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www.adventistreview.org<br />

March 21, 2013<br />

A Faith of Don’ts?<br />

Church to Receive $45<br />

Million in Reparations<br />

The Perfect 10<br />

6<br />

8<br />

14<br />

People leave the <strong>Adventist</strong> Church only because they’ve had a bad<br />

experience, right? Not anymore. A new study indicates that more and<br />

more church members are leaving because they’ve changed their beliefs.


“Behold, I come quickly . . .”<br />

Our mission is to uplift Jesus Christ by presenting stories of His<br />

matchless love, news of His present workings, help for knowing<br />

Him better, and hope in His soon return.<br />

18 24 8 6<br />

COVER FEATURE<br />

18 Beyond Belief<br />

Andy Nash<br />

Do those who leave the <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

Church still consider<br />

themselves <strong>Adventist</strong>s?<br />

ARTICLES<br />

14 The Perfect 10<br />

Cecilia Luck<br />

A young adult’s take on<br />

the Ten Commandments<br />

24 One (Happy) Meal<br />

With a Pie on the Side<br />

Leonora Spencer<br />

The word “compassion”<br />

takes on a whole<br />

different meaning.<br />

DEPARTMENTS<br />

4 Letters<br />

7 Page 7<br />

8 World News &<br />

Perspectives<br />

13 Give & Take<br />

17 Cliff’s Edge<br />

2 3 Back to Basics<br />

EDITORIALS<br />

6 Wilona Karimabadi<br />

A Faith of Don’ts?<br />

7 Lael Caesar<br />

Righteousness<br />

ON THE COVER<br />

We used to say, “Once an<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong>, always an <strong>Adventist</strong>.”<br />

New research is showing<br />

that’s no longer true.<br />

26 In the Wilderness:<br />

The Epidemic<br />

Gerald A. Klingbeil<br />

The children of Israel<br />

lose their focus, then<br />

find it again.<br />

29 Etc.<br />

30 Journeys With Jesus<br />

31 Reflections<br />

Next Week<br />

A Poem in Progress<br />

What to do when signs<br />

seem to indicate we’re going<br />

in the wrong direction.<br />

Publisher General Conference of Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong>s ® , Executive Publisher Bill Knott, Associate Publisher Claude Richli, Publishing Board: Ted N. C. Wilson, chair; Benjamin D. Schoun,<br />

vice chair; Bill Knott, secretary; Lisa Beardsley-Hardy; Daniel R. Jackson; Robert Lemon; Geoffrey Mbwana; G. T. Ng; Daisy Orion; Juan Prestol; Michael Ryan; Ella Simmons; Mark Thomas; Karnik<br />

Doukmetzian, legal adviser. Editor Bill Knott, Associate Editors Lael Caesar, Gerald A. Klingbeil, Coordinating Editor Stephen Chavez, Online Editor Carlos Medley, Features Editor Sandra<br />

Blackmer, Young Adult Editor Kimberly Luste Maran, KidsView Editor Wilona Karimabadi, News Editor Mark A. Kellner, Operations Manager Merle Poirier, Financial Manager Rachel<br />

Child, Editorial Assistant Marvene Thorpe-Baptiste, Assistant to the Editor Gina Wahlen, Marketing Director Claude Richli, Editor-at-Large Mark A. Finley, Senior Advisor E. Edward<br />

Zinke, Art Director Bryan Gray, Design Daniel Añez, Desktop Technician Fred Wuerstlin, Ad Sales Glen Gohlke, Subscriber Services Steve Hanson. To Writers: Writer’s guidelines are available<br />

at the <strong>Adventist</strong> <strong>Review</strong> Web site: www.adventistreview.org and click “About the <strong>Review</strong>.” For a printed copy, send a self-addressed envelope to: Writer’s Guidelines, <strong>Adventist</strong> <strong>Review</strong>, 12501 Old<br />

Columbia Pike, Silver Spring, MD 20904-6600. E-mail: revieweditor@gc.adventist.org. Web site: www.adventistreview.org. Postmaster: Send address changes to <strong>Adventist</strong> <strong>Review</strong>, 55 West Oak<br />

Ridge Drive, Hagerstown, MD 21740-7301. Unless otherwise noted, Bible texts in this issue are from the Holy Bible, New International Version. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc. Used by<br />

permission. All rights reserved worldwide. Unless otherwise noted, all photos are © Thinkstock 2013. The <strong>Adventist</strong> <strong>Review</strong> (ISSN 0161-1119), published since 1849, is the general paper of<br />

the Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong> ® Church. It is published by the General Conference of Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong>s ® and is printed 36 times a year on the second, third, and fourth<br />

Thursdays of each month by the <strong>Review</strong> and Herald ® Publishing Association, 55 West Oak Ridge Drive, Hagerstown, MD 21740. Periodical postage paid at Hagerstown, MD<br />

21740. Copyright © 2013, General Conference of Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong>s ® . PRINTED IN THE U.S.A. Vol. 190, No. 8<br />

Subscriptions: Thirty-six issues of the weekly <strong>Adventist</strong> <strong>Review</strong>, US$36.95 plus US$28.50 postage outside North America. Single copy US$3.00. To order, send your name, address, and<br />

payment to <strong>Adventist</strong> <strong>Review</strong> subscription desk, Box 1119, Hagerstown, MD 21741-1119. Orders can also be placed at <strong>Adventist</strong> Book Centers. Prices subject to change. Address changes:<br />

addresschanges@rhpa.org. OR call 1-800-456-3991, or 301-393-3257. Subscription queries: shanson@rhpa.org. OR call 1-800-456-3991, or 301-393-3257.<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (227) 3


inbox<br />

Letters From Our Readers<br />

Must Love God<br />

»»<br />

Thank you for printing<br />

Kimberly Luste Maran’s article<br />

“Must Love God” (Feb. 14,<br />

2013). After I lost my wife to<br />

cancer, someone suggested<br />

an <strong>Adventist</strong> online dating<br />

site. I appreciated the ease<br />

that I could “check out” the<br />

938 women between the ages<br />

of 52 and 72 who had registered.<br />

I was given a percentage<br />

of how close they came to<br />

what I was looking for in a<br />

wife. I told the Lord that I<br />

was too old for this dating<br />

thing—I asked Him to just<br />

pick someone out for me. He<br />

picked out Linda, and we are<br />

very happily married. I am so<br />

glad that we spent a great<br />

deal of time writing and talking<br />

on the phone before we<br />

actually met. In this way we<br />

had learned enough about<br />

each other before “chemistry”<br />

was brought into the<br />

relationship.<br />

I lived in Oregon, and<br />

Linda lived in Virginia, so<br />

there was little chance that<br />

we would otherwise ever<br />

meet. We both prayed the<br />

“scary prayer”—if this relationship<br />

would bring glory<br />

to God, bless it. If not, break<br />

us up.<br />

We wanted our marriage<br />

to be more than just two<br />

people having a wedding. We<br />

wanted a marriage that could<br />

be used by God for His service.<br />

Four months after we<br />

were married, I was asked to<br />

come out of retirement and<br />

pastor again. The Lord<br />

exceeded my expectations<br />

and has given me a wife who<br />

has a heart for the ministry<br />

and health evangelism.<br />

Charles Shultz<br />

Richmond, Virginia<br />

Moving in the<br />

Same Direction<br />

»»<br />

Gerhard Pfandl has written<br />

an article about unity and<br />

division in the church (see<br />

“Moving in the Same Direction,”<br />

Feb. 14). Pfandl certainly<br />

had some good points,<br />

including the fact that unity<br />

comes from common faith<br />

and experience more than<br />

organization. In that vein, it<br />

is important to have a clear<br />

vision of what it means to be<br />

Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong>. Otherwise,<br />

there comes a point<br />

at which a “big tent”<br />

becomes too big. May it<br />

never be that an <strong>Adventist</strong> is<br />

defined merely in terms of<br />

observing Saturday and a<br />

loosely defined profession of<br />

Jesus Christ.<br />

Second is the statement on<br />

the remnant. George Knight<br />

has ably pointed out substantial<br />

differences between<br />

statements in the 28 fundamental<br />

beliefs and the baptismal<br />

vows (The Apocalyptic<br />

Vision and the Neutering of<br />

Adventism, p. 78). The fundamental<br />

beliefs articulate the<br />

remnant in general terms of<br />

a message, whereas the vows<br />

state it in terms of the Seventh-day<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> denomination.<br />

