Women in leadership: In the beginnings of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in South America
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About this ebook
This work recounts the story of some of those women. All of them have been women of faith, with their struggles and heartaches, but also with hope and victories in Christ. Their lives, their dedication and their leadership inspired in others an intense longing to be sons and daughters of God. Their passion for doing good and honouring God gave fruits that today leave us indebted to them.
It is the author's desire that this book doesn't just fill a historic void, but that it motivates and inspires the development of all the potential of the woman filled with the Spirit of God that she may reflect His grace and mercy towards human beings.
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Women in leadership - Silvia Scholtus
Women in Leadership
in the beginnings of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in South America
Silvia C. Scholtus
Translation: Margarita A. Biaggi
Women in Leadership in the beginnings of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in South America
Scholtus de Roscher, Silvia
Título original: Liderazgo femenino en los inicios de la Iglesia Adventista del Séptimo Día en la División Sudamericana
Autora: Silvia C. Scholtus
Traductora: Margarita A. Biaggi
Dirección editorial: Rafael Paredes, Editorial Universidad Adventista del Plata
Edición editorial: Anabel Caro
Corrección editorial: Viviana Marsollier, Editorial Universidad Adventista del Plata
Diseño de tapa: Mauro Perasso
Diseño y diagramación: Pamela Alcover
Ebook: Mariel Mambretti
Imagen de tapa: © Shutterstock
© Es propiedad de Editorial Universidad Adventista del Plata, (2019)
MMXIX - 100
EDITORIAL UNIVERSIDAD ADVENTISTA DEL PLATA
25 de Mayo 99, Libertador San Martín,
E3103XAC Entre Ríos, ARGENTINA
Teléfono: 54 343 4918000, Int. 1230
Fax: 54 343 4918001
E-mail: direccioneditorial@uap.edu.ar
Web site: www.uap.edu.ar/publicaciones
La Editorial Universidad Adventista del Plata es miembro de
Red de Editorialesde Universidades Privadas
Scholtus de Roscher, Silvia
Women in leadership in the beginnings of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in South America / Silvia Scholtus de Roscher. - 1a ed . - Libertador San Martín : Universidad Adventista del Plata, 2019.
Libro digital, EPUB - (Serie pioneros / Plenc, Daniel Oscar)
Archivo Digital: descarga y online
Traducción de: Margarita A. Biaggi.
ISBN 978-987-765-031-0
1. Historia. 2. Liderazgo. 3. Iglesia Adventista. I. Biaggi, Margarita A., trad. II. Título.
CDD 200.9
Índice analítico
1 Towards a More Vital Church
Why tell stories?
Stories connect people
Stories define who we are
Stories provide meaning to our experiences
Stories are theological autobiographies
The stories of these people create hope
Each story is a gift, a treasure in the world
2 Introduction
3 Historical Context
4 Mary Thurston-Westphal: Love is Known in Self-denial and Sacrifice
Who was Mary?
Return to the United States
What was Mary’s legacy?
5 Lucy post: First Bible Instructor in South America
A mission
A brave and selfless woman
Conversion, and preparation for mission
Leadership and dedication to God’s service
Her last years
Untiring evangelist
6 Sadie R. Graham-Town: Busy in the Things of the Lord
Arrival in South America
Responsibilities and tasks
Return to the United States
New activities in South America
Last years
Her legacy
7 Luisa Post-Everist: Administrator, Teacher and Writer
One of the first converts in Uruguay
A little bit of her life
Her legacy
8 Lydia Green-Oppegard: Writer and Editor of Adventists Papers
Beginnings
How she met the adventists
Her first labors as a missionary
Her later years
Her legacy
9 Elvira Deggeller: Colporteur and Evangelist
Background and training
Her legacy
10 Cecilia Degeller: Missionary and Pioneer in Argentina, Paraguay, Bolivia, Perú and Uruguay
Background and preparation
Her labour as missionary
Her last years
Her legacy
11 Meda Kerr: A Pioneer of the Health Work in Uruguay
Initial activities
Missionary in South America
Her last years
Her legacy
12 With the Eyes on the Transcendent
What remains to be done
1
Towards a More Vital Church
I have the interesting task of working to disseminate the history of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. One fact became clear to me as I taught History of the Church at different times and to various groups of schools and churches in South America: it is probable that the reality of the Adventist Church today would be very different without the fearlessness of men and women of the past that embraced by faith the Gospel of Jesus and surrendered all to spread it.
In this small book I would like to highlight two important things. First of all, some actors have been overlooked when telling the story. I am referring particularly to the work of women as evangelists, teachers, health promoters and more. To forget their legacy projects in us a devoid future. To rescue their valuable contribution motivates us to follow their example and to think about the empowerment the Spirit of God can give to all who accept the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
Why tell stories?
