RT Article T1 "The farm that became a great problem": Epworth Mission Station and the manifestation of mission in crisis in post-independence Zimbabwe JF HTS teologiese studies VO 77 IS 2 A1 Ncube, Richman A1 Kgatla, Selaelo Thias ca. 20./21. Jh. A2 Kgatla, Selaelo Thias ca. 20./21. Jh. LA English YR 2021 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1946155195 AB Mission stations were created to radiate the light of Christianity to the surrounding communities. However, as time passed, what was meant to be the light became an eyesore to the noble intentions of the initial founders. Epworth Mission Station brings together the manifestation of a failed mission vision, as exemplified by the challenges and the squalid conditions of what was once a promising mission. This study explores the origins and challenges faced at a mission station and in particular Epworth of the Methodist Church in Harare. It looks at the challenges of the 19th-century mission approach in a post-colonial era. With the changes in political and religious terrain in Africa, mission work has suffered.Contribution: Using qualitative methods, which included desk research, archival and ethnographic approaches, the researcher sought to uncover the latent sources and nature of the mission problems and ended by suggesting what new approaches can be used to salvage respectability of mission in a post-colonial era. These include missional orientation and decolonisation of the African mind. K1 Methodist K1 Epworth K1 Missional Orientation K1 Decolonisation K1 Missional Ecclesiology K1 Paradigm Shift K1 Mission Station DO 10.4102/hts.v77i2.6326