Arthur Allum was the first Australian Seventh-day Adventist minister to be sent by the Church to China. Arthur and Eva spent 17 years there. Arthur had a particular burden for Western China and traveled up the Yangtze River to establish a Seventh-day Adventist presence in the Szechuan Province. He was distinguished by his ability to use Mandarin and to dress in Chinese clothing. Poor health eventually saw the family return to Australia where Allum held a number of key, senior positions in the Church.https://research.avondale.edu.au/esda/1000/thumbnail.jp
Australians, in the main, are unaware of the role which Australia played in the evangelization of Ch...
Harold Murray Blunden was a missionary to China, church administrator, including General Field secre...
This is a photograph of "Rev. Robert J. Cairns, M.M. [pastor of Sunchong, now Xinchang] and a Cathol...
Arthur Frederick Parker was a pastor who gave over 41 years of service to the Seventh-day Adventist ...
Harold and Clara Carr, along with Calvin and Myrtle Parker, were the first Australian Seventh-day Ad...
Seventh-day Adventists were late entrants to the China mission field, arriving in China in the first...
Mary Reed was the first Australian missionary of the China Inland Mission. She was a wealthy woman i...
Arthur Mountain, Jr. spent forty-four years in the service of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, twen...
With ever-increasing notoriety, owing to her successful missionary activities and charismatic preach...
© 1978 Dr. Lesley DixonLate in the nineteenth century, when cultural and commercial contact between ...
Esta Miller was a younger brother of Dr. Harry Miller, a pioneer missionary to China. He was counted...
Ronald Arthur Vince was a minister and church administrator in England and youth leader in the South...
Bernard and Emma Judge served the Seventh-day Adventist Church in their homeland Australia and as ea...
This is a photograph of a visit from the Apostolic Delegate to the Kongmoon Seminary. Front row, Frs...
Alfred Walter Martin was a missionary, educator, and administrator from Australia.https://research.a...
Australians, in the main, are unaware of the role which Australia played in the evangelization of Ch...
Harold Murray Blunden was a missionary to China, church administrator, including General Field secre...
This is a photograph of "Rev. Robert J. Cairns, M.M. [pastor of Sunchong, now Xinchang] and a Cathol...
Arthur Frederick Parker was a pastor who gave over 41 years of service to the Seventh-day Adventist ...
Harold and Clara Carr, along with Calvin and Myrtle Parker, were the first Australian Seventh-day Ad...
Seventh-day Adventists were late entrants to the China mission field, arriving in China in the first...
Mary Reed was the first Australian missionary of the China Inland Mission. She was a wealthy woman i...
Arthur Mountain, Jr. spent forty-four years in the service of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, twen...
With ever-increasing notoriety, owing to her successful missionary activities and charismatic preach...
© 1978 Dr. Lesley DixonLate in the nineteenth century, when cultural and commercial contact between ...
Esta Miller was a younger brother of Dr. Harry Miller, a pioneer missionary to China. He was counted...
Ronald Arthur Vince was a minister and church administrator in England and youth leader in the South...
Bernard and Emma Judge served the Seventh-day Adventist Church in their homeland Australia and as ea...
This is a photograph of a visit from the Apostolic Delegate to the Kongmoon Seminary. Front row, Frs...
Alfred Walter Martin was a missionary, educator, and administrator from Australia.https://research.a...
Australians, in the main, are unaware of the role which Australia played in the evangelization of Ch...
Harold Murray Blunden was a missionary to China, church administrator, including General Field secre...
This is a photograph of "Rev. Robert J. Cairns, M.M. [pastor of Sunchong, now Xinchang] and a Cathol...