From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of notable people who are associated with the
Seventh-day Adventist Church . In addition to living and deceased members, the list also includes
Millerites and notable former Seventh-day Adventists.
Academia
Niels-Erik Andreasen – former president at
Andrews University and
Walla Walla College ; also former teacher at
Pacific Union College and former dean of
Loma Linda University School of Religion
Delbert Baker – President of
Adventist University of Africa
Sidney Brownsberger (1845–1930) – educator and first president of
Healdsburg College (1882–1886)
Gary Chartier – American legal scholar; philosopher and author who is Associate
Dean and Professor of Law and
Business ethics at
La Sierra University
[1]
Eva Beatrice Dykes (1893–1986) – taught
Dunbar High School ;
Walden University ;
Howard University , and was chair of the English department and the Division of Humanities at
Oakwood University
[2]
[3]
Larry Geraty – archaeologist; 7th president of
Atlantic Union College (1985–1993), and 2nd president of
La Sierra University (1993–2007)
Lilia Wahinemaikaʻi Hale (1913-2003) -
Kanaka Maoli educator, musician and author
[4]
Siegfried Horn (1908–1993) – German
archaeologist ; Bible scholar; author, and Professor of History of Antiquity and Dean of the
Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary
[5]
[6]
Milton E. Kern (1875–1961) – President of
Foreign Mission Seminary (1910–1914); Dean of the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary (1934–1943), and Chairperson of the Ellen G. White Estate (1944–1951)
Heather Knight – 21st president of
Pacific Union College (2009–2016)
Dr.
Norman Maphosa –
Zimbabwean who is the former Vice Chancellor of
Solusi University (1992–2011); former
Zimsec board chairman and current Director General of Zimbabwe Institute of Public Management
[7]
[8]
[9]
[10]
Malcolm Maxwell (1934–2007) – 19th president of Pacific Union College (1983–2001) and son of
Arthur S. Maxwell
Richard Osborn – 20th president of Pacific Union College (2001–2009); founder of the Association of Adventist Colleges and Universities; former principal of
Takoma Academy ; former Education director of Columbia Union Conference; former Vice-President for Education for the
North American Division ; former president of the Council for American Private Education; chairman of the Association of Independent California Colleges and Universities & Vice-President of the
Western Association of Schools and Colleges
[11]
[12]
[13]
[14]
Leslie Pollard - African-american who is the 11th president of
Oakwood University
[15]
W. W. Prescott (1855–1944) – President of
Battle Creek College (1885–1894); founded
Union College and became the first president in 1891; became president of
Walla Walla College in 1891; founded
Avondale School for Christian Workers ; editor of the
Review and Herald , and vice president of the
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists
[16]
[17]
Denton E. Rebok (1897–1983) – taught at
Washington Missionary College ,
La Sierra College ; president of
Southern Missionary College ; Dean of the
Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary ; Chairperson of the
Ellen G. White Estate (1952) and missionary to China
Dr.
Leona G. Running (1916–2014) – first female
linguist and
Bible scholar at
Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary (1955–2002) and first female president of the Chicago Society of Biblical Research (1981–1982)
[18]
[19]
[20]
[21]
Homer Russell Salisbury (1870–1915) – American professor, minister and missionary who founded
Duncombe Hall College , taught at
Claremont Union College ; also former president of the South England Conference and Indian Union Mission. Killed when the
SS Persia was sunk by a
German submarine , during
World War I .
[22]
[23]
John Luis Shaw (1870–1952) – educator; missionary and treasurer
Literature
Ray Garton – horror novelist raised Adventist; credits his interest in horror to a reaction to the beasts in Bible prophecy (see:
Seventh-day Adventist eschatology )
[24]
Hesba Fay Brinsmead (1922–2003) – children's author
Nathan Brown – author and editor of
Signs Publishing Company
Candy Carson –
African American author; philanthropist and married to
Ben Carson
[25]
Diran Chrakian (1875–1921) –
Armenian poet, writer, painter, teacher, and victim of the
Armenian genocide
Roswell F. Cottrell (1814–1892) – American writer; hymnist; poet; counselor, and preacher
Clifford Goldstein –
Jewish-American author and editor
Arthur S. Maxwell (1896–1970) – known as Uncle Arthur, author of the Bedtime Stories series, and
The Bible Story set of books, among 112 books
Roger Morneau (1925–1998) – author on faith and prayer
Christopher Mwashinga – author and poet, writes in English and
Kiswahili
Andrew Nelson (1893–1975) – missionary and linguist
Cameron Slater – controversial blogger and editor of
New Zealand Truth
Annie R. Smith (1828–1855) – wrote 12
hymns and four poems
Steven Spruill – novelist
[26]
Standish brothers , Colin D. (1933–2018) and Russell R. (1933–2008) – identical twin authors
Movies, television, and radio
Terry Benedict - American film producer who created
The Conscientious Objector and co-produced
Hacksaw Ridge about Desmond Doss
[27]
[28]
Fretzie Bercede –
Filipino /Chinese actress, television personality, and former reality show contestant; 3rd placer of
Pinoy Big Brother: Teen Clash 2010
Grigoriy Dobrygin – Russian film and theatre actor; director, and producer
DeVon Franklin – American producer, author and motivational speaker
[29]
[30]
Antoinette Hertsenberg –
Dutch actress and TV presenter and married to
Niko Koffeman , a politician who belongs to
Party for the Animals
Darwood Kaye (1929–2002) – former
Our Gang actor who spent his adult life as a pastor
Cesar Montano – multi-awarded Filipino actor, film producer/director; game show host & singer
[31]
[32]
[33]
Cid Moreira – Brazilian journalist and TV presenter
Nǃxau ǂToma (1944–2003) – starred as a
Kalahari
Bushman in the films
The Gods Must Be Crazy ,
The Gods Must Be Crazy 2 , Crazy Safari , Crazy in Hong Kong , and The Gods Must Be Funny in China ;
[34] converted in later life
[35]
[36]
Utica Queen – American drag queen and contestant on
Rupaul's Drag Race
[37]
Painters, illustrators and sculptors
Harry Anderson (1906–1996) – American painter and illustrator whose clients were
American Airlines ,
The American Magazine , Buster Brown Shoes,
Coca-Cola ,
Collier's ,
Cosmopolitan ,
Cream of Wheat ,
Esso ,
Ford ,
Good Housekeeping ,
Humble Oil ,
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company ,
Ladies' Home Journal , Massachusetts Mutual,
Ovaltine ,
Redbook ,
Review and Herald Publishing Association ,
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ,
The Saturday Evening Post ,
Woman's Home Companion , and
Wyeth ; won many award's and also was elected to the Illustrators Hall of Fame in 1994
[38]
[39]
[40]
[41]
Luis Germán Cajiga –
Puerto Rican painter; linocutter, and silk-screen printer
[42]
[43]
Alan Collins (1928–2016) – American sculptor and art professor at