Knight points out<br />

how many can accept the former<br />

but perceive the latter as<br />

overwhelming conceit.<br />

The final point ties into<br />

Galatians 1:8, 9. If you take<br />

that text literally, even the<br />

third angel of Revelation 14<br />

must be anathematized if it<br />

preaches a false gospel. Incidentally,<br />

that text factored<br />

greatly in making the Reformation<br />

possible. Martin<br />

Luther used that text to say<br />

that the true foundation of<br />

the church was the preaching<br />

of the gospel, not the papal<br />

office being descended from<br />

Peter.<br />

Ron Thomsen<br />

Katy, Texas<br />

“It is not what Jesus our Savior<br />

instructed us to do in remembrance<br />

of Him.”—susan stormont, Buchanan, Michigan<br />

Let Me Serve You<br />

»»<br />

Here are my thoughts in<br />

response to Gerald Klingbeil’s<br />

editorial “Let Me Serve<br />

You” (Jan. 24, 2013). Sharing<br />

in the foot washing can be a<br />

warm time of prayer and service.<br />

It is not, however, the<br />

Communion. It is not what<br />

Jesus our Savior instructed<br />

us to do in remembrance of<br />

Him. More and more our<br />

members seem to be putting<br />

a stronger emphasis on the<br />

foot washing than on the<br />

emblems of the cross. The<br />

Communion bread and juice<br />

are our reminders of Christ’s<br />

shed blood and body crucified<br />

for us. This was how He<br />

gave Himself to save us, and<br />

not in the washing of feet.<br />

Foot washing overshadows<br />

the Communion remembrance<br />

service, and is given<br />

too strong a focus.<br />

I do not think Jesus<br />

intended foot washing to be<br />

more than a very important<br />

lesson on humility both for<br />

His disciples at the moment<br />

and for us who have<br />

followed.<br />

Susan Stormont<br />

Buchanan, Michigan<br />

Unstoppable Growth<br />

»»<br />

Ronny Nalin’s article<br />

“Unstoppable Growth” (Jan.<br />

10, 2013) was fantastic and<br />

4 (228) | www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013


Thank You<br />

»»<br />

I just want to thank you for<br />

the splendid articles the<br />

<strong>Review</strong> produces week after<br />

week. I am comforted, espewell<br />

written! It went right to<br />

the core of our Laodicean<br />

condition. My thanks to<br />

Nalin for his insights.<br />

As an aside, I read almost<br />

every article printed in<br />

almost every edition, and I<br />

appreciate the <strong>Review</strong> very<br />

much. Monte Sahlin’s<br />

“Church Trends” feature suggested<br />

that I should send<br />

you an e-mail and let you<br />

know!<br />

Lorna Peterson<br />

Manteca, California<br />

Share the Tide<br />

»»<br />

Bill Knott’s January 10 editorial<br />

entitled “The Blooddimmed<br />

Tide” was excellent<br />

and should be shared with a<br />

broader audience than those<br />

who are readers of the <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

<strong>Review</strong>. How can we make<br />

a dent in violence if it is promoted<br />

on a continuous basis<br />

by Hollywood, video games,<br />

etc.? Knott’s well-written editorial<br />

should, in my opinion,<br />

be shared widely—and not<br />

just in <strong>Adventist</strong> circles.<br />

Thank you for this—and<br />

other—excellent articles.<br />

Fred C. Schnibbe<br />

College Place, Washington<br />

What Is a Mystic?<br />

»»<br />

Eric Anderson’s article<br />

“What Is a Mystic?” (Jan. 10)<br />

was excellent and long overdue,<br />

and I highly commend<br />

editor Bill Knott for including<br />

it with the terminology<br />

that was used, especially<br />

given the half-truths, misunderstandings,<br />

and false accusations<br />

that have been<br />

circulating in recent years.<br />

For example, accusations<br />

have been leveled against<br />

“emptying the mind.” When<br />

a Christian (mystic or otherwise)<br />

“empties” their mind,<br />

that person is very specifically<br />

emptying the mind of<br />

self, and opening the mind<br />

and inviting Christ and His<br />

Spirit to come in and fill it.<br />

Anderson was very careful<br />

in his choice of words, and<br />

he gave very acceptable definitions<br />

for his usage of them.<br />

I appreciated his vulnerability<br />

and example in sharing<br />

his personal journey with<br />

<strong>Review</strong> readers.<br />

A mystic is one who is<br />

devoted to seeking “the mystery<br />

of godliness,” which<br />

according to Paul’s words in<br />

1 Timothy 3:16 is “great: He<br />

appeared in the flesh, was<br />

vindicated by the Spirit, was<br />

seen by angels, was preached<br />

among the nations, was<br />

believed on in the world, was<br />

taken up in glory.”<br />

I want to say with the<br />

inspired apostle, “My goal is<br />

that they may be encouraged<br />

in heart and united in love,<br />

so that they may have the full<br />

riches of complete understanding,<br />

in order that they<br />

may know the mystery of<br />

God, namely, Christ, in whom<br />

are hidden all the treasures<br />

of wisdom and knowledge”<br />

(Col. 2:2, 3).<br />

Merle J. Whitney<br />

Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania<br />

»»<br />

I am writing in regard to<br />

Eric Anderson’s “What Is a<br />

Mystic?” While it is true that<br />

we need a much deeper personal<br />

experience with God, is<br />

it necessary to repeat the<br />

same mistakes that occurred<br />

around the turn of the twentieth<br />

century with our<br />

church’s brush with pantheism?<br />

Do we really wish to see<br />

God’s judgment poured out<br />

on our institutions again for<br />

drinking the forbidden, mystical<br />

waters?<br />

Daniel Winters<br />

Osaka, Japan<br />

The Gehazi Syndrome<br />

»»<br />

Thank you for posting Gerald<br />

Klingbeil’s article “The<br />

Gehazi Syndrome: Suffering<br />

Familiarity With the Holy”<br />

(<strong>Adventist</strong> <strong>Review</strong> posted this<br />

article online on February 8,<br />

2013, www.adventistreview.<br />

org/article/6025/archives/<br />

issue-2013-1503/the-gehazisyndrome;<br />

the article originally<br />

appeared in the May<br />

2010 Ministry magazine). The<br />

four points included at the<br />

end of the article were most<br />

helpful.<br />

Eric Ollila<br />

Bay Roberts, Newfoundland,<br />

Canada<br />

cially since Alice, my wife, is<br />

no more, and the <strong>Review</strong> now<br />

helps to fill the companion<br />

gap. Alice had roots going<br />

back to the Sisley family of<br />

girls, from England, whom<br />

Ellen White predicted would<br />

be missionary-minded—and<br />

so it was. Our family was<br />

able to serve three years in<br />

Benghazi, Libya, and short<br />

terms in other countries.<br />

Keep up your good work—<br />

it cheers me.<br />

Don Fahrbach<br />

Munising, Michigan<br />

Correction<br />

»»<br />

In the December 27, 2012,<br />

obituary for Dr. Frank Strickland,<br />

his sister Ruth Sipkens’<br />

name was misspelled. We<br />

regret the error.<br />

We welcome your letters, noting,<br />

as always, that inclusion of a letter<br />

in this section does not imply that<br />

the ideas expressed are endorsed by<br />

either the editors of the <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

<strong>Review</strong> or the General Conference.<br />

Short, specific, timely letters have<br />

the best chance at being published<br />

(please include your complete<br />

address and phone number—even<br />

with e-mail messages). Letters will<br />

be edited for space and clarity only.<br />

Send correspondence to Letters to<br />

the Editor, <strong>Adventist</strong> <strong>Review</strong>, 12501<br />

Old Columbia Pike, Silver Spring, MD<br />

20904-6600; Internet: letters@<br />

adventistreview.org.<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (229) 5


Editorials<br />

Wilona<br />

Karimabadi<br />

A Faith of Don’ts?<br />

“So where do your children go to school?” a classmate in<br />

grad school asks.<br />

“A private school—Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong>, actually. I’m Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong>,” I reply.<br />

“Oh, yes, I had a friend back in the day who was <strong>Adventist</strong>.” I cringe, knowing what would come<br />

next. “Yeah, we hiked together through Yosemite one summer. She wasn’t allowed to use a blowdryer<br />

on Saturday,” she says. And there it was.<br />

“Oh, you’re Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong>,” my new Jewish friend says. “I dated an SDA guy. It made it<br />

pretty easy on Sabbath.” Well, that was slightly better. Sort of.<br />

Over my life there have been many similar conversations with new friends who find out which<br />

church I belong to and ask the questions I dread hearing. “So you’re <strong>Adventist</strong>, right? You guys<br />

don’t _________, and you don’t _________, and you don’t eat __________, and you don’t<br />

__________, and you don’t drink _________, right?” Feel free to fill in the blanks.<br />

And even in our own circles, there have been too many unhelpful statements that include the<br />

word “don’t”: “Don’t wear lipstick. You won’t go to heaven if you wear lipstick.” I heard that one<br />

from a friend who was told this at boarding academy. And in a beginners Sabbath school classroom<br />

a girl (now a grown woman and mother of three) recalls being extremely distressed at<br />

hearing the following: “Don’t misbehave now, because naughty children don’t go to heaven.”<br />

Huh?<br />

Is this what we are really all about? Of course not. But how many “on the outside” know that?<br />

You’ve likely been in similar situations. You tell someone you are Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong>, and<br />

either they know of us and start listing the “don’ts” we may be known for, or we are confused<br />

with another faith group—also defined by the “don’ts” they are known for. And I’ll be the first to<br />

fess up that in my younger days if someone at the neighborhood playground asked why I was<br />

unavailable on Saturday, my answer never explained things in a positive light. “Well, I won’t be<br />

here because we ‘don’t’ come here on Saturday. I can’t watch that cartoon with you because we<br />

‘don’t’ watch cartoons on Saturday.” Forgive the childish answers, but how adept were any of us<br />

5-year-olds at explaining adherence to the fourth commandment and knowing what the word<br />

“Advent” meant? Perhaps we’ve all been guilty of perpetuating the notion that our belief system<br />

is best defined by a running list of all the things we “don’t” do.<br />

Aren’t you tired of that?<br />

It’s time to flip the switch on being defined by all the things we don’t do, because you and I<br />

know that’s not who we really are. Do others know that?<br />

I realize there are those among us who may find it enhances their spiritual walk to adhere to a<br />

clearly articulated list of behaviors and activities they choose to refrain from. But we need to<br />

remember that if our job is to impact people for Christ—to show them who He really is through<br />

the difference He makes in our lives—practicing a faith of “don’ts” says nothing.<br />

Serve, listen to, understand, educate, and immerse yourself in people who need you—people<br />

who happily live well outside your comfort zone. Build up a broken person through the outpouring<br />

of Someone who lives within you. Put aside the lists and parameters that serve as a primary<br />

source of how you operate in this world, and let Jesus do the talking in any way He sees fit.<br />

Don’t you want someone to say (and if they already have, I’m thrilled): “Oh, you’re a Seventhday<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong>? You folks are the ones that do___________, and do__________, and you do live<br />

____________, and you really helped ____________, and that made our lives better”?<br />

Feel free to fill in those blanks here and in your daily lives with more Jesus and less “don’t.” n<br />

6 (230) | www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013


Righteousness<br />

When God says righteousness, He means business. Which<br />

means that He’s serious about it, and that He’s talking to Wall Street. Righteousness is not more<br />

natural to God than is business. The two do not pertain to distinct and incompatible worlds<br />

where Chicago’s commodities trading contrasts with Solomon’s Temple, or New York’s<br />

stockbroking opposes Moses’ wilderness tabernacle. In reality, unscrupulous business dealing<br />

is only one more variety of human, filthy-ragged righteousness, regardless to how many bucks it<br />

seems to make. The book of Proverbs may not be seen as Christianity’s exhaustive statement on<br />

a theology of righteousness. But it does provide strong evidence that for God righteousness is<br />

demonstrated in exemplary business conduct.<br />

Business and righteousness have a common origin. Their single source is the One whose successful<br />

start-up, named Universe, operates exclusively on His personal investments, while allowing<br />

Apple and Exxon to play bit parts in His Earth subsidiary. Agriculture and economics are for<br />

Him the very stuff of righteousness. In Proverbs, cash flow, cultivation, and going to work early<br />

are all inextricably linked together as proofs of righteousness.<br />

More than any other Old Testament text, Proverbs focuses on the righteous person. By way of<br />

illustration, the Hebrew term tsaddiq, which labels him, occurs more times (67) in the 915 verses<br />

of Proverbs than it does in Psalms (52 times in 2,461 verses). These numbers demonstrate the<br />

intensity of focus on righteousness in a book that gives attention to such matters as respect for<br />

property and boundary markers (Prov. 22:28; 23:10), and the value of precious metals in relation<br />

to heavenly wisdom (Prov. 3:13-18; 8:10). Ultimately, the wages of unscrupulous scheming is<br />

punishment. In Proverbs God talks righteousness by talking business.<br />

When God says righteousness, He means business. n<br />

Lael<br />

Caesar


World News & Perspectives<br />

photos: Tomáš Kábrt, Czecho-Slovakian Union Conference<br />

DEAL SIGNED: Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong> pastor Mikuláš Pavlík, Czecho-Slovakian Union<br />

Conference president, signs an agreement with Prime Minister Petr Necas of the Czech<br />

Republic on February 22, 2013, in Prague. The <strong>Adventist</strong> Church will receive US$45 million<br />

over the next 30 years as reparations for property seized under the former Communist<br />

regime, which ended in 1989.<br />

■■Czech Republic<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> Church Signs<br />

Pact for US$45 Million in<br />

Communism Reparations<br />

Over 30 years, Czech Republic will repay<br />

movement for theft of property.<br />

By Mark A. Kellner, news editor<br />

The Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong> Church in<br />

the Czech Republic will receive US$1.5 million<br />

annually for the next 30 years, a total<br />

of US$45 million, under a pact signed by<br />

church leaders and Prime Minister Petr<br />

Necas on February 22, 2013, in Prague.<br />

Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong> pastor<br />

Mikuláš Pavlík, Czecho-Slovakian Union<br />

Conference president, was one of several<br />

officials of religious organizations<br />

that signed an individual agreement<br />

with Necas.<br />

“Signing the Treaty Settlement means<br />

the legal process is complete, and we<br />

now have redressed the property damage<br />

committed by the Communist<br />

regime against the Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

Church,” Pavlík said.<br />

The Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong> Church is<br />

among 17 religious organizations—<br />

including Jewish, Protestant, and<br />

Roman Catholic communities—that are<br />

sharing in a US$3.1 billion settlement<br />

from the government.<br />

Prime Minister Necas, according to<br />

media reports, called the settlement “an<br />

act of justice” following a restitution<br />

plan approved by the Czech parliament<br />

in 2012.<br />

“By signing these agreements, we<br />

complete steps to remedy the property<br />

damage the Communists caused,”<br />

Necas said at the ceremony. “In the early<br />

nineties we as a state came to restitution<br />

as the most efficient and just<br />

means to achieve the transformation of<br />

our economy. The church had been<br />

excluded, but today we have completed<br />

this act of justice.”<br />

Necas, who also leads the nation’s<br />

Civic Democratic Party, said the deal<br />

“laid new, modern ground” for relations<br />

between state and church. Under<br />

Communist rule, for example, Roman<br />

Catholic priests’ salaries were paid by<br />

the state, which maintained strict control<br />

over that church’s operations. The<br />

Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong> Church refused<br />

state payments until 2008, when accepting<br />

such money for overall purposes,<br />

but not salaries, became a prerequisite<br />

for receiving property settlements.<br />

CHURCH LEADERS: Representatives of 17 religious organizations, Jewish, Protestant,<br />

and Roman Catholic, gather in the office of the Czech Republic for the ceremony.<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> pastor Mikuláš Pavlík is second from right in the first row.<br />

8 (232)<br />

| www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013


<strong>Adventist</strong> officials in Prague said the<br />

church lost property worth US$52.1<br />

million when the Communist regime<br />

seized its holdings in 1952. The Czech<br />

republic, church officials said, is the last<br />

formerly Communist nation to reach a<br />

settlement of this kind with religious<br />

organizations.<br />

Opposition Social Democrats tried to<br />

block the arrangement, seeking a court<br />

injunction hours before the individual<br />

agreements were signed. Though not<br />

granting an injunction, the state constitutional<br />

court is expected to issue a ruling<br />

on the Social Democrats’ complaint,<br />

media reports indicate.<br />

J. P. Lorenz, a pastor, organized the<br />

first Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong> congregation<br />

in Prague in 1902. A union conference<br />

was organized in the area in 1919,<br />

according to the Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

Encyclopedia. n<br />

—with reporting from Tomáš Kábrt,<br />

Czecho-Slovakian Union in Prague<br />

■■NOrth AMerica<br />

Vegetarian Diet Report Is Launched<br />

at Loma Linda University<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> school hosts Sixth International Conference on Vegetarian Nutrition.<br />

By Herbert Atienza, media relations specialist, Loma Linda University Health, writing from Loma Linda, California<br />

A groundbreaking report on the<br />

benefits of a plant-based Mediterraneanstyle<br />

diet—news of which captured<br />

global headlines—was released at a scientific<br />

conference held at Loma Linda<br />

University.<br />

A session at the Sixth International<br />

Congress on Vegetarian Nutrition<br />

(6ICVN) saw the first public presentation<br />

of an international headlinemaking<br />

landmark study by Spanish<br />

researchers that made a head-to-head<br />

comparison and determined that plantbased<br />

Mediterranean diets are better at<br />

reducing heart disease risks than a lowfat<br />

diet.<br />

Miguel Ángel Martínez, M.D., M.P.H.,<br />

Ph.D., lead investigator of the study<br />

called PREDIMED, for “PREvención con<br />

Dieta MEDiterránea” (“Prevention With<br />

a Mediterranean Diet”), said 6ICVN was<br />

a good place to unveil his study’s findings<br />

because they stand on groundbreaking<br />

research conducted at Loma<br />

GLOBAL SENSATION: Tony Yang (standing), assistant vice president for public affairs at Loma Linda University Health, addresses a<br />

news conference, held in conjunction with the Sixth International Congress on Vegetarian Nutrition, to announce the findings of a new<br />

landmark study on plant-based diets. The study garnered global headlines and media attention. Sitting on the panel (left to right): Dr.<br />

Miguel Ángel Martínez, lead investigator for the PREDIMED study and professor at University of Navarra, Spain; Dr. Joan Sabate, 6ICVN<br />

chair and chair of the Nutrition Department at Loma Linda University School of Public Health; and Dr. Sam Soret, associate dean for<br />

public health practice at Loma Linda University School of Public Health.<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (233) 9


