The organisation was founded at
Bundaberg in 1882 and reorganised in 1886 as the "Queensland Kanaka Mission" (QKM) in
Queensland,
Australia, as an evangelical and non-denominational church targeting
Kanakas (
blackbirded labourers at the sugarcane plantations, mostly from Solomon Islands and
Vanuatu).
Florence Young, the sister of Arthur, Horace and Ernest Young, the owners of the Fairymead plantation on which the mission was located, was largely responsible for the establishment of the mission, and served as secretary of the organisation. At its height in 1904–05, it employed 19 missionaries, 118 unpaid "native teachers," and celebrated 2150 conversions. Young used
pidgin English and illustrations to explain the resurrection and other Christian ideas. Under pressure from the administration of the
British Solomon Islands Protectorate, the Mission re-evaluated its linguistic policy, and in the 1920s began to use
English as the medium of instruction instead of pidgins or local languages; however, to facilitate understanding, they devised a simplified English. The SSEM was criticised for using its religious influence to support the
Malayta Company, which was led by the Young family in Queensland, and maintained close connections with the mission. After
World War II, the experience of many Solomon Islanders that not all whites are strict Christians made some upset that the SSEM withheld what they saw as the real key to power, education beyond literacy. Some whites were then ejected from churches as Malaita Bible teachers participated in the
Maasina Rule movement. The South Seas Evangelical Church was established in 1964 under its current name, and became independent from the mission in 1975. ==Beliefs and practices==