South Pacific Division

The South Pacific Division Receives Priceless Bible Collection

Some of the gifted Bibles date back to the 14th and 15th centuries.

Australia

Tracey Bridcutt, Adventist Record
The South Pacific Division Receives Priceless Bible Collection

[Photo: Adventist Record]

The South Pacific Division of the Seventh-day Adventist Church has been gifted a priceless collection of historic and rare Bibles, some dating back as far as the 14th and 15th centuries.

The Bibles, carefully curated over decades by Polish pastor Henryk Patryarcha, now serve as both a spiritual resource and a historical treasure for the South Pacific.

Patryarcha’s journey as a collector began over 50 years ago with small finds in Poland’s attics and antiquarian bookshops, eventually expanding to include rare editions from across Europe. Despite facing financial challenges, his dedication never wavered. “I wore leaky shoes and torn trousers,” he recalled, “but I always had money for a Bible.”

Patryarcha didn’t collect the Bibles merely for his own interests—he wanted to share their significance with others. His first small exhibition, held in 1982 in Podkowa Les'na, at the Polish Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, was originally intended for the theology students. However, it attracted unexpected attention when a local priest brought a group of young people to see the Bibles. Patryarcha was encouraged by the interest in and enthusiasm for the collection.

“The Bible was—and is—a magnet,” he said. “Bibles opened the way for me not only to show interesting exhibits related to the Bible, but also to conduct conversations on religious topics,” he added.

Over time his exhibitions spread across Europe, held in churches, clubs, libraries and museums, reaching thousands of people. They provided opportunities to engage people with the history and reliability of the Bible.

“From the reports I received I know that many visitors became interested in the truth and joined the Adventist Church,” Patryarcha said. “I myself baptized two people who became acquainted with the biblical truth of the Church through a Bible exhibition.”

As Patryarcha grew older, he began to consider the future of his collection. He knew that in Europe there were many Bible museums and libraries, but Australia offered few opportunities for people to experience this kind of biblical history.

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In 2019, part of the collection was sent to Australia to feature in an evangelistic series conducted by John Bradshaw and Eric Flickinger in Victoria. In that same year, Patryarcha travelled to Australia to guide local leaders Roman Chalupka and Louis Bermudez on how to conduct Bible exhibitions. Chalupka and Bermudez went on to conduct about 100 Bible exhibitions across Victoria and New South Wales.

Patryarcha’s vision for the collection is clear: “My desire is that the Bibles, collected with great effort, will encourage people who view them to become interested not only in the Bible as a book and its history, but also in the Bible as the Word of God.”

The remainder of the collection has now arrived in Australia and features more than 200 Bibles, along with scrolls and stamps. “It is really exciting for the Division to receive this amazing collection of Bibles,” said Dr. Darius Jankiewicz, field and ministerial associate secretary for the South Pacific Division. “We hope to use them for evangelistic purposes as well, and eventually exhibit them in a purpose-built museum,” he said.

The collection is being processed and documented by the Adventist Heritage Centre team in Cooranbong. “It is our hope in the future that we will have a permanent home for these Bibles so that people from our Church and the general public can come and see this extraordinary collection,” said David Jones, Adventist Heritage director. “It can be a testament to how God’s Word has lasted through the centuries,” he concluded.

The original article was published on the South Pacific Division news site, Adventist Record.

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