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The story of two Chinese colporteurs, Beh Chin-chien (白金鑒, Bai Jinjian) and Djeng Hsiang-pu (曾湘甫 Zeng Xiangfu), is one of Christian courage pitted against the inclement weather of western China and the difficulties of taking the gospel to Moslem Uyghers in Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, the largest province of China on its northwest border. It is also the story of their ultimate sacrifice for their belief in the gospel commission of Christ.
Chinese Union Mission China Biography Died/Imprisoned for Faith
Matilal Baidya was one of the pioneer Adventist workers in Bangladesh.
Alfred Sherman DePuy Baird was an architect who supervised construction of buildings for denominational institutions in Michigan and Washington, D.C.
James and Annie Baker were missionary nurses to Africa and among the earliest pioneer Adventist missionaries to east-central Africa.
Southern Africa-Indian Ocean Division Biography Groundbreakers Medical Workers Missionaries Couples
Joseph Baker, an ordained Methodist minister who joined the Millerite movement around 1843, was for a few years prominent in the early development of Sabbatarian Adventism.
W. L. H. Baker was an evangelist, conference administrator, and Bible teacher in the United States, Australia, and New Zealand, and recipient of a letter from Ellen G. White that has figured prominently in the varying explanations of the human nature of Christ debated within Adventism.
Enrique Balada was an Adventist minister born in Spain and one of the first Adventists in the republic of Chile. He made extensive mission trips and did evangelizing work in Argentina, Chile, Bolivia and Peru.
Pedro Balancas de Freitas was an Angolan Seventh-day Adventist evangelist, educator, translator, pastor, and church administrator, who served the church in various capacities in his country.
Severino Jutba Balansag, Sr. was an Adventist literature evangelist, pastor, church leader, and administrator.
Dexter A. Ball was a pioneering Seventh-day Adventist missionary who was sent to the eastern Caribbean by the Foreign Mission Board on recommendation of the International Tract Society in late 1890. He was the first Adventist minister to officially visit the Lesser Antilles.
Inter-American Division Biography Groundbreakers Missionaries
Keith Leslie Ballard, an Australian pastor who went to serve in Papua New Guinea, was born on September 23, 1939, in Brisbane, Australia.
Isaiah Ajibola Balogun was an evangelist, pastor, and pioneer Adventist worker in southwestern Nigeria.
Pastor Yekoyada Bamanya was a Seventh-day Adventist pastor from Bunyoro, western Uganda. He was one of the first graduates of Nhwanga Training School, which was the first Seventh-day Adventist school in Uganda.
Warren St. Clair Banfield was a prominent black Seventh-day Adventist minister, church administrator, and civil rights activist.
Juan Bangloy was a pioneer Adventist educator, minister, and leader from the Philippines.
Donald R. Bankhead was a minister, professor, administrator, and missionary acclaimed for his four and half decades of service in India. His love for the classroom moved him and his wife to go to the Adventist International Institute of Advanced Studies (AIIAS) in the Philippines in 2011 as Adventist Volunteer Services (AVS) workers. They taught in the Education Department of AIIAS Graduate School. Donald was asked to be the principal of AIIAS Junior Academy, now AIIAS Academy. During his tenure as principal, he played a pivotal role in obtaining accreditation from the Philippine government.
Clifford Thomas Bannister was a missionary to East, Central, and Southern Africa, and a church administrator and minister.
Harold Wilson Baptiste was a Grenadian evangelist, pastor, and administrator who served in both the Caribbean and the United States for more than 30 years.
José Baracat, pastor and administrator, was born March 14, 1909, in the city of Alexandria, Egypt (then a British protectorate).
Maria Deuz Baracat was a nurse and Bible worker from Brazil.