World News & Perspectives<br />

Linda University, such as the landmark<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> Health Study and a study on<br />

walnuts and heart disease.<br />

“It is a good opportunity to celebrate<br />

the findings from these studies from<br />

two decades ago; it’s like closing the<br />

loop,” he said. “Our findings are very<br />

supportive of the research of those pioneering<br />

studies at Loma Linda.”<br />

More than 800 scientists, researchers,<br />

and public-health experts gathered for<br />

the 6ICVN event, organized by Loma<br />

Linda University School of Public<br />

Health. The event is held every five years<br />

and is the premier gathering of the<br />

world’s experts in plant-based nutrition<br />

and health.<br />

At this year’s gathering, held February<br />

24-26, 2013, at Loma Linda University<br />

Drayson Center, delegates participated<br />

in dozens of seminars, workshops, and<br />

presentations exploring such topics as<br />

DELEGATES WELCOME: Dr. Richard Hart, president of Loma Linda University Health,<br />

welcomes more than 800 delegates to the Sixth International Congress on Vegetarian<br />

Nutrition, held February 24-26, 2103, at Loma Linda University Health. Next to him is Dr.<br />

Joan Sabate (center), 6ICVN chair, and chair of the Nutrition Department at Loma Linda<br />

University School of Public Health, and Dr. David R. Jacobs, Mayo professor, division of<br />

epidemiology, University of Minnesota.<br />

LARGE ATTENDANCE: More than 800 delegates attended the Sixth International Congress on Vegetarian Nutrition, held February<br />

24-26, 2013, at Loma Linda University Health.<br />

10 (234) | www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013


the link between diet and longevity, how<br />

plant-based diets can help prevent and<br />

treat major chronic diseases, and the<br />

sustainability of plant-based diet<br />

lifestyles.<br />

“I have been attending the Vegetarian<br />

Congress since the fourth one,<br />

because I’m a vegetarian and there are<br />

many new things that I learn,” said<br />

delegate Hiroshi Yamaji, 52, of Tokyo,<br />

director of health ministries for the<br />

Japan Union Conference of Seventhday<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong>s.<br />

“I feel very blessed by the lifestyle I<br />

have,” he continued. “I have been a<br />

practicing vegetarian since I was born,<br />

and I see the benefits in it. I am glad<br />

there is now strong scientific support<br />

for it.”<br />

Delegates received a rousing welcome<br />

from Loma Linda University Health officials<br />

at the start of the events.<br />

“It’s a real privilege for Loma Linda to<br />

be identified with this congress, which<br />

is the premier international conference<br />

for research in plant-based diets,” said<br />

EXHIBITS A DRAW: Delegates to the Sixth International Congress on Vegetarian Nutrition<br />

check out the exhibitor booths during the event, held February 24-26, 2013, at Loma<br />

Linda University Health.<br />

Richard Hart, M.D., Dr.Ph., president of<br />

Loma Linda University Health, during<br />

his welcome. “Loma Linda has pioneered<br />

efforts that now allow us to<br />

gather here. Vegetarianism is no longer<br />

an <strong>Adventist</strong> thing or a novelty. It has<br />

become a science-based way of life for<br />

many people.”<br />

Joan Sabate, M.D., Ph.D., 6ICVN chair,<br />

and chair of the Nutrition Department<br />

at Loma Linda University School of Public<br />

Health, noted the event has grown<br />

each time, and this year’s attendance<br />

easily surpassed the expected 700<br />

delegates.<br />

“The interest from both the <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

community and the scientific community<br />

is increasing,” Sabate said.<br />

“Vegetarian nutrition is one of the<br />

stalwart research themes of Loma Linda<br />

University School of Public Health,” said<br />

Tricia Penniecook, M.D., M.P.H., who is<br />

dean of the Loma Linda University<br />

School of Public Health. “During the<br />

congress, scientists, practitioners, academicians,<br />

students, and members of<br />

the community at large learned more<br />

about how a vegetarian lifestyle can be<br />

taught and implemented in practical<br />

ways.” n<br />

■■NOrth america<br />

One Project<br />

Draws <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

Leaders to<br />

Chicago<br />

Two-day meeting<br />

celebrates “supremacy of<br />

Jesus” within movement.<br />

By One Project staff<br />

Why would 750 leaders from around<br />

the world meet for two days in the<br />

“Windy City,” Chicago, Illinois, in early<br />

February? The answer was simple: Just<br />

Jesus. Leaders and laypersons of all ages<br />

gathered for the One Project on February<br />

11, 12, 2013. This was the third gathering<br />

of the One Project in North America<br />

(Atlanta 2011, Seattle 2012, Chicago<br />

2013). With spaces capped at 750, seats<br />

SPEAKER: Timothy Nixon, associate chaplain at Andrews University, addresses delegates<br />

at the One Project conference.<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (235) 11


World News & Perspectives<br />

were sold out a few months in advance<br />

of the gathering. The motto—“Jesus.<br />

All.”—is born from the One Project’s<br />

mission to celebrate the supremacy of<br />

Jesus within the Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

Church.<br />

“When we dreamed up the One Project,<br />

the love for Jesus was overwhelming.<br />

When we prepared for each<br />

gathering His love was overwhelming.<br />

When we experienced the gatherings<br />

we get to bask in the presence of His<br />

overwhelming love,” said Japhet De<br />

Oliveira, cochair of the One Project<br />

board. “Our gatherings follow a really<br />

simple process. With 20-minute reflections<br />

on Jesus, followed by our immediate<br />

live responses, and then the<br />

facilitator-led table recalibrations. Like<br />

Ellen G. White, we find Jesus to be the<br />

desire of the ages—every age—including<br />

this one. We desire His love, His<br />

truth, His leadership.”<br />

“When I first heard about the One<br />

Project,” declared Rod Long, of Sydney,<br />

Australia, “I wondered how we would<br />

talk about Jesus for two days. Now I<br />

wonder how we will ever exhaust that<br />

subject! The program elements reflect<br />

my experience: Conversations I had<br />

about Jesus (and there were lots), how<br />

Jesus intersects with all aspects of my<br />

life and experiences, and how the<br />

One Project recalibrated my ‘Jesus<br />

perspective.’ ”<br />

De Oliveira said, “Each year Alex<br />

Bryan, cochair of the One Project, suggests<br />

a subset theme and for 2013 it was<br />

Just Jesus. It is part of our Seventh-day<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> DNA with Jesus followers like<br />

the late and dearly loved Morris Venden.<br />

We simply cannot stop talking<br />

about Jesus, and Just Jesus is more than<br />

enough.”<br />

At the Chicago gathering, the movement’s<br />

Hope Channel arranged for live<br />

streaming of the One Project to 450-<br />

plus sites across the globe. One gentleman<br />

came to the Chicago gathering, but<br />

because of a brain injury he suffers<br />

from sensory overload. As a result, he<br />

was only able to join the larger group<br />

during the reflections while the lights<br />

were dimmed and the sound was<br />

focused. During the recalibration<br />

(group discussion) after each reflection,<br />

he would have to leave the room. His<br />

brother, who was participating via the<br />

live streaming, joined him via phone,<br />

and they were able to dialogue one on<br />

one for a recalibration of their life in<br />

Jesus.<br />

On April 5, 6, 2013, thanks to the support<br />

of the Norwegian Union and working<br />

closely with Pastor Victory Marley,<br />

the One Project will be offering the first<br />

gathering in Norwegian with limited<br />

English translation. In July the One Project<br />

will be in Newcastle, Australia, and<br />

then in early November it will be on the<br />

campus of Newbold College in England.<br />

All of these gatherings are limited in<br />

size.<br />

The next North American gathering,<br />

Seattle in February 2014, is already at<br />

50 percent capacity. Other site locations<br />

under consideration are Brazil,<br />

Canada, Germany, New Zealand, and<br />

many other options in the U.S.A. For<br />

more information, visit us at www.<br />

the1project.org. n<br />

AROUND THE TABLE: Delegates to the One Project conference exchange ideas during breakout sessions.<br />

12 (236) | www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013


adventist life<br />

This past fall my son Javad came home<br />

from school excited about an upcoming<br />

field trip to a local farm and pumpkin<br />

patch. “Please, come with us! I want you to<br />

take care of my classmates and me,” he<br />

said. Since he actually remembered to tell<br />

me about this ahead of time rather than<br />

the day before, I told him I would ask for<br />

the day off to go on the trip. He replied,<br />

“Ask your boss [Bill Knott] to let you go. If<br />

he’s a Christian, he will!”<br />

—Wilona Karimabadi, Ellicott City, Maryland<br />

Sermon in seven<br />

What motivates sacrifice?<br />

Do you agree with this?<br />

Sacrifice is<br />

about love,<br />

not about<br />

courage.<br />

share with us<br />

We are looking for brief submissions in these<br />

categories:<br />

Sound Bites (quotes, profound or spontaneous)<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> Life (short anecdotes, especially from<br />

the world of adults)<br />

Jots and Tittles (church-related tips)<br />

Camp Meeting Memories (short, humorous and/<br />

or profound anecdotes)<br />

Favorite (Church) Family Photos (must be high<br />

resolution min. 1000 px JPEGs)<br />

Please send your submissions to Give & Take,<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> <strong>Review</strong>, 12501 Old Columbia Pike, Silver<br />

Spring, MD 20904-6600; fax: 301-680-6638; e-mail:<br />

marank@gc.adventist.org. Please include phone number,<br />

and city and state from which you are writing.<br />

© terry crews<br />

think about it<br />

This is the story of four people named Everybody, Somebody, Anybody, and Nobody.<br />

There was an important job to be done and Everybody was asked to do it. Everybody was sure Somebody would do it. Anybody could<br />

have done it, but Nobody did it. Somebody got angry about that because it was Everybody’s job. Everybody thought Anybody could do it,<br />

but Nobody realized that Everybody would not do it. It ended up that Everybody blamed Somebody when Nobody did what Anybody<br />

could have done.<br />

—Author unknown, submitted by Edson Simon, Clackamas, Oregon<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (237) 13


40 Below<br />

THE<br />

en PERFECT<br />

by Cecilia Luck<br />

Perfect then, perfect now:<br />

the commandments are still relevant<br />

For Today’s pop culture.<br />

Between the ages of 7 and 10 I was involved in a number of children’s musicals at<br />

church. One song in particular is still ingrained in my head, and heart, after more than<br />

20 years. The song “The Perfect 10” puts the Ten Commandments into a rhyme. Then<br />

the chorus says that “they’re just as true as they were way back when.” God hasn’t<br />

changed over the course of history, and neither have His laws.<br />

What is the one thing that currently dominates the majority of our time and energy? Pop<br />

culture. It’s everywhere: the Internet, movies, television, music, magazines and books, video<br />

games, etc. It seems Hollywood has done its best at trying to turn these laws into suggestions—<br />

recommendations that can be disregarded as long as the reason is deemed acceptable. But<br />

these laws are practical and pertinent. Using the Ten Commandments as our guide, let’s<br />

embark on a quick journey to see just how these laws apply today, and how they can help us<br />