Atlantic Union College (1968–1971),
Andrews University (1971–1978) and
La Sierra University (1978–1989)
[44]
[45]
Greg Constantine –
Canadian-American painter and illustrator and retired art professor at
Andrews University
[46]
[47]
Shirley Ardell Mason (1923–1998) – painter and art teacher who was known as Sybil and had
Dissociative identity disorder
[48]
[49]
Singers, songwriters, musicians, and conductors
Rose May Alaba - Austrian singer, songwriter, recording artist and sister of
David Alaba
[50]
[51]
Herbert Blomstedt –
Swedish conductor for the
Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra , conductor for the
Norrköping Symphony Orchestra (1954–1962), conductor for the
Oslo Philharmonic (1962–1968), conductor for the
Staatskapelle Dresden (1975–1985), conductor for the
Danish Radio Orchestra (1967–1977), music director for the
San Francisco Symphony (1985–1995), music director for the
NDR Symphony Orchestra (1996–1998), and music director for the
Gewandhausorchester Leipzig (1998–2005)
[52]
[53]
Charmaine Carrasco - American
Christian pop musician
[54]
Committed – winner of the second season of NBC's
The Sing-Off
Del Delker (1924–2018) – American
contralto
sacred music female vocalist who sang on the
Voice of Prophecy
[55]
[56]
Roy Drusky (1930-2004) - American
Country music singer, songwriter producer, actor and disc jockey
[57]
Manuel Escórcio – South African
tenor who sang for the Cape Town City Opera
[58]
Jerome Fontamillas –
Filipino American musician
[59]
Anna German (1936–1982) – famous
Polish singer
[60]
Heritage Singers – American gospel group founded by Max and Lucy Mace
Wayne Hooper (1920–2007) – Musical Director for Voice of Prophecy radio program; composer; baritone
[61]
The Isley Brothers – Grammy Award-winning American musical group consisting of brothers
Ron and
Ernie Isley
Iyaz – R&B singer, rapper and songwriter; born Keidran Jones of the Virgin Islands; grew up in the church and still attends from time to time
King's Heralds – American male
gospel music
quartet
[62]
[63]
Little Richard (1932–2020) – former singer-songwriter and musician of
Rock and roll
[64]
[65]
Sunny Liu (1924–1987) – minister and singing evangelist
[66]
Joe Lutcher (1919–2006) – American
R&B saxophonist and bandleader who abandoned his musical career and witnessed to
Little Richard
[67]
Hugh Martin (1914–2011) – American theater and film composer; also accompanist for
Del Delker
[68]
[69]
[70]
NOTA – winner of the first season of NBC's The Sing-Off
Kevin Olusola – cellist and beatboxer, member of Grammy Award-winning a cappella group Pentatonix, winners of third season of NBC's The Sing-Of
[71]
Wintley Phipps – singer, songwriter, ordained pastor
[72]
Tyler Rand - American arts executive
Salt – American rapper & songwriter who was baptized into the Seventh-day Adventist Church on a mission trip in
Ethiopia with
Oakwood College .
[73]
Take 6 – American
a cappella
gospel music
sextet
Rozonda Thomas – singer-songwriter; dancer; actress; television personality and model
[74]
[75]
[76]
[77]
Sverre Valen (1925–2023) – Norwegian choir conductor
[78]
Davido – Nigerian singer, songwriter and record producer; his father
Adedeji Adeleke , Nigerian Billionaire, business magnate, founder and president of
Adeleke University is a devout Seventh-Day Adventist
[79]
Business
Law
Pioneers
This section includes
Millerites (followers of William Miller) who did not necessarily become Seventh-day Adventist:
J. N. Andrews (1829–1883) – first Seventh-day Adventist missionary; minister; writer; editor of the Adventist Review and 3rd President of the
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists
[98]
[99]
Nelson H. Barbour (1824–1905) – Millerite pastor
Joseph Bates (1792–1872) –
seaman ; founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church; wrote a tract on the seventh-day Sabbath which convinced James and Ellen White to start observing it, and
minister
[100]
[101]
Goodloe Harper Bell (1832–1899) – teacher at first Seventh-day Adventist school
[102]
[103]
[104]
Sylvester Bliss (1814–1863) – Millerite pastor, author and editor of The Signs of the Times
[105]
O. R. L. Crosier (1820–1912) – Millerite preacher
[106]
Hiram Edson (1806–1882) – evangelist who introduced sanctuary doctrine and started first Seventh-day Adventist press
[107]
Charles Fitch (1805–1844) – Millerite evangelist
[108]
Elon Galusha (1790–1856) – Millerite; minister and lawyer
Apollos Hale (1807–1898) – Millerite and minister
Stephen N. Haskell (1833–1922) – evangelist; missionary; author; editor; president of the New England Conference (1870–1887), president of the California Conference (1879–1887 and 1891–1894) and president of the Maine Conference (1884–1886)
[109]
[110]
Joshua V. Himes (1805–1895) – Millerite evangelist and promoter
J. N. Loughborough (1832–1924) – early Seventh-day Adventist pastor
[111]
[112]
William Miller (1782–1849) – founder of the Millerite movement from which Seventh-day Adventism and other groups emerged
[113]
[114]
George Washington Morse (1816–1909) – Millerite Adventist; evangelist and missionary
T. M. Preble (1810–1907) – Millerite pastor, early Sabbath supporter
[115]
Uriah Smith (1832–1903) – author; poet; hymn writer; teacher; inventor;
engraver , and editor of the
Review and Herald
[116]
[117]
Samuel S. Snow (1806–1890) – Millerite preacher
George Storrs (1796–1879) – Millerite preacher and writer
[118]
John T. Walsh (1816–1886) – Millerite and minister
Henry Dana Ward (1797–1884) – Millerite and abolitionist
Jonas Wendell (1815–1873) – Millerite evangelist
Ellen G. White (1827–1915) – a founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church; had 2,000
visions and
dreams from God; wrote articles;
pamphlets and books including the
Conflict of the Ages series
[119]
[120]
[121]
[122]
James Springer White (1821–1881) – a founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church; founder of
The Present Truth , and 2nd, 4th, and 6th President of the
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists (1865–1867, 1869–1871, and 1874–1880); husband of Ellen White
[123]
[124]
Church administration leaders
Government
Kwadwo Owusu Afriyie (1957–2020) –
Ghanaian who was Chief Executive Officer of
Forestry Commission of Ghana (2017-2020), general secretary of the
New Patriotic Party (2010-2014); and lawyer who died of
COVID-19
[132]
[133]
Sir
Patrick Allen – eighth
Governor-General of Jamaica (2009–present) became Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George by
Queen Elizabeth II , and former president of the West Indies Union
[134]
[135]
Sir
Silas Atopare – seventh
Governor-General of Papua New Guinea (1997–2003)
Roscoe Bartlett – served in
Maryland's 6th congressional district /
U.S. House of Representatives (1993–2013)
[136]
[137]
Simeon Bouro –
Solomon Islands Ambassador to
Cuba since March 2013; member of Solomon Islands National Parliament (2001–2006)
Percival Austin Bramble (1901–1988) –
Chief Minister of Montserrat
British West Indies (1970–1978)[
citation needed ]
