
Two Adventist Women Get Bachelor’s Degrees in the Middle East
God keeps calling men and women for ministry and mission, church leaders say.
Diói Cruz, MENAUM, and Adventist ReviewJul 7, 2026, 6:52 AM
For the first time in its 85-year history, two women from the Middle East and North Africa Union Mission (MENAUM) territory graduated from the Department of Theology at Middle East University (MEU)—one earning a Bachelor of Arts in Theology and the other in Religion. Their remarkable journeys bear witness to God’s continuing work in calling and preparing both women and men for ministry and mission across the MENAUM, regional leaders from the Seventh-day Adventist Church said.
Drawn to Jesus
One of these graduates is Lila,[*] from Lebanon. Although she attended an Adventist school in Beirut, she had never truly been introduced to the Adventist faith. Growing up, Lila loved church and faithfully attended Sunday school. Even as a child, she had a deep love for God and a curiosity about His Word. Yet it was not until one particular school year that God began leading her family in an unexpected way.
During that year a volunteer Bible teacher noticed Lila’s growing interest during Bible class and invited her to study the Bible personally. Without hesitation she gladly accepted. While other students spent recess in other ways, Lila spent her breaks studying the Bible through the It Is Written Bible Study Guides. Day by day her love for Scripture deepened. She became eager to learn, full of questions, and increasingly drawn to know Jesus more personally. Looking back, she believes the Holy Spirit was quietly working in her heart.

At the end of the school year, however, circumstances changed. Lila had to transfer schools, and the volunteer teacher returned to her home country. The Bible studies came to an end, and regular church attendance became difficult during a challenging season for the family. Yet the desire God had planted in her heart did not fade. Along with her mother, brother, and sister, Lila continued learning by watching evangelistic meetings online and holding on to the longing to return to church and continue studying God’s Word.
Then, about a year later, while driving with her mother to her grandmother’s house, something unexpected caught her attention. Lila noticed a billboard announcing an It Is Written evangelistic series taking place at the very school at which she had first learned about the Bible. Excited, she immediately recognized the speaker from the Bible study lessons and turned to her mother, saying, “Look! It’s the one who wrote our Bible studies!” They knew they had to attend.
Surrendering Her Life
Despite many difficulties God made a way for them to go night after night. Through those meetings, Lila, her mother, and her brother decided to give their lives to Jesus and were baptized. Later her sister also chose to be baptized. What began with one volunteer Bible teacher and simple Bible studies during recess became a story of transformation for an entire family.
Not long after that, Lila started studying in the faculty of theology at MEU with the desire to be fully equipped for God’s mission. Today, after graduating from MEU, Lila serves as a Bible teacher in the very school God first planted the seeds of faith in her heart. The same place that once helped lead her to Christ has now become her mission field. “I pray that other young people will discover the same joy, hope, and transformation that comes from loving, trusting, and walking with the Lord,” she said.
Trying to Understand God Better
The second graduate, Nila,* comes from a country in which sharing the Christian faith is extremely difficult. Her early years were impacted by her devout grandmother, who guided Nila and her siblings to pray and fast according to the requirements of their religion. Her journey to Christ began in the midst of profound grief. Within a short period of time she lost two brothers, one after the other.
Overwhelmed by sorrow, she could not understand how God could allow such tragedy to strike her family. She stopped praying, struggled to eat and sleep, and felt abandoned and hopeless. One night she came across an Instagram story about God’s timing and plan. Her initial reaction was negative, and she responded rather harshly.
She later visited the Telegram channel connected to that page, however, and listened to the story of Genesis accompanied by piano music. That night, after suffering from insomnia for a long time, she was finally able to fall asleep.
Later she saw another Instagram story encouraging people to read and study the Bible. This time she contacted them and began studying the Scriptures. After several months she had three remarkable dreams.

In one dream she was entrusted with something valuable that she had to protect and deliver safely to a certain place. In another dream she was given a book to guard. In yet another dream Nila was entrusted with a baby boy who would one day become a king, and she was responsible for protecting him and delivering the baby boy to another place.
A Call From God
Through God’s providence she eventually connected with a believer from her own country who was studying theology at MEU. While studying the Bible, she read Jesus’ words about those who leave their homes and families for the sake of the gospel, and immediately remembered her dreams. She began to wonder whether God was calling her to leave her city and dedicate her life to His service. As she prayed about it, she asked God for guidance.
Could it be that God was calling her to share an important message with others, and that her dreams were encouraging her to speak about the Bible? The future seemed uncertain, and Nila felt afraid and inadequate for such a responsibility. She asked God to help her if this was truly His calling.
Sometime later she had another dream. Nila saw herself standing on the water while many people around her were drowning. Beside her stood Jesus, also upon the water, holding her hands firmly in His own. She was horrified to see so many people drowning, but when she awoke, she felt a deep sense of assurance. She understood that God would help her share the message represented by the book and the child who would become king.
First Ministerial Worker in Her Country
From that moment on, Nila became confident that He would guide and strengthen her in the mission He was calling her to fulfill, and she eventually asked the Bible worker if she could prepare for pastoral ministry. The Bible worker patiently discipled her, studying the Bible with her and guiding her in her journey of faith. In time she accepted Jesus and was baptized.
Nila’s desire to know God more deeply led her to MEU, where she graduated in 2026. Now married, she and her husband are prayerfully preparing for the ministry God has called them to serve in together. She is the first Adventist prepared for ministry from her country.
These two young women represent much more than a historic graduation milestone, regional church leaders said. “They are living evidence that God is still calling workers from unexpected places, opening doors in challenging contexts, and raising up a new generation of disciples and ministers for His mission in the Middle East and North Africa,” they said. “Their stories remind us that no invitation is wasted, no dream is insignificant, and no heart is beyond the reach of God’s grace.”
The original article was published on the Adventist Review news site.
[*] Not their real names

Apr 17, 2026
Youth Leadership Summit Equips Young Leaders for Mission
Youth leaders gather to strengthen discipleship and prepare for active involvement in the global digital movement.
Loreto and Tubajon, two towns in the island province of Dinagat in northeastern Mindanao, Philippines, experienced a spirit of revival as youth directors from the Adventist churches in the Southwestern Philippines region (SWPUC) spearheaded an evangelistic campaign from August 11–16, 2025. The united outreach, supported by youth leaders from youth leaders in the Southern Asia-Pacific region (SSD), SWPUC, and the Northeastern Mindanao regional office (NeMM), culminated in the baptism of 40 individuals who chose to follow Christ.
The regional initiative calls members to unite through prayer, digital evangelism, and community outreach as part of the global mission movement leading to 2027.
Virgie Baloyo, Women’s Ministries Director of the Southern Asia-Pacific Division, addresses the delegation during a session at the Year-End Meetings. Her participation reflects the active role of women leaders in shaping the mission and administrative direction of the Adventist Church in the region.
GospelTruth.ai is for pastors and laypeople who wish to understand the Bible better, he said.
Blazes near Adventist facilities prompt emergency response amid dry season conditions
Educators in the Southwestern Philippines explore compassionate teaching, student well-being, and responsible digital habits in an increasingly connected world.