get back (and stay) on track toward our future, eternal destination.<br />

14 (238) | www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013


Number 1: “You shall have<br />

no other gods before Me” (Ex.<br />

20:3).*<br />

Not long before the<br />

Mount Sinai experience,<br />

the Israelites had been<br />

released from their<br />

bondage in Egypt, a<br />

country whose polytheistic<br />

religion would<br />

have definitely been<br />

ingrained in their<br />

minds. Not only this,<br />

but the land they were<br />

promised was also<br />

inhabited with worshippers<br />

of gods other<br />

than God. Through the<br />

biblical account we see<br />

how easily the Israelites<br />

were taken in by the surrounding<br />

influences. Egyptian<br />

life did rub off on them.<br />

So at Sinai, God first<br />

reminds the former slaves of<br />

His place in their life. We<br />

aren’t much different today.<br />

“No other gods” may have taken<br />

a different meaning these days,<br />

but what we’re doing is basically<br />

what the Israelites were guilty of—<br />

anything that takes higher priority than<br />

God is, in fact, a god. It comes down to<br />

balance: time on the computer and<br />

entertainment, necessities and enjoyments,<br />

both have their place, but God<br />

must come first.<br />

Number 2: “You shall not make<br />

for yourself an idol” (verse 4).<br />

“You shall not make for yourself an<br />

idol, or any likeness of what is in heaven<br />

above or on the earth beneath or in the<br />

water under the earth. You shall not<br />

worship them or serve them; for I, the<br />

Lord your God, am a jealous God, visiting<br />

the iniquity of the fathers on the<br />

children, on the third and fourth generations<br />

of those who hate Me, but showing<br />

lovingkindness to thousands, to<br />

those who love Me and keep My commandments”<br />

(verses 4-6).<br />

In the first part of this commandment<br />

an idol is defined as an image or<br />

representation of a god as an object of<br />

worship. Again, the Israelites were surrounded<br />

by idols while slaves in Egypt.<br />

Anubis, the god of the afterlife, and Ra,<br />

the sun god, are just a couple of the<br />

many deities worshipped and physically<br />

represented throughout Egypt.<br />

By telling the Israelites not to make<br />

any idols, God was turning their minds<br />

back to Him, the Creator. The Creator<br />

God alone is to be worshipped, not any<br />

created thing. We may possess items<br />

that hold sentimental value for us, but<br />

unless we form unhealthy attachments<br />

to them, they aren’t objects of worship.<br />

The second half of the commandment<br />

states that God visits “the iniquity of the<br />

fathers on the children,” but shows “lovingkindness”<br />

to those who love Him and<br />

keep His commandments. Is God saying<br />

that every son or daughter of a drunk, an<br />

adulterer, an abuser, etc., will be visited<br />

with iniquity? No! We aren’t held responsible<br />

for the sins and mistakes of our parents.<br />

The notion that we are responsible<br />

for the actions of our predecessors—and<br />

that we should be punished for it—is<br />

prevalent in Hollywood’s film industry.<br />

But the truth is, we are held accountable<br />

to God only for our own actions. If we<br />

don’t learn from our parents’ sins and<br />

mistakes and we follow in that path, then<br />

we are held accountable.<br />

Number 3:<br />

“You shall not take the<br />

name of the Lord your<br />

God in vain, for the<br />

Lord God will not<br />

leave him unpunished<br />

who takes His name in<br />

vain” (verse 7).<br />

Ancients believed<br />

that God’s name was<br />

so sacred and holy it was not even to be<br />

spoken. Today His name is so disrespected<br />

that it’s nauseating. I cringe<br />

every time I hear—or see—it being misused.<br />

The misuse is so rampant that it’s<br />

hard to block it out. How many times,<br />

for example, have you seen “omg” in<br />

texts or on Facebook or Twitter? It’s like<br />

a breath of fresh air when a movie, TV<br />

show, or a message board is free of it.<br />

We can’t force others not to take His name<br />

in vain, but we can do our part in being an<br />

example of how God should be respected<br />

and honored in our everyday conversations.<br />

Number 4: “Remember the sabbath<br />

day, to keep it holy” (verse 8).<br />

The Sabbath was, and still is, a blessed<br />

and holy gift. After six days of creating,<br />

God set aside the seventh day for rest<br />

and enjoyment of—and with—His creation.<br />

Today we can’t seem to stop for<br />

anything. Unfortunately for some, Sabbath<br />

is their busiest day.<br />

Remember . . . God commands us to<br />

remember. Take this time to remember all<br />

that God has done. God also commands<br />

us to rest—this is a test of obedience.<br />

Take this day to enjoy a break. Climb a<br />

tree. Call a friend you haven’t spoken<br />

with in a while. Shut off your computer.<br />

Forget about the demands and problems,<br />

and all that pop culture offers that<br />

follows us through the other six days.<br />

Remember the seventh day and rest in<br />

it. Also, remember that it’s lawful to do<br />

good on the Sabbath (Matt. 12:12). So<br />

rest—and go do some good.<br />

Number 5: “Honor your father<br />

and your mother” (Ex. 20:12).<br />

Sometimes this commandment is<br />

easier said than done. To honor means<br />

to have a high respect or esteem for<br />

The Bible is clear. It’s a matter<br />

of putting what we are<br />

supposed to do into practice. If<br />

we do, God will honor that.<br />

someone. We don’t see this often in the<br />

parent/child relationships portrayed on<br />

TV or film, and rarely do we find this<br />

honor toward parents in everyday life.<br />

Just watch any major reality show<br />

involving kids, parents, and competition,<br />

and you’ll see what I mean.<br />

And how are children, no matter their<br />

age, supposed to honor the parents who<br />

neglect and/or abuse them? Or parents<br />

who don’t teach them proper values or<br />

morals? Perhaps honoring the Father in<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (239) 15


heaven in spite of the circumstances<br />

would compensate for the honoring of<br />

earthly parents who don’t honor their<br />

role as they should?<br />

For parents who don’t share the same<br />

belief system or won’t admit to the<br />

change they need—love and honor them<br />

where they are, even if you don’t agree.<br />

As I said, it’s easier said than done, but it<br />

will make those relationships smoother<br />

in the long run.<br />

Number 6: “You shall not murder”<br />

(verse 13).<br />

From children’s video games to PG-13<br />

and R-rated movies, our society has become<br />

desensitized to murder and violence. We<br />

loathe terrorists who murder innocent people,<br />

yet we have no problem sitting through<br />

a movie in which murder is portrayed as<br />

both a crime and as justice served.<br />

We can’t ignore murder. It’s a very<br />

real part of our sinful world. But we can<br />

prayerfully sensitize ourselves again to<br />

the reality that murder is disgusting<br />

and deplorable. It’s life being taken.<br />

How can we not be sensitive to that?<br />

Number 7: “You shall not commit<br />

adultery” (verse 14).<br />

How is it that society has come to the<br />

place that we actually feel sorry for the<br />

one committing adultery? Again, Hollywood<br />

has done a good job of making<br />

adultery seem socially acceptable. We<br />

may sympathize with the one who feels<br />

something lacking and sees the need to<br />

cheat on their spouse, thereby excusing<br />

their behavior. This is not acceptable. I<br />

don’t know the stresses that married<br />

people sometimes experience. I am,<br />

however, the product of a home in<br />

which divorce as a result of adultery<br />

occurred—and I know its damaging<br />

effects. In spite of what pop culture has<br />

deemed all right, people need to do<br />

what is right: honor the vows made on<br />

the wedding day, stay faithful.<br />

Number 8: “You shall not steal”<br />

(verse 15).<br />

The excuses for stealing are many, but<br />

there is no good reason. As we see in<br />

pop culture, stealing not only refers to<br />

material possessions (we can surely<br />

recall, for example, stories about celebrities<br />

caught shoplifting); there are<br />

other things that can be stolen as well:<br />

time, love, ideas, etc. In the end it’s true:<br />

the one who steals never prospers.<br />

Number 9: “You shall not bear false<br />

witness against your neighbor” (verse 16).<br />

There’s a reason Solomon, in Proverbs,<br />

puts a lot of focus on two evils:<br />

lying and gossiping. They hurt. They<br />

destroy relationships. They break trust.<br />

They damage reputations. In today’s<br />

society these consequences aren’t often<br />

considered. With our broken human<br />

nature, we do this without thinking.<br />

Once again, the blatant acceptance of<br />

this behavior has contemporary media<br />

and entertainment written all over it.<br />

(Have you glanced over the tabloids at<br />

the grocery store lately?) We are surrounded<br />

by the world’s seeming<br />

approval of it. Even if done with the<br />

“best” intentions, bearing false witness<br />

still has negative effects. The character<br />

of a person can easily be damaged. And<br />

whether the information about a given<br />

person is true or not, we know exactly<br />

what we are supposed to do. The Bible is<br />

clear. It’s a matter of putting what we<br />

are supposed to do into practice. If we<br />

do, God will honor that.<br />

Number 10: “You shall not covet<br />

your neighbor’s house; . . . or anything<br />

that belongs to your neighbor” (verse 17).<br />

A want or desire isn’t necessarily a bad<br />

thing, especially when it’s something<br />

like a better-working car, a good education,<br />

etc. It really depends on what the<br />

desired object is—and our reason for the<br />

desire. We also tend to want not only<br />

what is not ours, but also something that<br />

belongs to another person—and the<br />

object of desire is not ours to want.<br />

While there are a plethora of modernday<br />

examples I could use, my mind<br />

keeps going back to David. He didn’t<br />

banish that initial thought of desire like<br />

he should have. And even though he was<br />

a man after God’s own heart, the breaking<br />

of this commandment led David to<br />

break the sixth, seventh, and eighth<br />

commandments as well. This all started<br />

with the simple act of desire for another<br />

man’s wife who was not his to desire.<br />

When we do see this in modern<br />

media, we should, no matter what the<br />

venue, be brought to a higher state of<br />

contemplation and contentment for<br />

what is ours. The more content and<br />

thankful we are for what God has<br />

blessed us with, the less the want of<br />

anything that isn’t ours to desire will<br />

enter our minds.<br />

Be the Change<br />

The Ten Commandments are still relevant.<br />

And here is something else to consider:<br />

how we interact with the modern<br />

media “enemy.” Sure, we can choose, for<br />

example, not to own a television, or try<br />

to avoid the negative influences that<br />

come out of pop culture. But the disregard<br />

for God’s commandments isn’t just<br />

going to disappear if we ignore it. Those<br />

evils are still going to be created, shown,<br />

read, heard—and they’ll influence those<br />

who watch and read and hear them.<br />

It’s not just about us avoiding it. It’s<br />

about trying to change contemporary<br />

mind-sets for the good. Try to make a difference.<br />

We can be the positive change in<br />

pop culture. Isn’t this how Jesus, through<br />

His life on earth, showed us how to be?<br />

He came face to face with sin and interacted<br />

with the perpetrators—and He<br />

changed things. He didn’t ignore His<br />

surroundings. We should do the same. n<br />

* All biblical quotations and references in this article<br />

are taken from the New American Standard Bible, copyright<br />

© 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977,<br />

1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission.<br />

Cecilia Luck writes from<br />

Collegedale, Tennessee.<br />

16 (240) | www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013


Cliff’s Edge<br />

Erst Kommt Das Fressen . . .<br />

In To Have and Have Not Ernest Hemingway expressed with paper and<br />

ink some moral dilemmas of flesh and spirit. “I don’t know who made the laws,” said a man who committed<br />

sin—a crime, actually—to feed his family, “but I know there ain’t no law that you got to go hungry.” A boy,<br />

a Cuban revolutionary, declared that he would do anything to free his country from tyranny: “I do things I<br />

hate. But I would do things I hate a thousand times more.”<br />

To eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil implied that those who ate would know good from<br />

evil, but the distinction isn’t always so distinct. Erst kommt das Fressen, wrote German Communist Berthold<br />

Brecht, dann kommt die Moral (“First comes food, then comes morals”). We might utter gut-stuffed<br />

protests against Brecht, but who could argue that one’s discernment between right and wrong blurs<br />

on an empty stomach (especially your child’s)?<br />

Mark Twain’s Huck Finn convinced himself that his own soul was damned to hell because he<br />

helped Miss Watson’s slave escape. In the 1600s Thomas Hobbes said that good and evil have<br />

no meanings apart from what humans, in a specific time and place, decide it is. Four hundred<br />

years before Christ, Socrates battled moral relativism pretty much for the same reasons people<br />

battle it today, 2,000 years after Christ. Niccolò Machiavelli argued that the political leader<br />

must “learn how not to be good.” Nietzsche said that we have to get “beyond good and<br />

evil,” because these concepts have worn out their usefulness. From The Rules of the Game,<br />

a pre-World War II French movie, a character says, “The truly terrible thing about this<br />

life, monsieur, is that everyone has their own reasons.” In 2010 atheist jihadist Sam Harris<br />

in The Moral Landscape sought to establish a scientific basis for morality, claiming that “morality<br />

should be considered an undeveloped branch of science.” Eighteenth-century philosopher Jean-<br />

Jacques Rousseau called conscience “thou infallible judge of good and evil,” which helps explain<br />

the German Reich chancellor’s sentiment: “If I live my life according to my God-given insights,<br />

then I cannot go wrong; and even if I do, I know that I have acted in good faith.”<br />

In the Foundation of the Metaphysics of Morals (1785) Immanuel Kant attempted to create a basis<br />

for morality on pure reason, before, and even apart from, experience or consequences. He thought<br />

he found it with the Categorical Imperative, his metaphysical law for morality: “Always act<br />

according to that maxim whose universality as a law you can at the same time will.” In other<br />

words, do only what you want everyone else to do. Sounds nice, but what if you universally<br />

will that everyone with one Jewish grandmother die in Auschwitz?<br />

Morality is either like sunshine, coming from above, transcendent; or it comes from within us, human<br />

creations such as free funk jazz and abstract expressionism. If the latter, then if all humans decided that<br />

anyone with one Jewish grandparent deserved death, how could it be wrong? If morality’s a human concoction<br />

alone, as subjective as tastes in music or in shoes, then Stalin’s gulags are no morally worse than the<br />

American prison at Guantanamo Bay.<br />

I’m not denying that atheists don’t or can’t live by moral codes that make them good citizens, in some<br />

cases better than their theistic neighbors. (After all, when was the last time an atheist flew a jetliner into a<br />

skyscraper?) Atheists just can’t base morality on anything absolute. Maybe they don’t want to, but this<br />

subjectivism can end up justifying a lot of wrong.<br />

The only answer is a morality from above, one transcending culture, prejudice, jurisprudence, tradition,<br />

logic, custom, even conscience (see the chancellor’s quote). That’s what God’s moral law, the Ten Commandments,<br />

is: a transcendent universal morality, the eternal template for good and evil. The law shows us<br />

exactly how God Himself defines these things.<br />

Of course, we’re still stuck with human subjectivism: some who believe in “Thou shalt not kill” go ape<br />

over abortion but have no problem with lethal injection; others, vice versa. So we’re not done with the<br />

debate, but at least with God’s law we have the absolute starting point. n<br />

Cliff<br />

Goldstein<br />

Clifford Goldstein is editor of the Adult Sabbath School Bible Study Guide. His latest book, Shadow Men, is available from<br />

Signs Publishing in Australia.<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (241) 17