Why tell stories? God comunicates with us telling us the story of how He relates with human beings. The stories in the Bible are testimonies of life. Those stories are there to make us think about the work of the Spirit of God among humans. But the work of God in the heart of humans and his mission does not end there, it extends to our present time. This book seeks to listen to the stories of those who in the past have been susceptible to the voice of the Holy Spirit and have been co-workers with God in his mission. This opens up a window for us to see how others saw themselves and what they did. There are various reasons why it is important to read or listen to other tell their stories.
Stories connect people
Above all, stories create a community. So it was with Gëorg Riffel. He arrived in Argentina as an immigrant, but the economic hardships that locust brought to the harvest led him to migrate to the United States where one of his brothers had established himself with his family. Both attended some meetings in Kansas, United States, given by Adventists and accepted their beliefs. His heart was burning with this hope and he communicated with his friends who had stayed in Argentina. One of them, Reinhardt Hetze commented in a letter that he would be willing to accept these beliefs if there were other believers who accompanied him. So it was that Gëorg returned to Argentina and brought with him other families of self-supporting missionaries to share their testimonies of life and relationship with Jesus. And so the families of Osvald and Eva Frick, August Yanke and wife and Adam and Eve Zimmermann arrived also. It was when they shared their stories that they wrote history with other people. It was when they developed shared experiences that they made friendships. They sought common experiences and related at those levels. That is how these missionaries created a bond with the people who lived at their missionary destination, and they found hearts willing to accept de Gospel. Every nation and every culture are connected by the stories lived together. And the first Seventh-day Adventist Church in the South American Division was formed with these first self-supporting missionaries in the lands of the Crespo Campo area, in the province of Entre Ríos, Argentina.
Stories define who we are
The first missionaries identified themselves as Seventh-day Adventist christians. In their narratives they defined the importance for them of believing in the sure hope of the coming of Jesus. That was what redefined the new situations they encountered. The first missionary families arrived to share their story with the friends they had left years before and their boldness brought new challenges to the Adventist Church. They started to write to the General Conference requesting they send more missionaries. It was then that this story became the book from which other people could learn about decisions, successes, failures, attitudes and more.
Stories provide meaning to our experiences
Past circumstances help to explain our present experiences and give meaning to our existence. Thus, common experiences lived with other persons gives shape to our own history. And so it was with the first missionaries. As they told about the challenge of reaching different places of the vast South American territory, the General Conference decided to send other missionaries. In 1891 the first colporteurs arrived in South America, Clair Nowlen, Elwin Snyder and Albert Stauffer. Later, in 1893, Richard Craig arrived to be in charge of a book depot and the work of the colporteurs. Craig and family set up home in Buenos Aires. They made the first attempts to establish in their own home, a school for their children and others interested in receiving education. In this way, each missionary started to put their story side by side with the story of others, as when we pile bricks, and start to give shape to what today we know of the Church and which is part of our lives. Our past helps us to make sense of our present, and that can strengthen us to choose a better future. The stories of others help us to not feel alone with ours. Last year’s events, even of yesterday, are part of our own drama. In fact, someone said that the only way to repeat the mistakes we sometime made is to forget the past.
Stories are theological autobiographies
For those who believe in God, stories tell how the Word became flesh in each one. They tell about God’s presence in the tragedies and celebrations of life. Our story is inscribed in the great narrative of the cosmic conflict —the novel of redemption—. Our life is a very important chapter and that puts our life in perspective. When we have the advantage of the past, we see God’s plan is overwhelming. The part our life has to play gives us hope and meaning in tragedy and sorrow, and gives courage to move forward.
The zeal of the first missionaries was passed on to others to extend the good news in distant lands. Not all missionaries where young. I remember Lucy Belinda Post who became the first single woman who volunteered her services to go to South America. She was inspired by the stories she heard of the missionaries in South America. Although she was almost fifty, Lucy did not hesitate to accept the challenge. Lucy arrived in the month of July of 1895, in mid winter. Shortly after her arrival, Lucy spent some time with her brother Zina’s family in Nueva Palmira, Uruguay. After five weeks, on August 31, 1895, Lucy organized the first Adventist congregation in that country: a Sabbath School of more than twenty interested persons whom she had visited since her arrival.
The stories of these people create hope
While we listen to the stories of other people, we can accept and affirm God’s presence in their lives and in ours. This confirms in us the power of hope. Hope enables us to shift our gaze from our own pain and fix it on God. He helps us to overcome those times affirming our hope in Him by the stories of others and our own.
That is why the Adventist Church takes care of sharing and carrying hope to those who suffer in this