Teenage trailblazers

Jarrod Stackelroth: Imagine being 16 years
old with nothing but a worn pair of boots,

a Bible in your hand, and the conviction
that God is calling you to preach.

No car, no microphone,
no paycheck waiting.

Just muddy roads, long walks,
and a burning message you

can't keep to yourself.

That's what the first Young
Adventist missionaries did.

And their courage carried the
gospel across countries and

eventually across continents.

After the great disappointment
of 1844, most people assumed

the movement would die.

Many walked away from their faith,
but a small group stayed and they

didn't just recover, they expanded.

They believed Jesus was still coming and
that he had given them a message to share.

. There were no cars, no microphones,
no smartphones, no hotels waiting

with clean sheets and free breakfast.

Just fields, mud, horse drawn
wagons, . And the quiet conviction that

the world needed to hear the truth.

Let's start with John Norton.

Loughborough.

He was just 16 years old when he
started preaching, not in cathedrals

or crowded auditoriums, but under
trees, on porches and in open fields.

He often worked in exchange for
a meal or a dry place to sleep.

He'd traveled through the American
Midwest with worn shoes and a strong

voice preaching about the Sabbath, the
sanctuary, and the soon return of Christ.

Loughborough wasn't in
it for fame or comfort.

He once said, I would preach if I had to
walk to the edge of my shoes every day.

Then there was John Nevins Andrews
another young leader, known for his

deep study and his clear writing.

At just 20 years old, he helped shape
Adventist theology on topics like the

Sabbath and the Heavenly Sanctuary.

He didn't just believe he researched.

He'd copy entire chapters of scripture
by hand just to study them more closely.

But Andrews didn't stop at books.

In 1874, he became the first
official overseas missionary for

the Adventist Church sailing with
his two children to Switzerland.

They lived, simply slept on the floor,
ate what they could afford, and printed

truth in a second language because the
gospel didn't belong to one country.

When asked what he needed for the
trip, Andrews reportedly said,

I am willing to go with nothing
but my Bible, and he meant it.

These weren't isolated stories
across the US and beyond.

Young Adventist missionaries traveled
on horseback or foot holding camp

meetings, printing leaflets, knocking
on doors, and opening small churches.

They studied by Lanin, light, slept in
barns, baptized people in freezing rivers.

Sometimes they were mocked.

Ignored or went hungry, but they
kept going because to them Jesus

was coming soon and no sacrifice
was too big to make that known.

It's tempting to think that mission
only happens when everything is in

place, when there's enough money,
enough training, the right building, the

right timing, but those early Adventist
missionaries had almost nothing.

And God used every step they took.

They didn't wait for
the perfect conditions.

They just said yes and moved.

Today the world looks different,
but the core truth remains.

God is still looking for people willing
to walk the extra mile, still calling

young hearts to rise, still opening
doors where his message can be heard.

You don't need to be an expert.

You don't need perfect
boots or perfect words.

You just need the courage to keep going.

Episode six.

Teenage Trailblazers

Read by Jared Stack Roth.

Teenage trailblazers
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