Cover Feature<br />

People leave the <strong>Adventist</strong> Church only<br />

because they’ve had a bad experience,<br />

right? Not anymore. A new study indicates<br />

that more and more church members are<br />

leaving because they’ve changed their beliefs.<br />

BY ANDY NASH<br />

Picture a Seventh-day<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> church somewhere<br />

with 200 members<br />

attending. Over<br />

time, 100 of these members<br />

will leave the<br />

church and in a sense<br />

be replaced by 100 new members—and<br />

then some. (The <strong>Adventist</strong> Church is one<br />

of the fastest-growing denominations<br />

in the world, and the fastest in the<br />

United States. 1 )<br />

But the 100 church members who<br />

leave—the ones who used to worship and<br />

fellowship, eat haystacks, and sing “Side<br />

by Side” with us: Why do they leave?<br />

Past studies indicated that if someone<br />

left the <strong>Adventist</strong> Church, it was almost<br />

always because of bad experiences or<br />

relationships, not because they changed<br />

their beliefs.<br />

In a 1998 report, “Why Do <strong>Adventist</strong>s<br />

Quit Coming to Church?” prepared by<br />

the Center for Creative Ministry, <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

researcher Monte Sahlin wrote:<br />

“Three out of four leave for reasons having<br />

to do with their relationships with<br />

people and groups, while less than one<br />

in five leave because they no longer<br />

believe in some teaching of the church.”<br />

Sahlin cited the work of other <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

researchers, including Roger Dudley,<br />

director of the Andrews University Institute<br />

of Church Ministry. “Generally<br />

speaking,” said Dudley, “poor interpersonal<br />

relationships in the church” were<br />

the primary reason members left.<br />

“Very few people,” added Gottfried<br />

Oosterwal, then-director of the Institute<br />

of World Mission at Andrews University,<br />

“indicated that they had left<br />

because of a disagreement over doctrine.<br />

Many had questions and doubts,<br />

but no basic disagreements with the<br />

main tenets of the <strong>Adventist</strong> faith.”<br />

Even more emphatic was Harold K.<br />

West, Florida Conference ministerial<br />

director, based on his 1975 study of<br />

departing church members “There was<br />

absolutely no proof,” said West, “that<br />

anybody left the church because they no<br />

longer believed in the doctrines.”<br />

Interviews with former <strong>Adventist</strong>s<br />

supplemented the center’s 1998 report.<br />

“After my baptism,” said one former<br />

member, “I would wait each week in<br />

the foyer. No one would talk to me, no<br />

one spoke.”<br />

“The church I attended,” said<br />

another, “was so cold I could ice-skate<br />

down the aisles.”<br />

“It’s the Theology,<br />

Not the People”<br />

While relationships will always factor<br />

into any church member’s experience, a<br />

new study suggests a shifting landscape<br />

in which more and more people are<br />

leaving the <strong>Adventist</strong> Church primarily<br />

because they’ve changed their beliefs.<br />

The study, “Former Seventh-day<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> Perceptions of the Seventhday<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> Church,” was conducted<br />

in 2011 by Southern <strong>Adventist</strong> University’s<br />

School of Business under the<br />

direction of marketing professor Lisa<br />

Goolsby. Goolsby was approached by<br />

Pastor Jerry Arnold and member Ken<br />

DeFoor of the Collegedale, Tennessee,<br />

Community church about exploring<br />

the reasons members are leaving the<br />

church. More than 600 former <strong>Adventist</strong>s<br />

from throughout the U.S. were<br />

invited to answer questions online;<br />

190 participated.<br />

When asked why they quit attending<br />

the <strong>Adventist</strong> Church, 49 percent of<br />

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espondents cited disagreement or disenchantment<br />

with <strong>Adventist</strong> doctrine,<br />

while another 10 percent cited their<br />

own lifestyle choices being out of harmony<br />

with church teachings. Only 38<br />

percent of responses cited a bad personal<br />

experience or “other” reason for<br />

leaving. (The respondents were able to<br />

cite more than one reason.)<br />

When respondents were invited to<br />

give open-ended feedback about their<br />

departure from the <strong>Adventist</strong> Church,<br />

68 percent of the comments concerned<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> doctrine, 47 percent concerned<br />

judgmental attitudes or other<br />

problems within the church, 31 percent<br />

concerned cofounder Ellen G. White,<br />

and 15 percent concerned legalism. (The<br />

respondents were able to submit multiple<br />

comments, which were then<br />

categorized.)<br />

“I could no longer stay within a system,”<br />

wrote one respondent, “that I<br />

knew to be unbiblical and with which I<br />

disagreed. . . . The ‘tipping point’ came<br />

when I realized we couldn’t expect our<br />

sons to tell us the truth if we were modeling<br />

a lack of integrity by being active<br />

members of a church they knew<br />

we no longer believed. . . . We<br />

did not leave because we were<br />

in any way hurt, angry, bitter, or<br />

disgruntled. We left with great<br />

grief and great loss, and we left<br />

because the Lord Jesus revealed Himself<br />

to us so compellingly that we knew we<br />

could not dishonor Him by remaining<br />

in a system that does not know who He<br />

really is or what He really did.”<br />

“There are many SDA churches,”<br />

wrote another former member, “that<br />

are open, loving, and focused only on<br />

Christ, but this is not the problem. The<br />

problem is with the doctrine of the SDA<br />

Church. The doctrinal beliefs of the SDA<br />

Church are completely unbiblical; this is<br />

the reason I will never attend an SDA<br />

church again.”<br />

“If Adventism,” said another, “would<br />

catch hold of the truth of grace and ‘It is<br />

finished,’ it would be a great package.<br />

I . . . cherish my memories of growing<br />

up in a warm, family-based, healthy,<br />

safe environment. Independent Bible<br />

study led me down a different path.”<br />

Another respondent encouraged<br />

“much more investigation into the fact<br />

that many have left because of doctrinal<br />

[reasons] and often, no other reasons.<br />

There is too much focus on people being<br />

hurt. . . . Doctrinal issues are ignored.”<br />

Doctrinal differences weren’t the only<br />

reason cited; the experiential element<br />

was still very much present. A divorced<br />

single mom with special-needs children<br />

described feeling ostracized by church<br />

members who were “snobbish.” She<br />

said that members with money seemed<br />

more accepted.<br />

We left with great<br />

grief and great loss.<br />

Another former member described<br />

the church as failing to reach out to his<br />

family “in their time of greatest need.”<br />

An inactive church member wrote,<br />

“Although I consider myself an <strong>Adventist</strong>,<br />

I do not currently attend the local<br />

church due to the judgmental, resistant<br />

attitudes that prevail in my area.”<br />

Still, compared to previous studies,<br />

the shift toward beliefs as the leading<br />

reason for leaving was striking. One former<br />

member wrote: “It’s the theology,<br />

not the people.”<br />

Asking Questions<br />

Pastor Arnold, who helped initiate the<br />

study, said the data align with what he’s<br />

seeing up close and personally. “I have<br />

had conversations with many young<br />

adults who do not embrace every teaching<br />

of the <strong>Adventist</strong> Church,” Arnold<br />

said. “Some have perspectives that are<br />

not reflective of the official teaching of<br />

the <strong>Adventist</strong> Church. Some understand<br />

the official teaching and disagree with it<br />

on some points.”<br />

Arnold said the two subjects that he<br />

gets asked about most are the doctrine<br />

of Christ’s ministry in the heavenly<br />

sanctuary and the proper use of Ellen<br />

White’s writings.<br />

“People still leave the church over<br />

their feelings being hurt,” Arnold said.<br />

“But one of the main underlying factors<br />

is the mistreatment they got because<br />

they were questioning. If we can<br />

keep a positive relationship with<br />

them while they are processing<br />

things, it communicates that<br />

they are welcome and wanted in<br />

our fellowship.”<br />

DeFoor, who left the <strong>Adventist</strong> Church<br />

and later returned, said he represents a<br />

boomer generation that had difficulty<br />

separating salvation in Christ from personal<br />

behavior such as Sabbathkeeping.<br />

“I know we say that the church doesn’t<br />

teach this,” DeFoor said, “but certain<br />

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Former <strong>Adventist</strong>s tend to be a sharpminded<br />

group that demands solid exegesis,<br />

not pat answers. It isn’t enough to<br />

say “the pope changed Sabbath.” We<br />

must first show from Scripture alone<br />

how Sabbath rest and salvation rest continue<br />

to coexist in the New Testament,<br />

just as they did in the Old Testament. 3<br />

We must also be willing to explain<br />

the uncomfortable but historical truth<br />

that the early Christian church began to<br />

distance itself from the Sabbath largely<br />

for the purpose of distancing itself from<br />

the Jews. 4 At a time when both Christians<br />

and Jews are asking questions,<br />

sincere questions, about each other’s<br />

faith, 5 the <strong>Adventist</strong> Church is perfectly<br />

positioned to teach and model the<br />

Judeo-Christian faith of Jesus Christ:<br />

one that celebrates “new treasures as<br />

well as old” (Matt. 13:52).<br />

3. We should clear up false understandings.<br />

For a myriad of reasons,<br />

many former <strong>Adventist</strong>s seem to have<br />

serious misunderstandings of <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

beliefs. One survey respondent wrote:<br />

“Keeping the Sabbath does not save anyone.”<br />

Another respondent wrote that<br />

she believed Ellen White was inspired by<br />

God—but that she is not our way to salvation.<br />

“I don’t think you have to believe<br />

in her to be saved,” she wrote.<br />

It’s truly sad that these former members<br />

were taught so erroneously; that<br />

they attended our churches and never<br />

learned of the all-sufficient grace of<br />

Jesus Christ. We must all bear responsibility<br />

for this and think about the messages<br />

we’re sending to our children and<br />

our members. Consider, for example,<br />

how often we pray “Thank you for the<br />

Sabbath” compared to how often we<br />

pray “Thank you for Jesus.”<br />

Many survey comments falsely<br />

reflected an impression that Ellen White<br />

dreamed up <strong>Adventist</strong> beliefs—when in<br />

reality her own study and writing complemented,<br />

and often trailed, that of<br />

other <strong>Adventist</strong>s. Former members, to<br />

be fair, have to recognize that it’s<br />

human nature for gifted spiritual leaders<br />

to end up becoming too important<br />

to their most ardent supporters.<br />

Recently an evangelical congregation<br />

decided that a certain woman’s teachpeople<br />

give the strong impression that<br />

it does teach this.”<br />

Based on his outreach to other former<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong>s, DeFoor said that the<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> Church needs more emphasis<br />

on the teaching and preaching of the<br />

Gospels. “We need to understand that it<br />

must be Jesus first,” DeFoor said. “That<br />

will lead us to a better understanding of<br />

our heavenly Father.”<br />

Goolsby said the <strong>Adventist</strong> Church<br />

isn’t the only faith community seeing a<br />

transient membership. She cites a 2008<br />

Boston Globe article, stating that “44<br />

percent of Americans have left the religion<br />

traditions in which they grew up.” 2<br />

“Social media has connected our<br />

lives,” Goolsby said. “We are now more<br />

aware of what our friends, family, and<br />

contemporaries are doing, thinking, and<br />

feeling. If those friends have issues or<br />

questions about their church or their<br />

belief system, they are generally speaking<br />

out through social media. This<br />

causes people who might not otherwise<br />

have questions or issues to suddenly<br />

start asking some of the hard questions.”<br />

Goolsby said a fundamental question<br />

to consider is whether the <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

Church is a “one-size-fits-all” religion.<br />

“Does the member,” she asked, “have to<br />

take it all or take nothing? And how<br />

does that fit with the plan of salvation?”<br />

Sahlin, who wrote the 1998 report,<br />

said that his current research also<br />

reflects changing perspectives among<br />

former <strong>Adventist</strong>s. “The relational<br />

issues are not as acute as they were in<br />

the seventies, eighties, and nineties,”<br />

Sahlin said. “They are still there, but<br />

there is this newer issue of how people<br />

experience Christian faith.”<br />

Sahlin said that newer faith issues<br />

among <strong>Adventist</strong>s are “largely driven<br />

by the evangelical critique of Adventism—that<br />

it’s based on salvation by<br />

works because of its insistence on the<br />

Jewish Sabbath and because of an<br />

extrabiblical prophet from which they<br />

get their doctrines.”<br />

Many <strong>Adventist</strong>s today, Sahlin said,<br />

aren’t prepared to handle this critique.<br />

“The fallout of our own theological<br />

debates of the 1980s and 1990s,” he said,<br />

“was a new generation that is uncertain<br />

about its faith and not well equipped to<br />

respond to the evangelical critique.”<br />

Sahlin said that <strong>Adventist</strong>s have quit<br />

making their own biblical critique of<br />

the evangelical faith, such as that found<br />

in The Great Controversy, Ellen White’s<br />

1911 work. “We have tried not to be different,”<br />

said Sahlin, noting that in the<br />

more recent church-published Great<br />

Hope, critiques of other denominations<br />

are largely absent.<br />

“I had to study<br />

my way out of<br />

the <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

Church before<br />

I could study<br />

my way back<br />

into it.”<br />

A New Challenge<br />

The reality of members leaving<br />

because of doctrine poses a new—yet<br />

old—challenge for the <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

Church. How should we respond? Here<br />

are five suggestions:<br />

1. We should reembrace conversations<br />

about doctrine. The <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

Church was founded on doctrine, even<br />

at the expense of relationships. In the<br />

mid-1800s, members of other Christian<br />

churches (including Ellen White, a<br />

Methodist) spent entire nights comparing<br />

the teachings of Scripture with the<br />

teachings of their own churches—<br />

including eternal torment in hell, Sunday<br />

sacredness, and a new teaching, the<br />

secret rapture. When these members<br />

left their home churches to become Seventh-day<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong>s, their existing relationships<br />

were often strained.<br />

Ironically, some of their spiritual<br />

ancestors are now leaving the <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

Church to return to these same teachings—and<br />

experiencing the same relational<br />

strain. Rather than feel defensive<br />

or judgmental, we should welcome<br />

respectful dialogue about Scripture<br />

with others. It will benefit everyone.<br />

2. We must provide the best possible<br />

scriptural answers to honest inquiries.<br />

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ings had become too influential—so<br />

they banned all classes using her materials.<br />

The woman? Beth Moore, a leading<br />

Christian writer and teacher. The<br />

church’s problem wasn’t Beth Moore;<br />

the church’s problem was finding a<br />

sense of balance. The same is true for us.<br />

4. We must recognize that sometimes<br />

the enemy is us. We can all think of<br />

toxic <strong>Adventist</strong> congregations or ministries<br />

that we frankly wouldn’t recommend<br />

to anyone. Rather than urge<br />

members (or former members) to endlessly<br />

“stick it out” in bad-apple <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

churches, we should encourage<br />

them to find a healthier <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

church—or plant a new one full of grace<br />

and truth in fresh airspace. New organisms<br />

grow faster anyway.<br />

We must also recognize—and so<br />

must former <strong>Adventist</strong>s—that every<br />

faith community has toxic elements<br />

that poorly represent the wider group.<br />

The Baptist Church deals with deluded<br />

members who scream “God hates you”<br />

at soldiers and gays. Even when functioning<br />

normally, every faith community<br />

has its strengths and weaknesses.<br />

One former <strong>Adventist</strong> described her<br />

children’s experience in their new<br />

denomination: “I found the strict rules,<br />

severe guilt, and the concept of burning<br />

forever in hell a terrifying concept to<br />

foist upon children.” Truly every<br />

church, like every church member, at<br />

some point cries out: “Who will rescue<br />

me from this body that is subject to<br />

death? Thanks be to God, who delivers<br />

me through Jesus Christ our Lord!”<br />

(Rom. 7:24, 25).<br />

5. We should at least honor the integrity<br />

of those who have left. Right or<br />

wrong, it takes courage to leave what<br />

you’ve always known. Even as we grieve<br />

the departure of those who used to<br />

worship with us, we should honor their<br />

integrity—especially when compared to<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> thought leaders and members<br />

who reject the authority of Scripture,<br />

stay in the church, and try to force it<br />

into their own image. This type of member<br />

does much greater damage to the<br />

kingdom of heaven than former <strong>Adventist</strong>s<br />

who retain a high view of Scripture<br />

and are seekers for truth.<br />

Where They Agree/<br />

Where They Disagree<br />

Former <strong>Adventist</strong>s’ levels of agreement with <strong>Adventist</strong> doctrines<br />