William Henry Bramble – first Chief Minister of Montserrat British West Indies
Ronald Brisé – Commissioner for the Florida Public Service Commission and former Florida's 108th congressional district/
Florida House of Representatives
Sir
James Carlisle – second
Governor-General of Antigua and Barbuda (1993–2007) and dentist
[138]
[139]
Ben Carson – former director of
pediatric neurosurgery at
Johns Hopkins Hospital ; author;
2016 Republican candidate for president ;
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (2017–2021)
[140]
[141]
Nelson Castro – New York State Assemblyman, 86th District, (2008–present)
[142]
[143]
Ret Chol – former
South Sudanese politician
Cari M. Dominguez – senior of
human resources at
Bank of America ; formerly worked at the
United States Department of Labor as Director of the
Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (1989–1993) and Assistant Secretary for Employment Standards (1991–1993); Director at
Spencer Stuart (1993–1995); Partner at
Heidrick & Struggles (1995–1998); Principal at Dominguez and Associates (1999–2001); 12th Chairman of
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (2001–2006); Board member of
ManpowerGroup (2007–); Board of Director for
International Women's Forum ; Hispanic Business Roundtable; Founder of Olney Adventist Preparatory School in
Olney, Maryland , and the current Senior vice president for human resources for
Loma Linda University and
Loma Linda University Medical Center
[144]
[145]
Kim Gangte – member of parliament in
India (1998–1999); educator & human right activist
[146]
[147]
[148]
Hakainde Hichilema – Seventh
President of Zambia , businessman and married to
Mutinta Hichilema
[149]
[150]
Andrew Holness – tenth and twelfth
Prime Minister of Jamaica , (2011–2012, 2016–present);
Leader of the Opposition (Jamaica) (2012–2016)
Okezie Ikpeazu – ninth
Governor of Abia State (2015-2023) and also married to
Nkechi Ikpeazu
[151]
[152]
Samson Kisekka (1912–1999) – fifth
Prime Minister of Uganda , (1986–1991); fifth
Vice President of Uganda (1991–1994); physician;
agriculturalist ; businessman; diplomat and writer
[153]
[154]
Niko Koffeman –
Dutch politician who belongs to
Party for the Animals and
animal rights activist , married to actress/TV presenter
Antoinette Hertsenberg
[155]
[156]
Jioji Konousi Konrote –
President of Fiji , (2015–2021); Fiji High Commissioner to Australia (2001–2006); former Assistant Secretary General of the United Nations; retired Major-General in
Fiji armed forces; former Force Commander of the United Nations interim force in
Lebanon ; former Ambassador Pleniopotentiary to Singapore, and former Minister of Employment, Labour Relations and Productivity
[157]
Sheila Jackson Lee – U.S. Representative, 18th congressional district of
Texas (
Houston )
Gordon Darcy Lilo – former
Prime Minister of Solomon Islands
James Marape – eight
Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea (2019–present)
[158]
Eunice Michiles – Brazilian senator
[159]
Floyd Morris –
Jamaica 's first blind senator (1998–2007), Minister of State in the Ministry of Labour and Social Security (2001–2007), twelfth
president of the Senate of Jamaica (2013–2016) and author
[160]
[161]
Phelekezela Mphoko –
Zimbabwe businessman, former diplomat, former
military commander , and Vice President of Zimbabwe under President
Robert Mugabe
Rose Namayanja –
Ugandan lawyer; columnist; author; security sector manager and politician
John Nkomo (1934–2013) – Zimbabwe politician
[162]
Samuel Sipepa Nkomo – Zimbabwe Minister of Water Resources Development and Management
Manuel Noriega (1934–2017) – dictator of
Panama who joined the Seventh-day Adventist Church
[163]
George Nga Ntafu (1943–2015) – Malawian statesman, former Cabinet Minister, and
Malawi Parliament Chief Whip
Ron Oden –
African American former openly gay 19th
Mayor of Palm Springs (2003–2007) and former ordained minister
[164]
Sam Ongeri –
Kenyan Member of Parliament for
Nyaribari Masaba Constituency (1988-1992;1997-2002 and 2007-2013), Cabinet Minister for Technical and Vocational Education (1988-1992), Minister of Foreign Affairs (2012-2013), Kisii County senator (2017–present); professor and physician
[165]
Harold
Bud Otis – former president of
Review and Herald Publishing Association (1978–1988) and president of
Frederick County, Maryland
[166]
[167]
Alex Otti - tenth Governor of Abia State (2023-present)
[168]
[169]
Jerry Pettis (1916–1975) – member of the
U.S. House of Representatives , who represented California's
33rd Congressional District (1966–1975) and
37th Congressional District (1975)
Shirley Neil Pettis (1924–2016) – member of the
U.S. House of Representatives , who represented California's
37th Congressional District (1975–1979)
Job Pomat –
Papua New Guinean
Speaker of the National Parliament of Papua New Guinea (2017–present)
[170]
[171]
Henry Puna –
Prime Minister of the Cook Islands
[172]
[173]
Ngereteina Puna – teacher; MP for
Arutanga-Reureu-Nikaupara (1989–1999);
Speaker of the Cook Islands Parliament (1999–2001), and Minister of Education for
Geoffrey Henry (2011–2012)
[174]
John Pundari – Papua New Guinean former Speaker of the National Parliament (1997–1999); Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Women and Youth (1999); Minister for Lands (2001); Minister for Foreign Affairs (2001); Minister for Mining (2010–2011), and Minister for Environment and Conservation (2012–present) was recognized as a Companion of the Order St Michael by
Queen Elizabeth II
[175]
[176]
[177]
[95]
Raul Ruiz – member of the
U.S. House of Representatives , representing California's
36th congressional district (2013–)
[178]
Desley Scott – Australian politician; member for
Electoral district of Woodridge in the
Parliament of Queensland , 2001–2015
[179]
Derek Sloan – former member of the
House of Commons of Canada for the
riding of
Hastings—Lennox and Addington (2019–); was expelled from the Conservative Party caucus on January 20, 2021 for receiving a donation from a white supremacist and other issues
[180]
Manasseh Sogavare –
Prime Minister of the Solomon Islands , (2000–2001), (2006–2007), (2014–2017) and (2019–present); Leader of the Opposition in Solomon Islands (2007–2010)
[181]
[182]
[183]
John F. Street –
Mayor of the City of Philadelphia (2000–2008)
Mana Strickland (1918–1996) – Minister of Education of
Cook Islands
Robert Lee Stump (1927–2003) – served in the
Arizona House of Representatives and the
Arizona State Senate (1959–1976); member of the
U.S. House of Representatives , representing Arizona's
3rd Congressional District (1977–2003)
Sione Taione –
Tongan politician
[184]
Hannu Takkula –
Finnish politician who was member of
Parliament of Finland (1995–2004) and member of
European Parliament (2004–2018)
[185]
[186]
Marianne Thieme – founder and parliamentary leader of the Dutch animal rights party
Animal Party & author
[187]
[188]
Ronald Sapa Tlau – Indian member for
Mizoram in the
Rajya Sabha since June 2014
Roman Tmetuchl (1926–1999) –
Palau governor of
Airai ; started Palau's first bank and also start a construction company.
