Type | Religious/Non-Profit |
---|---|
Headquarters | Hosur, Tamil Nadu, India. |
Location |
|
Region served
|
India, Nepal and Bhutan. |
Official language
|
Hindi |
President
|
Ezras Lakra |
Parent organisation
|
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists |
Website | www.adventist.org/world_church/world_divisions/sud.html.en |
The Southern Asia Division (SUD) of Seventh-day Adventists is headquartered at Hosur, Tamil Nadu, India. It heads the activities of the Seventh-day Adventist Churches and its affiliated bodies in India, Nepal and Bhutan.
The current division leadership was elected at General Conference Session held on 2015 in San Antonio,Texas on 2015. Ezras Lakra was elected to serve as its President. On 2010, the Southern Asia Division of Seventh Day Adventists celebrated its 100 years of organised work as Division.
The affiliated bodies include educational institutions and medical institutions located all over India.
It is part of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, whose headquarters are located in Maryland, United States.
The Adventist presence in India began in the early 1890s. Progress was slow. By 1904, there were about 130 Adventists there. The church began with book sales and pamphlet distribution. Early endeavors also included medical work, schools, care of orphans, and zenana work. At first, converts were of European heritage. There were some among the Indian population. One of them, A. C. Mookerjee. He was the grandson of William Carey's first convert.
In 1900 the mission director, D. A. Robinson, died from smallpox. William A. Spicer, at thirty-five years old, became the director. He was editor of the Oriental Watchman, the first Adventist periodical to be published in a completely non-Christian land. His leadership of the field was brief. In 1901, while attending the General Conference, Spicer was appointed as the secretary of the Foreign Mission Board located in the United States. John L. Shaw took over the leadership of the India field. Shaw came from the principalship of the church's South African school at Cape Town. With a few brief absences, he remained in India for twenty-three years.