Browse Articles

Show

in

sorted by: Title Division Date Published

Limit results to articles with a translation available in

Only show articles:

Where category is

Where title begins with

Where location is in

Where title text includes

View list of unfinished articles

Hide advanced options -


Showing 101 – 120 of 220

Arthur Houston Ferris was a Seventh-day Adventist (SDA) pastor and pioneer missionary from Victoria, Australia, who spent twenty-eight years in evangelistic and pastoral work, first as a volunteer, and then as an employee of the Church.

David Andrew Ferris was a Seventh-day Adventist medical missionary to the New Hebrides (now Vanuatu) and the Solomon Islands.

Norman Ferris was a Seventh-day Adventist pastor and missionary who was awarded an M.B.E. (Member of the British Empire) by Queen Elizabeth II for his services to the people of the Solomon Islands and Pitcairn.

Walter Geoffrey Ferris was an Australian Seventh-day Adventist (SDA) minister who spent some 28 years in missionary work in Fiji, Tonga, Pitcairn Island, Lord Howe Island, Cook Islands, and Gilbert and Ellis Islands in the South Pacific, becoming a skilled sea captain.

Lewis and Ella Finster served the Seventh-day Adventist church in Australia, the Philippines, Malayasia, the Far East, and the Inter-American division of the Seventh-day Adventists in various capacities.

Lillian and Orley Ford devoted their entire adult lives to mission service in South America and Central America.

John Fulton was a missionary, minister, and administrator. Susan served as a counselor, carrying on many responsibilities entailed with mission work and raising children. John is referred to as the “Adventist apostle to the Fiji Islands.”

Algenon and Edna Gallagher spent 38 years in pastoral ministry for the Seventh-day Adventist Church.

Thomas S. Geraty served the Seventh-day Adventist Church for almost forty-five years as a teacher, pastor, missionary, and educational administrator in three divisions and at the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists.

Frank and Jean Gifford served the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the Australasian and North American Divisions.

Stanley Kenneth Gillis served the Seventh-day Adventist (SDA) Church as a secondary school teacher in Australia, New Guinea, and New Zealand from 1943 to his retirement in 1983.

​Walter Emslie and Helen Agnes Gillis devoted thirty years of service to the foreign mission fields in Asia. Walter is often remembered as the pioneer missionary who was responsible for the development and construction of major Seventh-day Adventist mission headquarters compounds in Shanghai and Xi’an in China; Seoul in Korea; and Singapore in Southeast Asia. Also, as the early manager of the Signs of the Times Publishing Houses in these countries, he was also responsible for building up the publishing ministries in the Asia-Pacific region.

Hiram C. Goodrich and his wife, Anna Hafer Goodrich, devoted 30 years to the early development of Seventh-day Adventist work in Central America and Cuba.

David and Mabel Gray were pioneering missionaries to the Solomon Islands and Bougainville in the south-west Pacific.

Kenneth John and Dorothy Beatrice Gray were Adventist teachers and missionaries to Papua New Guinea and Fiji.

​Richard Edwin Greenidge was a pioneer in establishing Adventist education in Venezuela as he directed the first educational institution in the country, as well as laying the foundations for health institutions, with his wife Rebecca.

Stanley George Grubb led the Sanitarium Health Food Company into a new era of mechanisation that enabled the Company to remain competitive in spite of increasing competition from other cereal manufacturers.

​Ole J. and Anna E. Grundset were among the earliest Seventh-day Adventist missionaries to evangelize Manchuria.