[189]
Carolyn Harding Votaw (1879–1951) – public officeholder in Washington, D.C.; youngest sister of President
Warren G. Harding , and missionary to
Myanmar (1905–1914)
[190]
James Ronald Webster (1926–2016) – led
Anguilla Revolution of 1967; former
Chief Minister of Anguilla
Surangel Whipps Jr. – President of
Palau (2021–present); was CEO and President of Surangel and Sons Company from 1992-2021 and lead it to becoming the largest Palauan owned company in the
Republic of Palau .
[191]
George A. Williams (1864–1946) – served as
Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska (1925–1931)
Jorge Talbot Zavala (1921–2014) –
Ecuadorian Representative and Secretary of the Camara de Diputados,
Quito ,
Ecuador ; Nomina de Legisladores Nacionales (1950–1955), Archivo Nacional del Ecuador (1950–1955)
Scientists, doctors, nurses, and engineers
Phyllis B. Acosta (1933–2018) – public health researcher who pioneered nutritional therapy for management of phenylketonuria
Leonard Lee Bailey (1942–2019) – world-renowned
heart surgeon who transplanted a baboon's heart into a premature-born baby with underdeveloped heart
[192]
[193]
Lottie Isbell Blake (1876–1976) – first SDA Black Physician
[194]
Leonard R. Brand –
Loma Linda University
paleobiologist
Mary E. Britton (1855–1925) – physician;
educator ; journalist;
civil rights activist and
Suffragist
[195]
[196]
Ferdinand Budicki II (1871-1951) - Croatian engineer, adventurer and motorsports pioneer.
[197]
Margaret Caro (1848–1938) – first women Dentist on the Register of New Zealand; lecturer; social reformer, and writer
[198]
Alexander A. Clerk –
Ghanaian-American teacher;
psychiatrist ;
Sleep medicine specialist and the director of the world's first sleep medical clinic at
Stanford University Medical Center
Lenna F. Cooper (1875–1961) – American
dietitian and co-founder of the
Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics
[199]
Hulda Crooks (1896–1997) – American
mountaineer , dietitian and
vegetarianism activist
[200]
[201]
Hans Diehl (1946–2023) – physician and founder of the Complete Health Improvement Program (CHIP).
[202]
Robert Gentry (1933–2020) –
nuclear physicist and young Earth
creationist , known for his claims that
radiohalos provide evidence for a young age of the Earth
Howard Gimbel – Canadian
ophthalmologist ; senior editor; international speaker; professor at
Loma Linda University and associate professor at
University of Calgary , has won many awards including the
Alberta Order of Excellence and
Order of Canada
[203]
[204]
Frank Jobe (1925–2014) –
orthopedist and
sports medicine physician who worked for the
Los Angeles Dodgers (1968–2008); 26 years as a consultant for the
PGA Tour ,
PGA Tour Champions and
Senior PGA Championship and named
emeritus physician for the PGA Tour; clinical professor at
Keck School of Medicine of USC ; inducted into the
American Orthopedic Society of Sports Medicine Hall of Fame ,
Professional Baseball Athletic Trainers Hall of Fame and
Shrine of the Eternals ; received the
Dave Winfield Humanitarian Award ; was a
World War II veteran who won the
Bronze Star Medal ,
Combat Medical Badge and
Glider Badge
[205]
[206]
Nettie Florence Keller (1875–1974) – oldest practicing doctor in the world; feminist; prohibitionist; social reformer and missionary to New Zealand
[207]
Daniel H. Kress (1862-1956) – Canadian physician and missionary to Australia, England and New Zealand.
[208]
Lauretta E. Kress (1863-1955) – American physician; wife of Daniel Kress; and missionary to Australia and England.
[208]
Jeffrey Kuhlman -
White House physician to
Bill Clinton ,
George W. Bush and
Barack Obama ;
Florida Hospital Chief Medical Officer and employee of
Naval Aerospace Medical Institute .
[209]
Alice G. Marsh (1908–1997) – dietitian and vegetarianism activist
Frank Lewis Marsh (1899–1992) – creationist and the first Adventist to earn a
doctoral degree in
biology
Ora Kress Mason (1888-1970) – American nurse and physician; and daughter of Daniel and Lauretta Kress.