(from highest to lowest):<br />

The life, death, and resurrection of Christ (71.58 percent support all of<br />

the doctrine; 28.42 percent support part or none of the doctrine)<br />

The Trinity (71.05 all; 28.95 part or none)<br />

The Lord’s Supper (65.79 all; 34.21 part or none)<br />

Creation (64.74 all; 35.26 part or none)<br />

Second coming of Christ (60.53 all; 39.47 part or none)<br />

The experience of salvation (56.84 all; 43.16 part or none)<br />

Baptism (57.89 all; 42.11 part or none)<br />

New earth (55.79 all; 44.21 part or none)<br />

Unity in the body of Christ (55.79 all; 44.21 part or none)<br />

Marriage and the family (55.26 all; 44.74 part or none)<br />

Death and resurrection (55.26 all; 44.74 part or none)<br />

Spiritual gifts and ministries (52.11 all; 47.89 part or none)<br />

Stewardship (50.00 all; 50.00 part or none)<br />

Christian behavior (48.95 all; 51.05 part or none)<br />

The law of God (47.89 all; 52.11 part or none)<br />

The Sabbath (45.79 all; 54.21 part or none)<br />

Millennium and the end of sin (44.74 all; 55.26 part or none)<br />

The great controversy (44.74 all; 55.26 part or none)<br />

Christ’s ministry in the heavenly sanctuary (40.53 all; 59.47 part or none)<br />

The church (36.84 all; 63.26 part or none)<br />

The gift of prophecy (36.32 all; 63.68 part or none)<br />

The remnant and its mission (28.95 all; 71.05 part or none)<br />

In the <strong>Adventist</strong> Church’s earliest<br />

days, there was no creed but Scripture;<br />

the only litmus test was the final<br />

authority of the Word of God. It should<br />

be no different today—as long as someone<br />

continues to prayerfully plumb the<br />

depths of Scripture, there should be<br />

room for them in this church. As one<br />

returned <strong>Adventist</strong> put it: “I had to<br />

study my way out of the <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

Church before I could study my way<br />

back into it.” We should not feel threatened<br />

by such journeys.<br />

Perhaps the former members who<br />

pose the most confusion are those who<br />

now seem to find their identity in being<br />

“former <strong>Adventist</strong>s”—not unlike<br />

divorced persons forever identifying<br />

themselves as someone’s former<br />

spouse. Ironically, publications and<br />

Web sites centered on being “former<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong>s” have grown wearisome<br />

even to other former <strong>Adventist</strong>s. “It’s<br />

like they’ve just moved their chairs to<br />

the other side of the table,” said a former<br />

member.<br />

The message that seems to emanate<br />

from these groups is that <strong>Adventist</strong>s<br />

can’t possibly know the assurance in<br />

Christ that they do. This is a bold assertion<br />

to make about anyone. Even as<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong>s have been guilty of misjudging<br />

others, former <strong>Adventist</strong>s should be<br />

careful about doing the same toward<br />

the people they used to worship with.<br />

Members who have left would do much<br />

better to keep their focus on Christ and<br />

their new Christian communities and<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (245) 21


avoid the inherently negative spirit of<br />

former <strong>Adventist</strong> groups.<br />

Is It Join Hands or<br />

Sing Songs?<br />

At the close of the survey, respondents<br />

were asked: “Would you try the<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> Church again?” Forty-six percent<br />

said they would.<br />

These 46 percent are more than a figure.<br />

They’re moms and dads who<br />

squeezed into tiny cradle rolls chairs<br />

next to us. They’re old roommates who<br />

still show up at alumni weekend. They’re<br />

boomer men and women who battle lingering<br />

frustration about the way they<br />

were raised and still aren’t sure who the<br />

“real” <strong>Adventist</strong>s are. They’re good, sensitive<br />

people who hated worrying about<br />

the time of trouble but who aren’t too<br />

wild about eternal hellfire, either.<br />

They’re Christians who, deep in their<br />

hearts, are fine with most <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

doctrine, with most <strong>Adventist</strong> culture,<br />

with most <strong>Adventist</strong> people—but who<br />

simply wish for an <strong>Adventist</strong> Church in<br />

which Scripture is authoritative and<br />

Jesus Christ reigns above all.<br />

They’re also the people who can help<br />

get us there. We would be blessed to<br />

have them back. n<br />

1<br />

G. Jeffrey MacDonald, “<strong>Adventist</strong>s’ Back-to-Basics Faith<br />

Is Fastest-Growing U.S. Church,” USA Today, Mar. 17, 2011.<br />

2<br />

Ellen Goodman, “Shopping for Religion,” Boston<br />

Globe, Feb. 29, 2008, p. A15.<br />

3<br />

For a more in-depth discussion of New Testament<br />

Sabbath references, see Andy Nash, “Unrest Over a<br />

Rest Day,” <strong>Adventist</strong> <strong>Review</strong>, Feb. 9, 2012.<br />

4<br />

“Christians must not judaize by resting on the<br />

Sabbath, but must work on that day, rather honouring<br />

the Lord’s Day; and, if they can, resting then as Christians.<br />

But if any shall be found to be judaizers, let<br />

them be anathema from Christ” (Canon XXIX, Council<br />

of Laodicea, A.D. 364).<br />

5<br />

In Why the Jews Rejected Jesus (New York: Random<br />

House, 2005) Jewish author David Klinghoffer writes:<br />

“No authentic Messiah would inspire a religion that<br />

ended up calling upon the Jews to reject the manifest<br />

meaning of Sinai” (p. 215).<br />

Publishing).<br />

Andy Nash is a journalism and<br />

religion professor at Southern<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> University. His new<br />

book is called The Haystacks<br />

Church (<strong>Review</strong> and Herald<br />

22 (246) | www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013


Back to Basics<br />

Rock Solid<br />

Last month was bizarre! The pope resigned. A meteorite struck<br />

Russia, injuring about 1,500 people. The world-famous South African “Blade Runner,” Oscar Pistorius, was<br />

arrested for murder. Things are looking pretty shaky. The world needs a rock on which to lean.<br />

The human family has always been fascinated with rocks. In the book Patriarchs and Prophets Ellen White<br />

painted a poignant picture of the one Moses struck in the wilderness (Num. 20:8-11). Popular legends circulated<br />

among the rabbis of Paul’s day. They told elaborate, almost grotesque, stories about it; some suggesting<br />

that the rock was round, like a beehive, and rolled along the desert behind the people, stopping<br />

where they halted in their journey so that they never thirsted again. Some said the smitten rock was a<br />

divine act unique to their society and sufficient to assure salvation for their people.<br />

Paul detected the development of a similar attitude regarding Christianity among the believers in<br />

Corinth and addressed it in his first letter to them. He made a daring challenge to such erroneous<br />

concepts and underscored the danger that closely resembled the errors of Israel.<br />

He wrote, “For I do not want you to be ignorant of the fact, brothers and sisters, that our ancestors<br />

were all under the cloud and that they all passed through the sea. They were all baptized into<br />

Moses in the cloud and in the sea. They all ate the same spiritual food and drank the same spiritual<br />

drink; for they drank from a spiritual rock that accompanied them, and that rock was Christ.<br />

Nevertheless, God was not pleased with most of them; their bodies were scattered in the wilderness.<br />

Now these things occurred as examples to keep us from setting our hearts on evil things as they did”<br />

(1 Cor. 10:1-6).<br />

Paul used the experience and privileges of ancient Israel to emphasize that they were all under a<br />

cloud of salvation. They followed their human leader with such dedication that Paul described them<br />

as those who were “baptized [immersed] into Moses” when they passed through the divided waters<br />

of the Red Sea. They also ate the same spiritual food, a kind of communion, or Lord’s Supper; and drank<br />

the refreshing water that flowed from the smitten rock to quench their thirst, water being a symbol of<br />

the Holy Spirit (Titus 3:5).<br />

But they failed to realize that the Rock was Christ. Not a likeness of Him, but Christ Himself. To Paul,<br />

that Rock was not simply something familiar and common, but something more intimate and tender:<br />

Christ our Righteousness. Yet many of those who witnessed the miracle of the smitten rock in the wilderness<br />

failed to see this. They fell by the wayside. They suffered the ultimate punishment for sin: not making<br />

it to the Promised Land.<br />

The same can be true of us if we do not accept Christ as a person with whom we develop an intimate<br />

relationship that is driven by faith. When we lack the power of a vivid imagination, we too can doubt His<br />

promises and make the same mistake as ancient Israel. We can forget that it is Christ, and Christ alone, who<br />

girds us with mysterious strength to meet the challenges of life. It is Christ who supplies all our needs and<br />

inspires new hope every moment of every day. It is Christ who is ever-present, and from whom nothing can<br />

separate us (Rom. 8:37-39). He is our rock and our salvation.<br />

God has given our generation a greater opportunity than was afforded the Israelites: Christ has been<br />

revealed in Jesus, the one who was smitten for us, and by whose stripes we are healed (Isa. 53:1-6). Christ<br />

lives in His believers. From His gracious lips come invitations beckoning us to know Him more intimately,<br />

trust Him more completely, and enter into the joy of His fellowship more consistently.<br />

Those invitations dare us to count on Him, lean on His strength, and bask in the light of His truth. Then<br />

we too shall drink and keep on drinking of that spiritual rock. Unlike early Israel, we know that Rock is Jesus<br />

Christ, who offers salvation to all who believe (John 1:12).<br />

Hyveth<br />

Williams<br />

Hyveth Williams is a homiletics professor at the Seventh-day <strong>Adventist</strong> Theological Seminary.<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (247) 23


<strong>Adventist</strong> Life<br />

One<br />

(happy)Meal<br />

With a Pie on the Side<br />

Trusting<br />

God for<br />

our daily<br />

“bread”<br />

BY LEONORA SPENCER<br />

In July 2005 the rain came down, the<br />

wind blew, and suddenly and unexpectedly<br />

I was without a doubt displaced.<br />

(Displaced sounds more<br />

palatable than homeless.) Abruptly,<br />

my car became my “new” home. I could<br />

not believe it! Life as I knew it had<br />

changed. What at first seemed to be an<br />

easy resolve, overnight became a relentless<br />

nightmare. It was hard to accept that<br />

my insurance company, which happily<br />

received my payments annually, had<br />

become my worst enemy,<br />

Living out of my car was interesting,<br />

to say the least. Many nights I fell asleep<br />

in my back seat with a hammer for protection<br />

and a flashlight to see what I<br />

needed to hit—all the while asking,<br />

“God, where are You?” and pleading,<br />

“Please help me.”<br />

Throughout my life I’ve experienced<br />

some very exigent situations; yet no<br />

matter what happened, I could always<br />

find enough faith and Scripture to see<br />

my way through. This time, however, the<br />

events were unprecedented.<br />

Broadening Perspectives<br />

This sudden new life as a reluctant<br />

vagabond resulted in my questioning<br />

everything and everyone, including God.<br />

Before then I had presumed that if I<br />

were ever in dire need, I would be able<br />

to turn to obvious resources. Not so. I<br />

did, however, uncover a group of choristers<br />

singing similar tunes of “I’m praying<br />

for you.” I came to abhor those<br />

words. I didn’t want anyone to shoo me<br />

away with “I’m praying for you.”<br />

Instead I needed someone to stop and<br />

simply pray with me, or perhaps ask,<br />

“What can I do to help?”<br />

During that time I found it difficult to<br />

pray for myself. My faith also was<br />

derailed by those who, like Job’s comforters,<br />

suggested that my “predicament”<br />

was the result of some secret sin<br />

or that God was trying to teach me a lesson.<br />

Out of sheer frustration, if not<br />

anger, I countered with such comments<br />

as: “Since we’re all sinners bound to<br />

experience adversity, what will happen<br />

when it’s your turn?” Perhaps, I pon-<br />

24 (248) | www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013


dered, my “lesson” might be an opportunity<br />

for others to show compassion or to help in<br />

some way. Obviously, though, their words<br />

and actions indicated that my situation<br />

involved only me.<br />

Until the Storm Passes<br />

I was born to a country<br />

girl who once witnessed a<br />

person get struck by lightning.<br />

She therefore taught<br />

her children and grandchildren<br />

an unwavering<br />

code of conduct during a<br />

storm: “Be still until the<br />

storm passes!”<br />

Until the storm passes—<br />

that is what my state of<br />

affairs had become: a<br />

storm, a really bad storm.<br />

So I did what I had been<br />

taught; I became very still. In the silence I<br />

came to understand that life is not ultimately<br />

about the “storms” or the losses.<br />

Instead, it’s about learning to trust God.<br />

We need to “be still” and to submit our<br />

I needed<br />

someone<br />

to pray<br />

with me, or<br />

perhaps<br />

ask, “What<br />

can I do to<br />

help?”<br />

lives completely to Him.<br />

When I finally totally surrendered my<br />

life to God, He impressed these words<br />

upon my heart: “Lord, teach us to pray”<br />

(Luke 11:1) and “Give us today our daily<br />

bread” (Matt. 6:11). As I meditated on<br />

these Bible verses, I realized that in<br />

spite of my circumstances<br />

and regardless of all of my<br />

questions, the Holy Spirit<br />

had given me the words I<br />

needed to begin to talk to<br />

God again. And so I began:<br />

“Give us today our daily<br />

bread.”<br />

This scripture illuminated<br />

my path and allowed me to see<br />

the “bread”: gas in my car;<br />

clean clothes to wear; a sample<br />

pair of hose; stamps found;<br />

food court samples; a kind<br />

representative for my lender, who gave me<br />

a few months of reprieve; a call from a caring<br />

friend; a “buy-one, get-one-free” sale;<br />

friends who opened their homes to me; a<br />

free oil change; and on and on and on. Day<br />

by day, whatever I needed, God provided!<br />

Thankful in All<br />

Circumstances<br />

I truly am thankful for my time of<br />

homelessness. It was a two-and-a-halfyear<br />

journey that I’ll never forget. It<br />

taught me to consider, catch sight of,<br />

and, above all, appreciate my “daily<br />

bread”—and to trust God more fully<br />

than I ever had before.<br />

In the end I lost my two-year battle<br />

with the insurance company. When I<br />

received the news, I distracted myself by<br />

cleaning out my car. And wouldn’t you<br />

know it, I found what I needed for that<br />

day: enough change for one (happy)<br />

meal with a pie on the side!<br />

God’s Word is sure! Thank You, Lord,<br />

for our daily bread. n<br />

Leonora Spencer is a writer<br />

residing in Georgia.<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (249) 25


