B
orn January 13, 1891, in Battle Creek, Michigan, John Nevins Andrews was the namesake of his grandfather who served as the first Seventh-day Adventist overseas missionary.
In the spring of 1916, Andrews was completing his medical training at George Washington University. His girlfriend, Dorothy, was a nursing student at Washington Sanitarium. Dorothy was born in India, where her parents, William and Georgia Spicer, had served as missionaries.
It was generally considered unacceptable to marry while still in school, so the adventurous couple hatched a plan. They dropped Dorothy’s mother off at a concert in Washington, DC, telling her they would pick her up later. Then they drove to Baltimore and found a minister to marry them. When they picked up Dorothy’s mother, they told her the news and swore her to secrecy until later. Within a few weeks of graduating, they set sail for China where they spent a year in Shanghai learning Chinese.
“For one brought up in a home such as mine, the natural consequence was to prepare for, and expect to go to a mission field,” Dorothy wrote. “To go out and work for ourselves, for our own advancement, simply never occurred to us.”
From Shanghai, John and Dorothy traveled to Chungking (Chongqing) in Southwest China. It was a 1,300-mile trip by boat, foot, and sedan chair and where their first child, Robert, was born in 1917. The couple served there for more than two years, but their hearts were set on going to the mission frontier of Tibet.
In 1918, Andrews went on an exploratory trip with a fellow missionary to Tatsienlu (Kangding). Located on the Tibetan border, it was where he hoped to establish a mission clinic. Despite being shot at by robbers, they reached their destination and arrived safely back in Chungking.
On June 10, 1919, the family embarked on the same journey, using a large houseboat to carry their belongings. Within seven miles of their final port, their boat was wrecked. All their goods, including food, clothes, and books—were thoroughly drenched.
In the Tibetan border region, conversion to the Christian religion was forbidden, a crime punishable by death. Largely because of his surgical skills, Andrews gained the trust of the Tibetans who came to his clinic.
Andrews also produced the first Adventist literature in Tibetan. Tatsienlu was a major hub for the tea trade. Through acquaintances made with traders who came to the clinic, he sent gospel tracts across the border sewn up in packages of tea.
John and Dorothy had four more children while serving in China. Tragically, during their first furlough home in 1923, their five-month-old baby, Judy, died of whooping cough. Despite this heartbreak, they returned to Tatsienlu the following year, where a sentiment against foreigners was beginning to grow.
In 1926, the family was forced to flee. It was the middle of winter, and they traveled over treacherous mountain passes to Chengdu. From there, they headed to Chungking by bamboo raft and boat. They arrived in the middle of the night, and across the river, they could see the city on fire. They found refuge in the American consulate until they found passage on a steamer to Shanghai. There they remained until 1928 when the family undertook another perilous journey back to Tatsienlu. They continued serving there until 1932, when they felt it was time to return to America.
Andrews passed away on October 20, 1980, aged 89. Dorothy passed away on April 17, 1979, aged 86. They rest together at the Montecito Memorial Park in Colton, California, awaiting the return of Jesus.