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Frontier Missions is a Christian missiological term referring to the natural pioneering of the gospel among ethno-cultural and ethno-linguistic population segments where there is no indigenous church. The phrase was originally used with reference to Roman Catholic, and later Protestant, mission stations in the Western United States.
The Inter-American Division of Seventh-day Adventists is a sub-entity of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, which oversees the Church's work in Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean, and Northern South America.
Anglican Frontier Missions is an American-based Christian mission organization that "To plant biblically-based, indigenous churches where the church is not, among the 2 billion people and 6,000+ unreached people groups still waiting to hear the Gospel for the very first time."
The title of this article could just as well be "Seventh-day Adventist independent ministries" or "Independent Seventh-day Adventist ministries". In in-house speak, "independent ministries" is the abbreviation most used. The currently title makes it sound like the ministries belong to "the Seventh-day Adventist Church".
1 paragraph Academy; Advanced Bible School; Advent Christian Church; Adventist Frontier Mission or AFM; Adventist Health Systems or AHS; Adventist International Institute of Advanced Studies or AIIAS; Adventist Media Center or AMC; Adventist Review; Adventist Society for Religious Studies or ASRS; Adventist Theological Society or ATS; Adventist Today; Adventist University of the Philippines or ...
The South American Division (SAD) of Seventh-day Adventists is a sub-entity of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, which oversees the Church's work in most of South America, which includes the nations of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Peru, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
William Ambrose Spicer (December 19, 1865 – October 17, 1952) was a Seventh-day Adventist minister and president of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. [1] He was born December 19, 1865, in Freeborn, Minnesota, in the United States in a Seventh Day Baptist home. [2]
In 1969 under the direction of John Freeman a commercial photographer, a group of Seventh-day Adventist volunteers flew to the Bahamas to build a church [4] This idea expanded to other projects involving volunteers flying their private planes to locations to build churches and was organized into Maranatha Flights International based in Berrien Springs, Michigan.