Search Results
There are articles matching your search criteria that are still undergoing the editorial process.
Click here to view a list of upcoming articles.
The Cuba Adventist Theological Seminary (SETAC) is the only educational institution of the Adventist church in Cuba. It accepts students from the conferences and missions of the Cuba Union Conference who wish to obtain a bachelor’s degree in theology. In addition, students come from other Latin American countries and from other continents, with representatives from Mexico, Belize, Nicaragua, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Panama, Ecuador, Bolivia, Venezuela, Chile, Peru, Canada, the United States, Puerto Rico, Haiti, Congo, and Angola.
One of the darkest moments that the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Cuba experienced after the triumph of the Revolution was when it suffered a most unjust and devastating tax imposition by the State. This plunged the Church and many of its members into one of the most critical economic situations of its history.
Antillian College (Colegio de las Antillas) was the main educational institution of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Cuba from 1940 to 1967. This campus also became the main center of higher education for the Inter-American Division. It was there that workers were trained from and for Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic, as well as for the other unions in this division’s territory.
Unión Radio is an Adventist radio that broadcasts its programs throughout Guatemala and beyond.
Earl F. Hackman spent his early career in Home Missionary departmental leadership from local conference to General Conference levels and then moved to the presidencies of the Southeastern California Conference, the Northern California Conference, the Southern Union Conference and the Inter-American Division.
North Mexican Union Conference is one of 24 unions that form part of the Inter-American Division and one of the five unions established in Mexico.
Olmeca Conference was organized in 2001, when Tabasco Conference was divided into the Tabasco Conference and the Olmeca Conference.
Costa Rica is located in Central America. It borders on the north with Nicaragua, the south with Panama, the east and west with the Atlantic and Pacific oceans respectively.
Arthur Harry Roth was the fifth president of the Inter-American Division (1954-1962).
Mozambique is one of the countries that constitute the territory of the Southern Africa-Indian Ocean Division of Seventh-day Adventists.
Southern Africa-Indian Ocean Division Mozambique Country (Based on SDA membership)
Richard Martin Ritland was a Seventh-day Adventist biologist, paleontologist, and early director of the Geoscience Research Institute. He also served as a professor at Atlantic Union College, Loma Linda University, and Andrews University. He worked extensively on issues of science and faith, and he led geology field conferences to educate Adventist teachers and administrators about the history of the earth and life.
Radio Lira, a non-profit organization in Costa Rica, offers its audience varied spiritual programming that includes blocks of music and messages by dynamic speakers.
George and Alma Caviness were educators and missionaries. George was also an ordained minister and college president.
North American Division Biography Educators Missionaries Couples
Frank and Bertha Chaney were missionary educators who contributed to the development of Adventist schools in Australia and New Zealand and served, in varying capacities, in the United States, the Philippines, the West Indies, and Mexico.
North American Division Biography Educators Missionaries Couples
Brenton and Lillian Connerly were pioneer missionaries in Puerto Rico, the American Canal Zone and Colombia.
North American Division Biography Groundbreakers Missionaries Couples
Cuno P. Crager was a missionary educator and administrator who served in Africa and Latin America with his wife, Reba Hatton Crager.
North American Division Biography Died/Imprisoned for Faith Educators Missionaries Couples
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.
Clinton Achenbach was an American missionary who served during the early phases of Adventist work in the Spanish-speaking lands of Peru, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Cuba and the Dominican Republic.
Francisco Arroyo was an Adventist pastor, evangelist, and church administrator from Costa Rica.
Alvin Nathan Allen, pastor, evangelist and missionary, was born in Portage, Wisconsin, on June 25, 1880.
Showing 1 – 5 of 5