Biblical Studies<br />

in the<br />

Wilderness<br />

the Epidemic<br />

BY GERALD A. KLINGBEIL<br />

This is the second installment of a series of articles focusing upon the book of Numbers—a<br />

must-read for those waiting to enter the Promised Land. 1 —Editor’s note.<br />

Not again!” Young Michal turned around to see who had uttered these<br />

words so passionately. She had been busy since early morning. It was<br />

Friday and tomorrow it would not be there. It was whitish and sweet<br />

like cake with honey. Michal loved it—but then she had not known<br />

much else. When it had first been found around the camp somebody<br />

had wondered “manna”?—“what is it?”—and that had become its name. Michal liked manna,<br />

and mother had become quite the expert in preparing it in different ways. At times she would<br />

grind it into some type of flour; on other days she would boil it in a pot or bake it into a cake.<br />

Nobody had seen manna grow—every morning it was just there, like the few dew drops on the<br />

forlorn grass shoots.<br />

“I am sick and tired of this sweet, soft nothing,” Michal heard the female voice speak again.<br />

“I wish I could eat something else.” “Oh, do you remember the wonderful fish dish with onions<br />

and garlic that your aunt used to make for us?” another voice said wistfully. “Yes, and those<br />

melons—weren’t they just delicious? Egypt, well, those were the good ol’ days.”<br />

There was silence as people bent down and picked up more manna for the Sabbath. Michal<br />

searched to link the voices to faces—but was unable to do so. She loved manna and sneaked a<br />

handful of the sweet stuff into her mouth. It tasted like—well—more. Yes, it was sweet, and yes,<br />

it had a unique texture. But when Michal closed her eyes while eating, she could smell and taste<br />

a different land, with green pastures and soft winds rippling through the treetops. She thought<br />

she could hear the noise of lazy waves lapping on a shore—it just sounded like freedom. 2<br />

Not Again!<br />

Complaining seems to be part and<br />

parcel of human nature. “Not again!” my<br />

Hebrew students would exclaim when I<br />

reminded them of their weekly quiz.<br />

“Not again!” we shout when we wrestle<br />

with the “why.” Not again! is us—you<br />

and I—shaking our heads (and at times<br />

our fists) at God.<br />

Not again! became a trademark of<br />

Israel’s wilderness experience. Numbers<br />

recounts numerous occasions<br />

someone complained about something.<br />

In Numbers 11:1 the people complain—<br />

about something. Scripture is not clear,<br />

but in response God sends fire that consumes<br />

some on the outskirts of the<br />

camp. In typical fashion Israel cries out<br />

to Moses, who in turn intercedes before<br />

the Lord on their behalf, and the fire<br />

subsides (verse 2). Only one verse into<br />

chapter 11 the mixed multitude (or<br />

“rabble,” as verse 4 states) decide that<br />

they have had it with manna—and crave<br />

the culinary riches of Egypt: Who will<br />

give us meat—and fish, and cucumbers, and<br />

melons, and leeks, and onions, and garlic?<br />

(cf. verse 5).<br />

The list could go on and on. A people<br />

in the wilderness, unhappy about food,<br />

water, leadership, God’s direction,<br />

and—ultimately—the future. A people<br />

who had heard the voice from the mountain,<br />

who had marched through the<br />

waters, who had seen God’s mighty<br />

acts—and yet this all didn’t seem to<br />

matter when it came to the nitty-gritty of<br />

26 (250) | www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013


daily life. Their God seemed to be far<br />

removed. Their trust was underdeveloped.<br />

Their commitment was vacillating.<br />

Somehow that sounds familiar. We too<br />

struggle with the reality of God in the<br />

nitty-gritty of daily life. We too are quick<br />

to shout and scream—and murmur—<br />

when we feel that life is not fair. We too,<br />

at times, raise our fists toward heaven<br />

and shout “Why?” completely forgetting<br />

that God sheds more tears about our<br />

pain than we can ever produce.<br />

The book of Numbers has a very<br />

unique structure, pivoting around the<br />

two generations of Israel—old and new.<br />

Interestingly, a quick scan of the first 10<br />

chapters of Numbers results in many<br />

references to faithful compliance: God<br />

tells Moses (and, by extension, Israel) to<br />

count all the men aged 20 and above—<br />

check (1:54). God organizes their living<br />

space and the camp arrangement—check<br />

(2:34). When God wants a census of the<br />

Levites, Moses and the people comply<br />

(3:16). The firstborns are to be numbered<br />

and redeemed—check (3:42).<br />

When the Levites need to be formally<br />

ordained for their special ministry,<br />

Moses and the people follow through<br />

(8:20). Every time there is a fulfillment<br />

formula that sounds something like<br />

this: “And X did Y according to the word<br />

of the Lord.” God speaks—Moses and<br />

the people comply. What else is needed?<br />

It works—don’t fix it.<br />

And yet, isn’t there more to this life<br />

with God? The master-slave mentality<br />

still seems to shine through here. Obedience,<br />

yes, but is there not another<br />

important element that should characterize<br />

the human-divine relationship?<br />

Beginning in Numbers 11 the facade<br />

begins to crack. Instead of obedience (or<br />

at least compliance) we find complaints,<br />

suspicion, and even open rebellion.<br />

Everybody is affected. It starts with the<br />

mixed multitude and catches on with<br />

the people, affecting even Moses as he<br />

complains to God about his lot of leading<br />

a wayward people. Miriam and<br />

Their God<br />

seemed to be far<br />

removed. Their<br />

trust was<br />

underdeveloped.<br />

Their<br />

commitment was<br />

vacillating.<br />

Aaron weigh in and criticize not only<br />

Moses’ leadership but also his marriage<br />

and tribal loyalty. When the going gets<br />

tough, when the time gets longer, erstwhile<br />

obedient Israel suddenly becomes<br />

suspicious, complaining, and doubleguessing<br />

Israel.<br />

X-ray of a Complaint<br />

An example of the anatomy of murmurings<br />

can be found in Numbers 12.<br />

The chapter follows a veritable collection<br />

of complaints described in Numbers<br />

11. It seems that murmurings tend<br />

to multiply—the spirit behind them is<br />

contagious. You remember the colds or<br />

flus that affect the entire family during<br />

winter—somehow they always catch on!<br />

In Numbers 12 the first two verses<br />

teach a significant lesson: The purported<br />

reason of the complaint may not always be its<br />

true cause. The Hebrew text in verse 1 tells<br />

us that Miriam and Aaron talked against<br />

Moses because of his Cushite wife. Twice<br />

the ethnic origin of Zipporah is mentioned,<br />

which is another way of pushing<br />

our nose into the problem: A Cushite, a<br />

foreigner, an outsider—“can you imagine<br />

that?” However, while Moses’ marriage<br />

(and questions of influence) may<br />

have been an issue, the real complaint<br />

goes much deeper: “God does not only<br />

speak through Moses—He has also spoken<br />

through us.” The core issue of Aaron’s<br />

and Miriam’s murmurings did not<br />

involve some abstract theological point<br />

of contention concerning revelation.<br />

Miriam and Aaron felt cut out—they<br />

wanted to belong to the inside circle.<br />

Verse 2 closes with the ominous: “And<br />

the Lord heard this,” reminding us that<br />

there is a heavenly dimension to our complaints<br />

and murmurings—especially when<br />

they happen inside the church.<br />

God’s response to this complaint is<br />

quick and decisive. After Aaron, Miriam,<br />

and Moses have gathered at the<br />

entrance of the tabernacle, the Lord<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (251) 27


comes down in a pillar of cloud.<br />

This is a crucial moment affecting<br />

divine leadership and communication—thus<br />

God’s swift response.<br />

Apparently Aaron and Miriam had not<br />

been part of the 70 elders that God had<br />

empowered to share Moses’ leadership<br />

duties in Numbers 11:16-25. Perhaps<br />

they were jealous of Moses’ privileged<br />

standing with God. Perhaps they had<br />

gotten used to being the top dogs and<br />

now felt unappreciated. The Bible is not<br />

entirely clear as to the true reason for<br />

their murmurings. However, Scripture<br />

is unequivocally clear about God’s<br />

response. “Why then were you not<br />

afraid to speak against my servant<br />

Moses?” (Num. 12:8).<br />

Here is another valuable lesson from<br />

Numbers 12: When we murmur and mumble<br />

against other people (or God), we forget<br />

who we really are and what our position in<br />

life is. We are not the center of the universe.<br />

We are frail human beings with<br />

large egos, often lacking sound judgment<br />

and a true recognition of our<br />

place in life.<br />

Leprosy<br />

Can you imagine the shock on everybody’s<br />

face as the cloud lifted? Miriam<br />

was covered with whitish patches on<br />

her skin: leprosy. Everybody stepped<br />

back—aghast. Leprosy meant isolation.<br />

Leprosy meant no access to God<br />

through the sanctuary. 3 Leprosy meant<br />

dying every day while everyone watched<br />

from afar. Aaron pleads for his sister—<br />

and Moses (the object of their murmurings)<br />

prays to the Lord. This is not a<br />

nicely formulated prayer spoken in<br />

well-measured cadences. It is a shout of<br />

anguish, a cry that reverberates down<br />

through the ages. “Please heal her.” The<br />

Hebrew text employs the same word<br />

used to describe Moses’ intercession<br />

during the earlier murmuring attack<br />

noted in Numbers (11:1). It had already<br />

appeared in similar contexts in Exodus<br />

15:25 and 17:4 when Moses cried to God<br />

to provide water for the people. I like<br />

this valuable lesson from Numbers: Our<br />

murmurings cause pain (both for ourselves<br />

and for others). God heard Moses’<br />

anguished cry—and restored Miriam.<br />

The Domino Effect<br />

Epidemics are not very selective. In<br />

the fourteenth century the Black Death<br />

raced through Europe and decimated<br />

the population of an entire continent by<br />

an estimated 50 percent.<br />

The spirit of murmurings and complaints<br />

is similar to an epidemic. Within<br />

a worldwide church it multiplies<br />

quickly (unfortunately the relative anonymity<br />

of the information age often<br />

makes the “infection” rate more rapid).<br />

While we may complain about one<br />

thing, the real issue at stake is often not<br />

mentioned and represents a hidden<br />

agenda. In our murmurings and railings<br />

against God (or anybody else) we<br />

We are frail<br />

human beings<br />

with large<br />

egos, often<br />

lacking sound<br />

judgment<br />

and a true<br />

recognition of<br />

our place<br />

in life.<br />

often forget who we really are—clay,<br />

fragile earthen vessels, a race in rebellion.<br />

Ultimately, our murmurings<br />

always cause pain. We hurt people. We<br />

wound ourselves, and we cause pain to<br />

the One who gave Himself so that we<br />

would be able to choose life.<br />

Yet, there is another type of domino<br />

effect. 4 It moves more quietly and may<br />

not always be clearly visible—yet it is as<br />

powerful as the epidemics (past and<br />

present) that ravage entire continents.<br />

Sixty-three years ago, somewhere in a<br />

neighborhood of post-World War II<br />

Cape Town, South Africa, an overworked<br />

and worn-out woman, pregnant with<br />

her sixth child, lay in bed, sick and worried.<br />

A devout Catholic and married to a<br />

hardworking husband who was not<br />

really interested in religion, with a<br />

house full of hungry and lively children,<br />

she felt very discouraged.<br />

An <strong>Adventist</strong> neighbor had put her<br />

name down for prayer at an evangelistic<br />

meeting that was underway in town.<br />

The evangelist, a native of England, in<br />

turn visited the family and offered to<br />

pray. His soft-spoken prayers reminded<br />

Eileen of God’s unending love. A Bible<br />

study ensued, marked by many visits<br />

and shared scripture and a husband<br />

who slowly began to discover this God<br />

of Scripture. Following many months of<br />

Bible studies Eileen and Albert decided<br />

to be baptized and began a lifelong<br />

journey of spiritual growth. A visit and<br />

loving prayer changed the course for an<br />

entire family touching many generations—my<br />

wife’s extended family—for<br />

Eileen and Albert were my wife’s grandparents.<br />

Both of them have passed to<br />

their rest—they await the coming of<br />

Jesus somewhere in a cemetery in Cape<br />

Town. Yet, their decision changed not<br />

only their lives, but also my wife’s<br />

and—ultimately—my life.<br />

Stemming the tide of negative sentiments<br />

takes courage. Speaking out<br />

when the majority roars for blood<br />

requires pluck. Numbers teaches us<br />

that we can avoid this epidemic of negativity<br />

and murmurings. We are called to<br />

stick to the Master and walk humbly<br />

before God. We are invited to consciously<br />

decide to be the positive influence<br />

in the midst of a sea of negativity<br />

and criticism (remember Caleb and<br />

Joshua!). It’s not an easy task—but it’s<br />

God’s way: one kind act, one encouraging<br />

word, one gentle hug that generates<br />

another kind act and more encouraging<br />

words and many gentle hugs—and ultimately<br />

beats the epidemic. n<br />

1<br />

See Gerald A. Klingbeil, “In the Wilderness: Of Tassels,<br />

Wanderings, and the Promised Land,” <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