[210]
[211]
George McCready Price (1870–1963) – missionary and leading early creationist
Ruth Janetta Temple (1892–1984) – first
African American doctor in California and opened first medical clinic in Los Angeles
[212]
Paul Nobuo Tatsuguchi (1911–1943) – Japanese surgeon in the
Imperial Japanese Army
[213]
[214]
Archibald W. Truman (1884–1977) – physician and vegetarianism activist
Walter Veith – South African
zoologist , author, creationist and end times lecturer
Kathleen Keen Zolber - American president of the
Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics
Sports
Gretchen Abaniel –
Filipino professional
boxer who won the
Women's International Boxing Association Minimumweight Title;
Women's International Boxing Federation Minimumweight Title; Global Boxing Union Minimumweight Title; WIBA Intercontinental Minimumweight Title;
WBC International Minimumweight Title and a contestant on
The Amazing Race Philippines 2
[215]
David Alaba – Austrian
association football player and has a sister
Rose May Alaba
[216]
Luis Aponte – retired
Venezuelan
baseball player
[217]
Ed Correa – retired
Puerto Rican
Major League Baseball pitcher
[218]
Grace Daley – retired
African American
Women's National Basketball Association
basketball player
[219]
Devaun DeGraff – retired
Bermudian association football player
[220]
Jimmy Haarhoff – retired British association football player
[221]
Priscah Jeptoo – Kenyan
Marathon runner, Olympic and world medalist;
[222] winner of the
2013 London Marathon
[223] and
2013 New York City Marathon ,
[224] and founder of Better Living Marathon
[225]
Abel Kirui – Kenyan marathon runner, two-time world champion, Olympic medalist,
[226]
2016 Chicago Marathon winner,
[227] and founder of Better Living Marathon
[225]
Elijah Lagat – Kenyan marathon runner, winner of the
1997 Berlin Marathon , 1998
Prague Marathon and
2000 Boston Marathon
[228]
[229]
Ljiljana Ljubisic – Canadian who won gold medal in discus and bronze in shot at the
1992 Summer Paralympics & won bronze in the same events at the
1996 Summer Paralympics
[230]
Germaine Mason (1983-2017) -
Jamaican who was an Olympic medalist
high jumper
[231]
[232]
Archie Moore (1916–1998) – American professional
boxer (Light Heavyweight World Champion December 1952 – May 1962)
[233]
Amos Tirop Matui – Kenyan marathon runner, winner of the 2005
Singapore Marathon , 2009
Country Music Marathon and
Hamburg Half Marathon , and founder of Better Living Marathon.
[225]
Vitor Ressurreição – Brazilian association football
goalkeeper
[234]
Carlos Roa – retired
Argentine association football goalkeeper
[235]
Daren Sammy –
St. Lucian ,
West Indies
cricketer
Andrea Silenzi – retired Italian association football player
[236]
[237]
Davion Taylor - African American
linebacker in the
National Football League
[238]
[239]
Theologians, ministers and evangelists
M. L. Andreasen (1876–1962) – theologian, protested against the book
Questions on Doctrine , and was influential in "
historic Adventism "
Samuele Bacchiocchi (1938–2008) – theologian and author who wrote From Sabbath to Sunday , based on his study at the
Pontifical Gregorian University , at which he is the only non-Catholic to have enrolled
Bryan W. Ball – theologian; academic; author; teacher; former principal of
Avondale College , and former president of
South Pacific Division of Seventh-day Adventists
Shawn Boonstra – former Speaker/Director of It Is Written Canada and 3rd Speaker/Director of
It Is Written (2004–2011) and 5th Speaker/Director of
Voice of Prophecy (2010–present)
John Burden (1862–1942) – minister; administrator, and medical missionary to Australia
Edwin Butz (1864–1956) – pastor and missionary to Australia and
Tonga
Arthur Carscallen (1879–1964) – pastor; administrator; linguist; publisher, and missionary to
Kenya
John Carter – pastor; evangelist, and founder of
The Carter Report
E. E. Cleveland (1921–2009) – pastor; evangelist; civil rights leader; author, and teacher at
Oakwood College
[240]
Raymond Cottrell (1911–2003) – theologian; teacher; writer; editor; associate editor of the
Adventist Review and the
Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary , and missionary to China
[241]
Richard M. Davidson – Old Testament scholar, and author of Flame of Yahweh
Herbert E. Douglass (1927–2014) – American theologian who was president of
Atlantic Union College (1967–1970); associate editor of
Adventist Review (1970–1976); associate book editor and vice-president for Editorial Development at
Pacific Press Publishing Association (1979–1985); president of
Weimar Institute (1985–1992); vice-president for philanthropy at
Adventist Heritage Ministry (1997–2001), and consultant for
Amazing Facts (2003–2005)
Jon Dybdahl – theologian and college administrator
Henry Feyerabend (1931–2006) – Canadian evangelist; singer, and author
Mark Finley – pastor; evangelist and 2nd Speaker/Director of
It Is Written 1991–2004
Desmond Ford (1929–2019) – Australian pastor fired for criticizing the
investigative judgment teaching, resulting in the
most controversial dismissal ever in the church
[242]
[243]
Le Roy Froom (1890– 1974) – pastor; scholar and historian, one of the leading Adventist apologists of his time
John Edwin Fulton (1869–1945) – pastor; author and missionary to Fiji
Paul A. Gordon (1930–2009) – former director of the
Ellen G. White Estate
Gerhard Hasel (1935–1994) – theologian; Professor of Old Testament & Biblical Theology; Dean at Theological Seminary at
Andrews University , his childhood experience in
Nazi Germany are recounted in the book A Thousand Shall Fall
Edward Heppenstall (1901–1994) – theologian and Bible scholar
Edward Hilliard (1851–1936) – pastor and missionary to Australia and Tonga
John F. Huenergardt (1875–1955) – pastor; teacher; administrator, and missionary
Merritt Kellogg (1832–1921) – doctor; pastor and missionary to Australia; Niue; Pitcairn; Samoa, and Tonga
George R. Knight – historian, author, educator, theologian
Väinö Kohtanen (1889–1963) –
Finnish pioneer, evangelist, college president and conference president in Finland in the first half of the 20th century
[244]
[245]
Samuel Koranteng-Pipim – Ghanaian theologian; author, and speaker
Hans Karl LaRondelle (1929–2011) – theologian and author
John G. Matteson (1835–1896) –
Danish American ; minister; evangelist; teacher; missionary to
Denmark and
Norway ; musician; editor, and publisher
[246]
Andrew Nelson (1893–1975) – scholar of
East Asian languages and literature and missionary to Japan
Dwight Nelson – pastor at
Andrews University
Francis D. Nichol (1897–1966) – apologist, authored a classic defense of Ellen White; editor of Review and Herald , now
Adventist Review , (1966–1966); supervising editor of the
Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary .
James R. Nix – Director of the
Ellen G. White Estate
Elizaphan Ntakirutimana (1924–2007) – pastor; administrator, and participant in
Rwandan genocide
[247]
Robert W. Olson (1920–2013) – former director of the Ellen G. White Estate
Arthur Patrick (1934–2013) – theologian; teacher; pastor; evangelist; administer, and historian at
Avondale College
[248]
Jon Paulien – leading expert on the
Book of Revelation
Richard Rice – developed the "
open theism " understanding of God
H. M. S. Richards (1894–1985) – poet, evangelist; founder and 1st Speaker/Director of
Voice of Prophecy ; pioneer in religious radio broadcasting; the H. M. S. Richards Divinity School at
La Sierra University is named in his honor
Ángel Manuel Rodríguez – pastor; professor; theologian, and former director of the
Biblical Research Institute
Samir Selmanovic – pastor and author
[249]
[250]
George Vandeman (1916–2000) – popular evangelist who founded
It Is Written (1956–1991)
Alfred Vaucher (1887–1993) – French theologian; church historian and bibliographer
Morris Venden (1932–2013) – proponent of salvation and sanctification by faith alone, a strong supporter of the
Pillars of Seventh-day Adventism including the
investigative judgment , known for his parables and humor.
