Edin Cornelius Alfsen


Edin Cornelius Kristoffersen Alfsen was a Norwegian-American Lutheran missionary affiliated with the Norwegian Mission Alliance. He was also the founder with the Norwegian Tibet Mission.
Born in Skogn to Kristoffer Alfsen and Brita Jonsdatter Hodlekje Alfsen, he was employed at Det norske diakonhjem and was later enrolled at the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago. He journeyed to China in 1922 and became affiliated with the Norwegian Mission Alliance in Zhangjiakou, Zhili, Longmen and Zhicheng for fourteen years. During 1925, Edin Cornelius Alfsen married Zoe Eathel Oakes in China. Edin established the Norwegian Tibet Mission during 1938 and formed a mission station at Dajianlu for six years until 1944.
In 1945, Edin worked at the Mayo Clinic in the United States from 1945 for thirteen years. He undertook a trip to Taiwan via Singapore, and later that year, to Batu Gajak in Malaysia where he established an independent mission named the South East Asia Bible Fellowship. He became a U.S. citizen in 1956.
Alfsen died on 1 August 1966 in Kasson, Minnesota.

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