August 2, 2016

Working at Adventist Hospital Leads to Baptism

When Judith Mufuh sat down to watch a film about the Seventh-day Adventist Church for her new job, she had no idea how profoundly it would impact her life.

Mufuh had recently started working as a chaplain at an Adventist-run hospital in the U.S. state of Maryland, and her manager, Dr. Shelvan Arunan, gave her the film, Martin Doblmeier’s “The Adventists,” to learn more about the faith-based roots of the hospital.

“When the video ended, my husband and I sat in silence and awe of how inspiring and moving it was,” Mufuh said. “Having studied theology, I was familiar with the history of many denominations, but I was very intrigued by the uniqueness of the Adventist faith.”

Arunan, executive director of Mission Integration and Spiritual Care at Adventist HealthCare Shady Grove Medical Center in the city of Rockville, gives every employee who enters his department the video to help them better understand the mission of Adventists.

“After they watch the video, we meet and talk because I want them to comprehend who Adventists are and what our mission is truly about,” he said.

Mufuh, who was raised Lutheran, was also curious because her goddaughter had had a positive experience with the Adventist faith.

“She had recently married an Adventist man and told me how warm and welcoming the church had been to her,” she said. “I trust my goddaughter very much, so after watching the video and thinking about her experience, I was curious and wanted to know more.”

Judith began asking questions. So many, in fact, that Arunan provided her with more videos and books, and they began having regular Bible studies.

Eventually, Mufuh met Arunan’s wife, Rajee, who invited her to visit an Adventist church in the community.

“When I met Rajee, she was beyond goodness, and so friendly and nonjudgmental,” Mufuh said.

Mufuh and her family attended services at various churches in the area before connecting with Hyattsville church in Prince George’s County, Maryland.

“The moment I walked into the church, I remember thinking that it felt like home,” she said. “Later on, when I learned the mission of the church is ‘A Place that Feels Like Home,’ I knew it was going to be part of my path.”

It was important to Judith that her husband and four sons had input, too. When her children expressed an enthusiasm to attend church, they agreed as a family that it was time to join.

“It has been the most blessed, wonderful journey I have ever had,” Mufuh said. “It’s a sense of peace and calm that I had not experienced for a long time, and it’s beautiful to have people who surround you and understand you.”

She and her husband, Christopher, were baptized into the Seventh-day Adventist faith on Dec. 26, 2015.

Judith said her experience has enabled her to better connect with her patients on a spiritual level.

“I want them to leave the hospital feeling that they are not alone and that there is something special and unique about Adventist HealthCare and its employees,” Mufuh said. “The ability to hold someone’s hand without judgment and journey with them is very powerful.”

Arunan said that he was simply doing his job and, because Mufuh was curious, he helped her study and answered her questions.

“We do the best we can, but God does the rest,” he said.

For Mufuh, his guidance was invaluable in her journey.

“The most amazing thing was just coming for a job and not knowing how it would change my life,” she said. “Dr. Arunan didn’t push me. He just let me experience the goodness of God and, when that takes place, it transforms.

“Sometimes all it takes is one person to inspire change.”

Watch Judith Mufuh tell her story. (Adventist HealthCare / Columbia Union Visitor)

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