Juan Carlos Viera (1938–2016) – former director of the
Ellen G. White Estate
Arthur L. White (1907–1991) – former director of the
Ellen G. White Estate ; son of
William C. White and grandson of
Ellen G. White
William C. White (1854–1937) – former director of the
Ellen G. White Estate and son of
Ellen G. White
Benjamin G. Wilkinson (1872–1968) – theologian whose writings influenced the American fundamentalist
King-James-Only Movement
Kenneth H. Wood (1917–2008) – pastor; author; editor of
Adventist Review ; missionary to China, and Chairman of the
Ellen G. White Estate
[251]
Norman Young – New Testament scholar
Military
Other
Johnny Barnes (1923-2016) – a
Bermuda institution mentioned him in guidebooks and profiled him in two documentary films
[264]
[265]
Lindy Chamberlain – Australian Adventist famous for being wrongfully convicted of the murder of her daughter Azaria at
Uluru ; it was later shown that a
dingo took Lindy's baby and was the subject of the film
Evil Angels
[266]
Michael Chamberlain (1944-2017) – pastor from Australia falsely accused of murdering his daughter Azaria and was the subject in the film Evil Angels
[266]
Michał Belina Czechowski (1818-1876) – missionary to Italy,
Romania , and
Switzerland
Queen
Mantfombi Dlamini (1953-2021) – married to
Zulu King
Goodwill Zwelithini kaBhekuzulu
[267]
[268]
Rosetta Douglass (1839-1906) - African-american civil rights activist
[269]
S. M. I. Henry (1839–1900) – evangelist for the
Woman's Christian Temperance Union ; wrote tracts, pamphlets and books
[270]
Mutinta Hichilema -
First Lady of Zambia and married to
Hakainde Hichilema
[150]
[271]
Albert Horsley (1866-1954) –
miner who murdered former
Idaho Governor
Frank Steunenberg
[272]
Nkechi Ikpeazu –
Nigerian charities worker; founder of
Vicar Hope Foundation and wife of
Okezie Ikpeazu
[273]
[274]
[275]
Jon Johanson – Australian
aviator who flew around the world three times, in 1995, 1996, and 2000 which he flew over the North Pole and he flew to the South Pole in 2003
[276]
[277]
[278]
[279]
Louise Little (1897–1991) – Grenadian-American activist and mother of
Malcolm X
[280]
[281]
Irene Morgan (1917–2007) – African-American who refused to surrender her bus seat and was taken to court, preceding the famous
Rosa Parks case
[282]
[283]
Barbara O'Neill – Australian naturopath who, in 2019, was banned indefinitely from providing any health service or education for her role in providing dangerous health advice.
[284]
Sandra Seifert –
Filipino /German fashion model who won Miss Earth-Air at the
Miss Earth 2009 pageant
[285]
[286]
John Tay (1832-1892) – Missionary to
Fiji and
Pitcairn
David Trim - Historian, archivist and educator
[287]
Lynne Waihee – former
First Lady of Hawaii and married to the former Governor
John D. Waihe'e III
[288]
Former baptized members and people raised
Anthony B – Jamaican
deejay and member of the
Rastafari movement
Les Balsiger – belonged to a Seventh-day Adventist Church that was disfellowshipped for firing their minister
Joseph R. Bartlett – former member of the
Maryland House of Delegates who was raised Seventh-day Adventist, and son of
Roscoe Bartlett
[289]
Jungkook – idol,
BTS member raised by an Adventist mother
Ryan J. Bell – former pastor who became an
atheist
Wayne Bent – former pastor who founded
Lord Our Righteousness Church
[290]
[291]
Usain Bolt –
Jamaican Olympic sprinter who competed in three Summer Olympics (2008, 2012, and 2016), winning eight gold medals; raised Seventh-day Adventist by his mother
[292]
Nana Kwaku Bonsam –
Ghanaian
witch doctor and
fetish priest
Robert Brinsmead – edited
Present Truth Magazine
Joyce Bryant (1941-2022) – African-American singer/dancer, and former Seventh-day Adventist
[293]
[294]
D. M. Canright (1840–1919) – pastor who left over difficulties concerning Ellen White
Bill Chambers – Australian country singer
[295]
Kasey Chambers – Australian
country singer /songwriter and daughter of
Bill Chambers who was raised in the Seventh-day Adventist Church
[296]
Nash Chambers – Australian country singer and son of
Bill Chambers who was raised in the Seventh-day Adventist Church
[297]
Ludwig R. Conradi (1856–1939) – missionary and evangelist
Daniel Cooper (1881–1923) – New Zealand
child murderer and illegal
abortionist who was
disfellowshipped
Heidi Cruz – wife of
Ted Cruz ; former employee for President
George W. Bush ; bank employee, and raised Seventh-day Adventist by her parents
[298]
[299]
Kat Von D – tattoo artist; model; musician; author; entrepreneur; and television personality and raised Seventh-day Adventist by her parents
[300]
[301]
Clifton Davis – former Seventh-day Adventist pastor; songwriter; singer and actor
Clive Doyle (1941-2022) -
Branch Davidian who had been raised in the Seventh-day Adventist Church
[302]
Livingstone Fagan - British african who left the Seventh-day Adventist Church and joined the Branch Davidians
[303]
Luke Ford – Australian/American writer; blogger; and former pornography gossip columnist
Muma Gee -
Nigerian pop singer-songwriter, actress and fashion designer who was raised in the Seventh-day Adventist Church by her mother
[304]
Vincent Harding (1931–2014) – former African American Seventh-day Adventist pastor who became a
Mennonite pastor; civil rights author, and associate of
Martin Luther King Jr. who wrote the main draft of King's 1967 speech "
Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence ".
