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Jerome Clark was a history professor and author, who served for two decades as chair of the History Department at what is known today as Southern Adventist University.
John Orr Corliss was a pioneering evangelist in the United States and in Australia.
Merritt Eaton Cornell was a tent evangelist, leading debater, and author of five doctrinal books.
Molleurus Couperus was a professor of dermatology at Loma Linda University during the mid-twentieth century. He enjoyed broad interests, especially those involving issues related to science and faith. He served as the founding editor of the independent Adventist journal Spectrum.
Eli Curtis was a Millerite who initially sympathized with Bridegroom Adventists including James and Ellen White but who later became a spiritualist.
Spencer N. Curtiss served for nearly four decades in managerial positions at both the Review and Herald and Pacific Press publishing associations.
Dakota Conference is an administrative unit of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the Mid-America Union Conference.
William C. Davis was a Presbyterian minister in the southern United States whose expositions on biblical prophecy and early opposition to slavery made him a precursor to both the abolitionist and Second Advent movements that arose in America during the 1830s. In a work published in 1811, Davis became the first American author to contend that the 2300-day prophecy of Daniel 8:14 would be fulfilled in the 1840s.
The Day-Star was a Millerite periodical published weekly in Cincinnati, Ohio, from 1845 to 1847.
Daniel Christian Theunissen was the first South African person of mixed race to be ordained as a Seventh-day Adventist minister.
Southern Africa-Indian Ocean Division Biography Groundbreakers
Joe Lutcher, a nationally-renowned jazz saxophonist and band leader, became a Seventh-day Adventist in 1953 and thereafter put his “converted saxophone” to use on behalf of evangelism and societal uplift.
William Edwin “Bill” Zeunert gave forty-four years of service to the Seventh-day Adventist Church, working for the Sanitarium Health Food Company (SHF) as manager, and as assistant treasurer at the Australasian Division of Seventh-day Adventists in Wahroonga.
Adobenchisuto Raifu [Adventist Life] (1972- ) is a monthly periodical published by the Japan Publishing House in Yokohama, Japan. It is a successor to Owari no Fukuin [The Gospel for the Last Days], 1899-1913; Shimei no Otozure [Tidings of the Message], 1913-1920; and Shimei [Message, 1921-1943, 1946-1971; monthly] and the official monthly magazine of the Japan Seventh-day Adventist Church
Northern Asia-Pacific Division Japan Periodicals/Book/Electronic Text
Rolland James (known as R. J.) and Celia Richmond Brines were Seventh-day Adventist educators who spent two terms as missionaries in China. A hospital administrator and physician in the United States and China, R. J. was the first medical superintendent of Porter Hospital. Celia wrote the popular mission book, "Dragon Tales."
Chinese Union Mission China Biography Educators Missionaries Medical Workers Couples
Church Compass [Korean, Kyohoi Jinam] is a monthly periodical published by the Korean Publishing House in Seoul, Korea. It was launched on July 20, 1916, as the official monthly magazine of the Korean Seventh-day Adventist Church.
Northern Asia-Pacific Division Periodicals/Book/Electronic Text
Henry John Doolittle, more affectionally known as “Harry,” and Florence Jessie Delph Doolittle were Seventh-day Adventist missionaries to China (1913-1927). Harry was a minister, administrator, and treasurer, while Florence was a nurse. Harry’s Chinese name was: 杜立德 (pinyin Dù Lìdé).
Chinese Union Mission China Biography Missionaries Medical Workers Couples
HisHands Mission Movement is one of the mission initiatives of the Northern Asia-Pacific Division to help involve church members with the mission work in their home country.
The first Seventh-day Adventist missionaries sent to Japan in 1896. They were William C. Grainger, from California, former president of Healdsburg College, and Teruhiko H. Okohira, a native of Japan, a former Healdsburg student.
Northern Asia-Pacific Division Japan Country (Based on SDA membership)
Korean Publishing House (Sijosa) is a publishing organization with its own printing facilities, operated by the Korean Union Mission at Seoul, Korea. It issues Seventh-day Adventist books and the following periodicals: Sijo (Signs of the Times, Korea); Kyohoe Jinam (Church Compass); Home and Health (Ka Jeong Koa Keon Kang); senior, early teen, and primary Sabbath School lesson quarterlies; and the Sabbath School Helper. It is located at Emoonro 1 gil 11, Dongdaemoon-gu, Seoul.
Northern Asia-Pacific Division Publishing House/Media Institution
Sahmyook Foods (Sahmyook Sikpoom) was founded in 1982 and based on the slogan, “The realization of love for humanity through health all over the world.” The mission and purpose of the organization is to contribute to the health of mankind as a profit-making organization of the Korean Seventh-day Adventist Church Educational Foundation. It also takes social responsibilities, such as spreading the health gospel, fundraising for educational work, creating jobs for Adventists, and local community service and food contributions.
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