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March 1 - Maud’s Missionary Journey

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    Maud Sisley Boyd
    was the first woman missionary
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    sent by the Seventh-day Adventist Church’s
    Foreign Mission Board.
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    Maud Sisley was born in 1851,
    in Kent, England.
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    After her father died,
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    her family went to the United States
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    where they learned about
    the Adventist message.
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    A visit by James and Ellen White
    convinced them
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    to relocate to church headquarters
    at Battle Creek, Michigan.
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    Maud was an Adventist member
    for 10 years
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    when she was called to serve
    as a missionary.
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    In 1877, she left for Europe
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    where she eventually served
    in Switzerland and England.
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    After several years in Europe,
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    Maud returned to the United States
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    in time to attend
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    the second annual session
    of the General Sabbath School Association
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    held in Battle Creek, Michigan.
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    Here she met another participant,
    the widower Charles L. Boyd.
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    The couple wed in 1879
    and had two daughters.
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    The Boyds went as part of the first group
    of Adventist missionaries
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    to Cape Town, South Africa.
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    Tragically, their youngest daughter,
    Ethel,
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    died at age three and a half in Africa.
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    The family remained in Africa
    for about four years
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    before returning to the United States.
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    They reached Battle Creek
    in time to attend
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    the 1891 General Conference Session.
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    At this General Conference Session,
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    Charles was asked to become president
    of the Tennessee River Conference,
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    located in Nashville, Tennessee.
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    The Boyds were early workers
    in the American South,
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    striving to break down racial barriers
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    in response to Ellen White’s call
    to do so.
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    They created a church that allowed
    both black and white members
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    to worship together.
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    In 1898, she and Charles were in Asheville,
    North Carolina, when Charles died.
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    After his death, Ellen White invited
    Maud and her family to Australia
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    to assist with the newly formed
    Avondale School.
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    Maud was “highly respected as a teacher.”
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    She spent nine years there.
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    Her daughter, Ella,
    went as a missionary to Tonga.
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    When her sister fell ill,
    Maud returned to Massachusetts
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    to be closer to her
    while continuing to conduct Bible work.
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    During the last 17 years of her life,
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    she served as a Bible teacher
    at the Loma Linda
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    and Glendale Sanitariums in California.
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    She spent one school year teaching
    at Oakwood Junior College in Alabama.
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    After her sister died,
    she returned to Australia
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    to live with her daughter, Ella.
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    Here she died in 1937
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    and was buried next to her mother
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    in the Avondale Adventist Cemetery
    in Cooranbong, New South Wales.
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    Maud Sisley Boyd spent her life
    in service to others,
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    and her legacy lives on to this day.
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    For more stories about
    pioneer missionaries,
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    visit: encyclopedia.adventist.org
Title:
March 1 - Maud’s Missionary Journey
Description:

Maud Sisley Boyd was the first woman missionary sent by the Seventh-day Adventist Church's Foreign Mission Board. She dedicated her life to sharing her faith around the world, and her legacy of service and commitment continues to inspire today.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Team Adventist
Project:
Mission Spotlight DVD
Duration:
02:52

English subtitles

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