[305]
[306]
Victor Houteff (1885–1955) – Bulgarian who founded the
Shepherd's Rod who was disfellowshipped by the Seventh-day Adventist Church
[307]
Moses Hull (1836–1907) – former pastor who became a
Spiritualist lecturer and author
Magic Johnson - African American who was raised in the Seventh-day Adventist Church by his mother
[308]
[309]
Angus T. Jones - American child actor who played Jake Harper in
Two and a Half Men
[310]
[311]
John Harvey Kellogg (1852–1943) – medical doctor who was disfellowshipped, co-founder of
cornflakes with brother
Will Keith Kellogg
[312]
[83] and subject of the Hollywood film
The Road to Wellville
[313]
Hamaas Abdul Khaalis (1921–2003) –
Islamic leader who led the 1977
Hanafi Siege
[314]
[315]
David Koresh (1959–1993) – American leader of the
Branch Davidians who was disfellowshiped by the Seventh-day Adventist Church
[316]
[317]
Bob Lanier (1948-2022) - African American National Basketball Association player who was raised in the Seventh-day Adventist Church by his mother
[318]
[319]
Sandra Lee - American
celebrity chef and author raised in the Seventh-day Adventist Church
[320]
Zhang Lingsheng – helped start the
True Jesus Church
Luciano – Jamaican roots
reggae singer
Lee Boyd Malvo – former Seventh-day Adventist and convicted murderer who was connected to the
D.C. sniper attacks in the
Washington metropolitan area and converted to
Islam
[321]
[322]
Jesse Martin – boy sailor; his parents were Adventists
[323]
Wayne Martin - American who left the Seventh-day Adventist Church and joined the Branch Davidians
[324]
Kenneth
Chi McBride – raised Seventh-day Adventist by his parents; singer-songwriter & actor
[325]
Brian McKnight – raised Seventh-day Adventist by his parents;
Grammy Award winning singer-songwriter;producer; radio host, and 2009
The Celebrity Apprentice contestant
[326]
[327]
[328]
Ronald Numbers – science historian and author of
The Creationists , and former Adventist lecturer
David Pendleton – former member of the
Hawaii House of Representatives and 2002 candidate for
lieutenant governor , now a
Catholic
T. M. Preble (1810–1907) – wrote articles against the Seventh-day Sabbath in The World's Crisis and a book First-Day Sabbath
Forrest Preston – American billionaire who was raised in the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the founder of
Life Care Centers of America
Cherie Priest – former Seventh-day Adventist, American novelist and blogger
[329]
[330]
Prince (1958–2016) – raised in the church, later converted to the
Jehovah's Witnesses
[331]
[332]
Mark "Chopper" Read (1954–2013) – notorious Australian ex-criminal and author of real and fictional crime books; claims in his books to have been raised Adventist by a strictly devout mother
[333]
Walter T. Rea (1922–2014) – former pastor for his criticisms of the
inspiration of Ellen G. White ; author of The White Lie
Busta Rhymes – American
rapper , producer and actor, raised in
Brooklyn by Seventh-day Adventist Jamaican-immigrant parents; later converted to
Islam
[334]
[335]
Ruth Riddle -
Canadian Branch Davidian who was raised in the Seventh-day Adventist Church
[336]
Terrence Roberts – former member who was one of the nine African American students who
desegregated
Little Rock Central High School
[337]
[338]
[339]
Benjamin Roden (1902–1978) – religious leader and organizer of the Branch Davidian Seventh-day Adventist Church, who was disfellowshipped
[340]
Lois Roden (1916–1986) – wife of Benjamin Roden and president of the
Branch Davidians after her husband's death
[340]
G. G. Rupert (1847–1922) – former American Seventh-day Adventist minister who founded
Independent Church of God
Paul Rusesabagina – internationally honored for saving 1,268 civilians during the
Rwandan genocide ; the subject of 2004 film
Hotel Rwanda ; describes himself as a "lapsed Adventist" in his autobiography
Lena Sadler (1875–1939) – American surgeon and
obstetrician who was the wife of William S. Sadler
William S. Sadler (1875–1969) – American surgeon; self trained
psychiatrist and author who helped publish
The Urantia Book
Ahn Sahng-hong (1918–1985) – Korean pastor and founder of
Witnesses of Jesus Church of God
Dumelang Saleshando –
Botswanan politician raised Seventh-day Adventist by his mother, now is member of an unspecified church
[341]
Augusto César Sandino (1895–1934) –
Nicaraguan revolutionary and politician, cooperativist, member of Adventist church in his youth, adopted vegetarianism due to church teachings
Steve Schneider - American Branch Davidian who was raised in the Seventh-day Adventist Church by his parents
[342]
Vladimir Shelkov (1895–1980) – former
Ukrainian Seventh-day Adventist minister and leader of the
True and Free Seventh-day Adventists
Sirhan Sirhan –
Palestinian convicted of the assassination of U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy
[343]
Heinz Spanknöbel (1893–1947) – former German Seventh-day Adventist minister and led the pro
Nazi
Friends of New Germany
[344]
Mathew Staver – former American Seventh-day Adventist pastor who became a
Southern Baptist ; professor and lawyer; also founding member and Chairman of
Liberty Counsel and dean at
Liberty University
Sean Taylor (1983–2007) – former African American member who played for the
Washington Redskins and was murdered
[345]
Roch Thériault (1947-2011) - Canadian who founded the
Ant Hill Kids and was disfellowshipped by the Seventh-day Adventist Church
[346]
[347]
Iya Villania – Filipina host, actress and performer, married to
Drew Arellano
Paul Wei – Chinese evangelist of the
True Jesus Church
Marcus Wesson - African American mass murderer and child rapist who was raised in the Seventh-day Adventist Church by his mother
[348]
Richard Wright (1908–1960) – author whose autobiography
Black Boy mentions clashes with his Adventist family
[349]
Malcolm X (1925–1965) –
American Muslim minister and
human rights activist , raised Adventist by his mother
[280]
See also
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"Siegfried Horn: Dialogue With an Adventist Archaeologist" . College and University Dialogue . Retrieved 17 September 2018 .
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^
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^ Rasi, Humberto.
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^ Netteburg, Kermit; Parnell, Michael.
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^ Kovacs, Debbonnaire (9 January 2014).
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^ Miller, Mark (24 January 1999).
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^ Cooper, Michael (20 February 2017).
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^
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^
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^
"Ardella V. Delker" . International Adventist Musicians Associations . Retrieved 10 December 2019 .
^
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^ Duerksen, Dick.
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
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^
"Pentatonix : 'The Sing-Off' champs release debut album" . QNS.com .
^
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^
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"A new canvas for tattoo artist Kat Von D" .
Houston Chronicle . Retrieved 29 September 2022 .
^ Benjamin, Kathy (23 July 2018).
"The Untold Of Kat Von D" .
Grunge . Retrieved 29 September 2022 .
^ Gladwell, Malcolm (24 March 2014).
"Sacred and Profane" .
The New Yorker . Retrieved 20 June 2023 .
^
"In the end, cult members had one thing in common: Koresh" .
Tampa Bay Times . 25 April 1993. Retrieved 20 June 2023 .
^
"Why I Left The Music Scene In The Last 6 Years, Rivers State Born Song Goddess, Muma Gee" .
City People Magazine . 29 October 2018. Retrieved 22 June 2023 .
