish Missionary Society during the nineteenth century and early twentieth century. The Rhenish Missionary Society, overwhelmed by the mass conversion, had come to an arrangement with the Methodist mission whereby Bataks who had moved to the cities of North Sumatera would be cared for by the Methodists. The Chinese community became more responsive in the 1930s and 1940s when Chinese Methodists started migrating to Medan and North Sumatera in larger numbers. The ministry of the fiery
Chinese evangelist, Dr
John Sung also had a great impact in the growth of ethnic Chinese churches in the whole of South East Asia. As a result of the
Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation that started in 1963, it no longer became tenable to administer the mission work from the headquarters of the Southeast Asian Central Conference in
Singapore. As a result, the General Conference of
The Methodist Church granted autonomy to the mission and the Methodist Church in Indonesia was formed in May 1964. The Methodist Church in Indonesia has since extended its work to other parts of Indonesia including Kalimantan and
Sulawesi. ==Belief and practices==