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Showing 441 – 460 of 726

Ralph and Mary Mackin were an Adventist couple from Ohio who sought Ellen White’s counsel regarding their experience of speaking in foreign tongues and casting out demons.

​Percy Tilson Magan was an Adventist educator, physician and institution-builder.

Frank Lewis Marsh was the first Seventh-day Adventist to earn a Ph.D. in biology. He taught at several Adventist institutions and was the author of numerous articles and books in defense of young-earth creationism.

​Early Adventist physicians who worked at a number of early Adventist sanitariums from New York and Michigan to California.

Mary (Cook) McReynolds was a doctor, staff physician, and teacher. She dedicated most of her life to pioneering work in the medical field and the Adventist education system, all while stressing the importance of health evangelism amongst individual churches by participating in camp meetings, evangelistic series, and giving medical lectures.

Oliver Mears was the first president of the Ohio Conference of the Seventh-day Adventists.

The Messenger Party originated during the early 1850s in Jackson, Michigan.

Jim Mainza was a Seventh-day Adventist teacher, colporteur and evangelist in both Southern and Northern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe and Zambia).

Margaret Caro was the first registered woman dentist in New Zealand and supported the work of the Seventh-day Adventist Church by assisting with the program at the New Zealand Training School and serving as a Bible worker.

Coral Carlos Gomes [Carlos Gomes Choir] is one of the oldest Seventh-day Adventist Church choirs in Brazil.

Dan T. Shireman engaged in self-supporting educational work and personal evangelism for more than four decades, most extensively in North Carolina.

​Sarat Kamal Samaddar was a renowned person, both in the Adventist and non-Adventist circles in the country of Bangladesh. He was among the Adventist pioneers in the country of Bangladesh and was an author of several books.

​Joseph and Dulcie Miller spent most of their working life as missionaries in the islands of the South Pacific. Initially, they ministered in Australia, then New Hebrides, Fiji, the Cook Islands, and later for the Australasian Division and the North New South Wales Conference.

José Baracat, pastor and administrator, was born March 14, 1909, in the city of Alexandria, Egypt (then a British protectorate).

​William Gordon Campbell Murdoch was president of Newbold College in England (1930-1946) and Avondale College in Australia (1947-1952) and Dean of the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary at Andrews University in Berrien Springs, Michigan (1959-1973).

​Edith Ellen Armstrong was a Bible instructor in the Lake Union for close to four decades.

Carl Herman Franz Stabenow was an Adventist pioneer in the state of Espírito Santo, Brazil.

The Southern Ukrainian Conference is a church unit in southern Ukraine, in operation since 1990.

Youth programs in the South Pacific Division train youth to be mission-minded and to give selfless service and also teach youth valuable life and outdoor skills.

​Florence M. Kidder began teaching at a Seventh-day Adventist school in 1903 and continued teaching in church schools for 65 consecutive years until her death in 1967.


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