^
A Prophet Pushed Out: Vincent Harding And The Mennonites
Archived 31 October 2015 at the
Wayback Machine Mennonite Life Retrieved 12 March 2019
^ Schudel, Matt (22 May 2014).
"Vincent Harding, author of Martin Luther King Jr's antiwar speech, dies" .
The Washington Post . Retrieved 12 March 2019 .
^
"Cult's roots stretch to 1934, Seventh-day Adventists" .
Tampa Bay Times . 1 March 1993. Retrieved 20 June 2023 .
^ Katz, Jesse (1 October 2003).
"Master of Illusion" .
Los Angeles Magazine . Retrieved 3 July 2023 .
^ Hyman, Ramona; McChesney, Andrew (18 May 2016).
"Magic Johnson Shows Gratitude to Adventists With $550,000 Donation" . Adventist Review . Retrieved 3 July 2023 .
^ Gomez, Patrick (26 October 2016).
"Why Agnus T. Jones Has Left Faith-Based Organizations - and Is 'Slowly' Returning to Acting" .
People . Retrieved 13 July 2022 .
^ Marsh, Taylor (1 June 2021).
"Here's What Really Happened To Angus T. Jones" . The List . Retrieved 13 July 2022 .
^ Upchurch, Michael (7 August 2017).
"Feuding Kellogg brothers snap, crackle and pop in vivid new biography" .
Chicago Tribune . Retrieved 24 July 2019 .
^ Buckley, Nick (24 October 2019).
"Battle Creek reluctant to revisit 'The Road to Wellville' 25 years after film's release" .
Battle Creek Enquirer . Retrieved 16 August 2022 .
^ Steyn, Mark.
"Moustapha, Messenger of Hollywood" .
The Atlantic . Retrieved 27 June 2023 .
^ Mahler, Jonathan (5 December 2022).
"Two Days of Terror in Washington, D.C."
The New York Times . Retrieved 27 June 2023 .
^ Hirsley, Michael (2 March 1993).
"Adventists Kicked Out Cult, Leader" .
Chicago Tribune . Retrieved 22 June 2023 .
^ Freedman, Adrianna (22 April 2020).
"Here's What Happened to David Koresh Before Waco" .
Men's Health . Retrieved 22 June 2023 .
^ Aschburner, Steve (10 September 2018).
"NBA legend Bob Lanier reflects on career, current game and impact off floor" .
National Basketball Association . Retrieved 3 July 2023 .
^ Lombardo, John (22 February 2016).
"Bob Lanier, the NBA's inside man" .
Sports Business Journal . Retrieved 3 July 2023 .
^ Wallace, Benjamin (25 March 2011).
"The Ravenous and Resourceful Sandra Lee" .
New York . Retrieved 21 June 2021 .
^ Kovaleski, Serge; Sheridan, Mary (12 January 2003).
"A Boy of Bright Promise and No Roots" .
The Washington Post . Retrieved 16 August 2018 .
^
"Sniper victims' families describe heartache" .
CNN . 19 December 2003. Retrieved 16 August 2018 .
^ In particular, Lionheart: A Journey of the Human Spirit , p6 mentions they were married in the Adventist Church
^ Green-Bishop, Joseph (6 June 1993).
"Branch Davidians: Thinking About the Followers A Harvard-Trained Lawyer, Not a Mindless 'Fanatic' " .
Baltimore Sun . Retrieved 20 June 2023 .
^
"Chi McBride aims for a bull's eye with 'Human Target' " .
Newsday . Retrieved 22 June 2023 .
^
Brian McKnight Biography Encyclopedia.com Retrieved 16 August 2018
^
Brian McKnight fan page
Archived 25 August 2004 at the
Wayback Machine Retrieved 16 August 2018
^
Eighth Contestant Fired Reality TV World Retrieved 16 August 2018
^
2010 Spotlight Award:Cherie Priest
Archived 12 September 2018 at the
Wayback Machine Seattle Magazine Retrieved 23 February 2012
^
Damn
Archived 12 September 2018 at the
Wayback Machine The Haunt Retrieved 23 February 2012
^ O'Hagan, Sean (4 April 2004).
"Royal Blush" .
The Guardian . Retrieved 22 June 2023 .
^ Hill, Libby (22 April 2016).
"Prince practiced door-to-door evangelism" .
Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 22 June 2023 .
^
"I was not a well person" . The Guardian . 17 November 2000. Retrieved 4 February 2020 .
^
Hot Gallery Snakkle Retrieved 19 August 2012
^
Busta Rhymes Biography Encyclopedia.com Retrieved 16 August 2018
^ Cardwell, Cary (26 February 1994).
"Davidians At A Glance" .
United Press International . Retrieved 22 June 2023 .
^ Adams, Roy (5 February 2010).
"Nine Children Face an Angry Town" . Adventist Review . Retrieved 27 June 2023 .
^ Hahn, Heather (22 September 2007).
"Schooled in faith" .
Arkansas Democrat Gazette . Retrieved 27 June 2023 .
^ Lee, Steve.
"Fighting the system at 15 ... in 1957" .
Grand Forks Herald . Retrieved 27 June 2023 .
^
a
b Pitts, Bill.
"Lois Roden" .
World Religions and Spirituality Project . Retrieved 22 June 2023 .
^ Nkomo, Ndaba (9 April 2011).
"A day with Dumpling" . Mmegi . Retrieved 16 June 2016 .
^ McBride, Jessica (26 April 2020).
"Steve & Judy Schneider: Real Story of the Waco Characters" .
Heavy.com . Retrieved 21 June 2023 .
^
"Sirhan Sirhan" . BIOGRAPHY . Retrieved 30 May 2019 .
^
"Heinz Spanknoebel No Desperado, Only Ridiculous German" .
Jewish Telegraphic Agency . Retrieved 30 May 2019 .
^
"Sean Taylor Washington Redskins player murdered" . Adventist Review . Retrieved 5 April 2019 .
^ McPadden, Mike (28 September 2017).
"Roch Thériault: The Horrifying Savagery (& Home Surgery) Of Canada's Most Violent Cult Leader" .
Investigation Discovery . Retrieved 6 July 2023 .
^ Bovsun, Mara.
"Canadian 'messiah' formed horrifying doomsday cult after ulcer surgery left him with chronic pain" .
New York Daily News . Retrieved 6 July 2023 .
^ Arax, Mark (30 June 2005).
"Wesson Gets Death in 2004 Mass Murder" .
Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 3 April 2024 .
^
"Happy Birthday, Richard Wright!" . NewsOne . 4 September 2012. Retrieved 30 October 2019 .
External links
Media related to
Seventh-day Adventists at Wikimedia Commons