1. William G. Johnsson

    William G. Johnsson (b. 1934) is a Seventh-day Adventist editor and church leader. Born in Australia he earned a degree in chemical technology before attending Avondale where he met his wife Nolene Johnsson. Johnsson earned his Th.D. in theology from Vanderbilt University. His dissertation was entitled "Defilement and Purgation in the Book of Hebrews." He served as a missionary to India at Vincent Hill School and Spicer College.

  2. Uriah Smith

    Uriah Smith (May 2, 1832 - Mar 6, 1903) was a Seventh-day Adventist author and editor who worked for the "Review and Herald" (now the "Adventist Review") for 50 years.

  3. Kenneth H. Wood

    Kenneth H. Wood, Jr. (b. 1917) is a Seventh-day Adventist minister, author, editor, and administrator. Since 1980 he has has served as chairman of the Ellen G. White Estate board of trustees. By virtue of this position he also serves as an "ex officio" member of the General Conference Executive Committee. Wood graduated from Pacific Union College in 1938. In 1955 he became associate editor of the "Review and Herald" (now the "Adventist Review").

  4. Francis D. Nichol

    Francis David Nichol was a Seventh-day Adventist editor, author, and leading twentieth-century apologist for the prophetic ministry of Ellen G. White. Born in Australia, Nichol's parents became Adventists after reading a discarded copy of the "Review and Herald" (now the "Adventist Review"). In 1905 his family emigrated to Loma Linda, California, and later graduated from Pacific Union College.

  5. Raymond Cottrell

    Raymond Forrest Cottrell was a Seventh-day Adventist theologian. He was an associate editor of both the "Adventist Review" and the "Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary". He also served in an editorial role for "Adventist Today", was a consulting editor to "Spectrum" magazine, and published many articles of his own.

  6. Herbert E. Douglass

    Herbert Edgar Douglass, Jr. was born in Springfield, MA in 1927, the oldest of five children (all sons) to Herbert Edgar Douglass Sr (1904–1983) and Mildred Jennie Munson (1908–1988). Douglass is a Seventh-day Adventist theologian, earning his Doctorate in Theology at Pacific School of Religion in 1964. From 1954–1957 Douglass wrote commentaries for five books for, and served on the staff that edited, the "Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary".

  7. James Springer White

    James Springer White (August 4, 1821, Palmyra, Maine - August 6 1881, Battle Creek, Michigan), also known as Elder White was a co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church and husband of Ellen G. White. White's contributions to the denomination were rather notable, …

  8. John Byington

    John Byington was a Seventh-day Adventist minister and the first president of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. His father, Justus, was a soldier in the American Revolutionary War, an itinerant Methodist Episcopal preacher, and later one of the founders of the Methodist Protestant Church, becoming an early president of its Vermont Conference. At 7 years of age John first came under the conviction of sin, and at 18 (1816) was converted.

  9. Francis M. Wilcox

    Francis McLellan Wilcox (1865-1951) was a Seventh-day Adventist minister, administrator and editor of the "Review and Herald" (now the "Adventist Review") for 33 years. He was an early student of South Lancaster Academy (today Atlantic Union College). After graduation he spent four years in evangelism in New York (1886-1890). On July 16, 1889, he was ordained at the Rome, New York, camp meeting presided over by Ellen G. White.

  10. John Norton Loughborough

    John Norton Loughborough was an early Seventh-day Adventist minister. One well known quote by Loughborough appeared in an October 8, 1861 "Review and Herald" article (now the "Adventist Review"), in which he was quoted speaking against the formation of creeds: :"The first step of apostasy is to get up a creed, telling us what we shall believe. The second is, to make that creed a test of fellowship. The third is to try members by that creed.

  11. Annie R. Smith

    Annie Rebekah Smith (March 16, 1828 - July 26, 1855) An early Seventh-day Adventist hymnist, she was the sister of the early Adventist pioneer, Uriah Smith. She has ten hymns in the current Seventh-day Adventist Church Hymnal She died of tuberculosis. Some of the hymns she authored include: * How Far from Home? * I Saw One Weary * Long upon the Mountains Subsequent to having written and submitted a poem to the "Review and Herald" (now "Adventist Review"), …

  12. Mark Kellner

    Mark A. Kellner became news editor in April, 2007. He came to the Adventist Review from a business publishing unit of the Gannett Company. Prior to joining Gannett, Mark served from February, 2003, to October, 2006, as assistant director for news and information of the General Conference. In 2007, Mark celebrates 35 years of writing for publication, beginning with a stamp collecting column for his hometown weekly newspaper.