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Laura del Carmen Flores Dias, 23, is now a graduate student at Navojoa University in Mexico. (Andrew McChesney / Adventist Mission)

Adventist Student Pays Tuition With Faith in Mexico

Laura del Carmen Flores Dias promised God to become a Bible teacher if He covered her tuition.

By Andrew McChesney, adventistmission.org

Laura’s life has been filled with surprises in Mexico.

When Laura del Carmen Flores Dias was 10 years old, she went to a friend’s house expecting a big party. Instead, she wound up at a small-group Bible study.

She liked the Bible studies so much that she attended for a year and then started going to the Seventh-day Adventist church on Sabbath.

When she asked to be baptized after the church conducted an evangelistic series, the church members replied that she needed more Bible studies, that her parents were not Adventists, and that she was only 11.

In the end, they agreed that she could be baptized.

When Laura finished high school, she wanted to enter an Adventist university but lacked the money for the tuition. Her desire to learn from Adventist teachers only grew when her pastor told her that Adventist universities offered Bible classes. She began to dream about becoming a Bible teacher.

Laura made a deal with God. She prayed, “If You let me study at an Adventist university, I will become a high school Bible teacher. But if You don’t let me study, I will work now, get married, and study later.”

God answered her prayer. She was accepted for the first semester even though she only had enough to pay for half the tuition. She worked as a housekeeper to earn extra money. The next semester, she received a full scholarship, and four years later she graduated debt-free with a degree in family science.

Realizing that God had answered her prayer, Laura kept her promise to study to become a high school Bible teacher. But again she had no money for tuition.

Laura sent letters seeking a scholarship to two Adventist universities. Both wrote back that she should consider becoming a literature evangelist to earn her tuition.

Laura didn’t mind working, but she wanted an indication from God about which university to choose. She knew it was difficult to find a job that would cover her full tuition, so

she prayed, “I’ll go to the university where You give me a job.”

Four days after her university graduation, Laura received a letter from Navojoa University. “We have a job for you, and you can enroll anytime,” the letter said.

Laura didn’t have the money to travel to the university. But when her classmates heard about her plight, they put their own money together to pay for her trip to the university.

Laura, now 23, is a graduate student at Navojoa University and looking forward to teaching the Bible to high school students.

Her favorite Bible verse is James 1:12, which says, Blessed is the man who endures temptation; for when he has been approved, he will receive the crown of life which the Lord has promised to those who love Him” (NKJV)

“We have many trials as young people,” she said. “But we always can overcome them with God’s help. God will give to those who love Him the ability to overcome all trials.”

Laura’s life has been filled with surprises, and she likes it that way.

Her advice to other students who don’t have money for an Adventist education is to trust God.

“God is the owner of everything,” she said. “He will provide not only what you need but even more than that if you trust Him.”


Part of the Thirteenth Sabbath Offering in first quarter 2018 will help the Seventh-day Adventist hospital in Laura’s hometown of Villahermosa expand with a building that will offer new health services to the community. Thank you for your mission offerings.