<strong>Review</strong>, May 10, 2012, pp. 20-22.<br />

2<br />

This fictional narrative is based on Numbers 11.<br />

3<br />

That’s most likely also the reason Aaron was not<br />

struck by leprosy—it would have made the priestly<br />

service impossible.<br />

4<br />

Gerald A. Klingbeil, “The Domino Effect,” <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

<strong>Review</strong>, Apr. 26, 2012, p. 6.<br />

Gerald A. Klingbeil is an<br />

associate editor of the<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> <strong>Review</strong> who has seen<br />

the antidote against the<br />

epidemic at work in his own life.<br />

28 (252) | www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013


Bookmark<br />

Life Is Good: The<br />

Best Is Yet to Come<br />

William G. Johnsson, <strong>Review</strong> and Herald<br />

Publishing Association, Hagerstown,<br />

Maryland, 96 pages, $8.99, softcover.<br />

<strong>Review</strong>ed by Stephen Chavez, coordinating<br />

editor, <strong>Adventist</strong> <strong>Review</strong>.<br />

The question many people are asking<br />

about religion today is not Is it the<br />

truth? but Is it relevant?<br />

An increasing number are<br />

deciding that religion is<br />

not wrong or misguided—<br />

it’s just irrelevant.<br />

William Johnsson, former<br />

editor of <strong>Adventist</strong><br />

<strong>Review</strong>, has produced a<br />

book that in fewer than<br />

100 pages doesn’t argue<br />

the existence of God; it<br />

merely explains how some<br />

of the simplest life experiences point<br />

inexorably to the reality of a loving, personal,<br />

divine Being.<br />

In a personal, nonthreatening, nonjudgmental<br />

way, Johnsson explains his<br />

convictions about life and<br />

the hereafter. He acknowledges<br />

that after looking at<br />

the same evidence, people<br />

may come away with different<br />

conclusions. In fact,<br />

the first half of the book<br />

examines the claims of<br />

some of society’s greatest<br />

skeptics. But he concludes:<br />

“We live in perpetual trust<br />

that Someone bigger than<br />

we are has drawn us to Him.”<br />

For anyone who’s struggled with<br />

doubt, or those who know someone<br />

who has, this book is an invaluable,<br />

thought-provoking resource. n<br />

At Rest<br />

BIEBER, F. W. “Bill”—b. Apr. 13, 1916;<br />

d. Oct. 29, 2012, College Place, Wash. He<br />

served as a religion teacher at Oshawa<br />

Missionary College and as MV and educational<br />

superintendent of the British<br />

Columbia, Wisconsin, and Northern<br />

Union conferences. He also served as<br />

principal of Wisconsin Academy and<br />

president of the South Dakota and<br />

Idaho conferences. He was predeceased<br />

by his wife, Viola; and one son, Billie<br />

Bruce. He is survived by one daughter,<br />

Sherene Bieber.<br />

FRAME, Robert R.—b. Nov. 23, 1915,<br />

New South Wales, Australia; d. Nov. 5,<br />

2012, Hendersonville, N.C. He served in<br />

the treasury office of the South Pacific<br />

Division, then as secretary-treasurer<br />

and later as president of the Papua New<br />

Guinea Mission. He served as assistant<br />

treasurer, secretary, and president of<br />

the South Pacific Division, associate secretary<br />

of the General Conference, and<br />

president of the <strong>Adventist</strong> Media Center.<br />

He is survived by his wife, Peggy;<br />

one son, Peter; one daughter, Judy; and<br />

two granddaughters.<br />

LELAND, John H.—b. Mar. 1, 1924,<br />

San Diego, Calif.; d. July 30, 2012,<br />

Ooltewah, Tenn. He served as a medical<br />

recruiting officer for the Kentucky-<br />

Tennessee Conference and as a practicing<br />

physician in Crestwood, Kentucky.<br />

He also served in prison ministry at the<br />

Kentucky State Penitentiary. He is survived<br />

by his wife, Floreen; two sons,<br />

James and John; three daughters, Joleen<br />

Horine, Jennifer Huck, and Anne<br />

Blanchard; 10 grandchildren; and seven<br />

great-grandchildren.<br />

MARTIN, Chester L.—b. Sept. 5, 1918;<br />

d. Oct. 28, 2012, Port Charlotte, Fla. He<br />

worked in printing for Washington<br />

<strong>Adventist</strong> University and the <strong>Review</strong><br />

and Herald Publishing Association. He<br />

is survived by his wife, Camilla; one<br />

daughter, Sharon F. Dickson-Kadel;<br />

three grandchildren; and six<br />

great-grandchildren.<br />

MARTZ, Dowell Edward—b. Sept. 29,<br />

1923, Livonia, Mo.; d. Feb. 9, 2012,<br />

Bakersfield, Calif. He served as a physics<br />

professor at Pacific Union College. He is<br />

survived by his wife, Mabel; two sons,<br />

Martin and Marc; and two daughters,<br />

Merri and Marjorie Emerson.<br />

MILLER, Henry R.—b. Feb. 15, 1930,<br />

Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; d. May 18, 2012, Mesa,<br />

Ariz. He served as a teacher in Easton<br />

Elementary School in Pennsylvania and<br />

Thunderbird Elementary School in<br />

Arizona. He is survived by his wife,<br />

Anna; one son, Hugh R.; and one<br />

step-grandson.<br />

MOORES, Robert M.—b. Aug. 4, 1944,<br />

Oshawa, Ont.; d. Dec. 14, 2012, Halifax,<br />

N.S. He served as secretary-treasurer of<br />

the East African Union and Maritime<br />

Conference; as treasurer of the China<br />

Island Union Mission and Trans-<br />

European and Northern Asia-Pacific<br />

divisions. He also served as an auditor<br />

for the West and East Indonesia unions<br />

and the Far Eastern Division. He is survived<br />

by his wife, Eileen; three daughters,<br />

Heather Harrington, Holly<br />

Bruestle, and Merrilee Moores; one<br />

brother, Clarence; one sister, Glenda<br />

Madgwick; and three grandchildren.<br />

PATCHEN, Glenn A.—b. June 26,<br />

Coeur d’Alene, Idaho; d. Nov. 5, 2012,<br />

Wenatchee, Wash. He served as an<br />

obstetrician/gynecologist. He is survived<br />

by his wife, Valerie; two sons, Greg<br />

and Garth; one daughter, Genelle Pepple;<br />

one brother, Gary; one sister, Gloria<br />

Kupferman; and seven grandchildren.<br />

RICHARDS, Sibyl P.—b. Apr. 24, 1923,<br />

Mobile, Ala.; d. June 11, 2012, Westfield,<br />

Ind. She served as a teacher at Battle<br />

Creek Academy and as girls’ dean at<br />

Wisconsin Academy. She is survived by<br />

one daughter, Mary Ann Smith; and<br />

three grandchildren.<br />

SHANK, E. Ruth—b. Nov. 7, 1932,<br />

Clayton, Ohio; d. Apr. 18, 2012, Sebring,<br />

Fla. She served as a parish nurse for<br />

Florida Hospital Heartland in Avon Park<br />

and Sebring. She is survived by four<br />

sons, John, Joe, Eirek Heintz, and Donald<br />

Trembly; and one daughter, Disa<br />

Gibbons.<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (253) 29


Journeys With Jesus<br />

Jill<br />

Morikone<br />

A Selfless 6-Year-Old<br />

It was a typical day at school. I was halfway through my morning’s<br />

work of teaching piano—halfway through listening to scales, finger exercises, hymns, and gospel songs,<br />

reading chord charts, and teaching improvisation. Some students had practiced hard, and some hadn’t.<br />

Some kids were incredibly gifted, and some made up for that lack by diligence and perseverance. The<br />

morning had gone well—nothing earth-shattering, just the normal routine of daily life.<br />

I stepped out of the music room into the hallway to find my next student, little knowing that my<br />

morning was about to change.<br />

The teacher had just dismissed her multigrade class for recess, and I paused to watch the<br />

exodus. Children ran down the hallway, eager to get to the gym for playtime. Their voices rose<br />

as they laughed and argued, as kids everywhere do. I smiled as little girls joined hands to play<br />

jump rope, while the boys started shooting baskets in a corner. What a joy to have freedom<br />

from classes for a moment. Doesn’t every child love recess? (Doesn’t every teacher love<br />

recess?)<br />

As I turned to enter the classroom, the moment happened. Just as I reached for the<br />

door handle, the door opened suddenly, and I found myself looking down at a very<br />

cute little guy. Navy-blue pants and a light-blue polo. A short, almost buzzed, cut of blond<br />

hair. He was our only first grader this year.<br />

“Good morning, James.* How are you?” My question came out almost automatically. Rhetorically.<br />

I smiled at him and turned to enter the classroom.<br />

His response stopped me in my tracks. “Hi, Miss Jill. How is your day going today?”<br />

Had I just heard right? Had a little boy—a first grader—actually asked about my day? I let go of the<br />

handle and allowed the door to shut behind me. We were alone in the hallway. Oh, there was<br />

lots of commotion, but we were somehow shut in—he and I—in this moment of time. I<br />

stooped down and looked into his brown eyes. “Thanks for asking, James! My day is going<br />

very well—especially now. How about you?”<br />

The moment had almost passed for him. He was already reaching into his locker for his<br />

midmorning snack. “Oh, it’s going really good.” He pulled out his lunch box.<br />

Still blown away by his interest in others, by his unselfishness, I tried again. “And what’s<br />

made your day so good, James?”<br />

He grinned as he munched on some crackers, crumbs on his fingers and around his mouth.<br />

“That’s easy. I have food right here to eat, and I have two good friends.”<br />

Food and friends. That’s a pretty good combination, I thought as he ran off to play. But in reality he had much<br />

more than that. Oh, he had a good home, good parents and siblings; but somehow I sensed that wasn’t all.<br />

His was an unselfish heart. A caring heart. A heart that thought of others even though he was only 6 years<br />

old.<br />

As I entered the music room with my next student, the day seemed different. Brighter somehow. All<br />

through the rest of the morning I pondered the sermon I had seen—lived out through the life of a child.<br />

What was God, through this experience, calling me to do? Was He asking me to “get out of myself”? Yes.<br />

Would my worldview change if I lived each day speaking an encouraging word, seeking to lift up my sister<br />

or brother, searching for ways to bless others? Absolutely.<br />

Wasn’t this our gospel commission: Go, therefore, and teach and love others; preach and show Jesus;<br />

baptize and live His life (see Matt. 28:19, 20)?<br />

It’s a calling He’s placed on my heart. What about yours? n<br />

* not his real name<br />

Jill Morikone is a music teacher, a church pianist, and a host on the 3ABN Today cooking segments.<br />

30 (254) | www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013


Reflections<br />

The Beauty of Scars<br />

I have worried too much in my life, even about little things such as<br />

scars. As ridiculously vain as it may sound, the imperfections of scars annoyed me, for they told the secrets<br />

of my less-than-graceful moments.<br />

At the end of my sophomore year of college I shattered my patella while horseback riding. The orthopedist<br />

offered me a choice: surgery or take my chances with casting. The former choice, he added, would leave a<br />

visible scar. I found myself in the casting room moments later. Why? Because scars scared me. That changed<br />

one day when my perspective shifted through the words of a dear friend.<br />

Kimi was one of my roommates in an apartment of four during a mission service year in Pohnpei, a<br />

Micronesian island in the Pacific. After a day of teaching, the four of us could often be found discussing life.<br />

On this particular day I was selfishly lamenting over yet another scar when Kimi nonchalantly said, “Scars<br />

just mean you lived.” I don’t think I ever told her how much those words meant, how they changed my view.<br />

But it was true. Scars have a way of telling a small piece of our life story. The scar holds a memory, an adventure,<br />

a risk, and a point in time. To live greatly, scars are often required.<br />

However, scars run deeper than mere discolorations or raised, jagged lines on the surface of your skin.<br />

Emotional scars cannot be hidden. The face speaks volumes from stone-cold eyes to a single tear to a grimace<br />

to a furrowed brow to disengagement, etc. And sadly, our world is<br />

full of such scars.<br />

While I have learned to take Kimi’s advice and accept my external<br />

scars, I find myself reserved in other venues of life. I’m honored to hear<br />

others candidly express their stories, yet I often limit what I share.<br />

While grateful that life has been kind to spare me from the jading of<br />

emotional scars, I continuously find myself putting up walls. Perhaps<br />

it’s my personality, or perhaps my old fear of scars overshadows things.<br />

I build walls because walls prevent scarring.<br />

Walls also prevent you from living fully.<br />

There are survival scars. When I consider the cancer survivor, the<br />

multitrauma survivor, the prisoner of war, the mother saving her child,<br />

I see their scars as badges of honor. They have conquered their scars and<br />

emerged stronger than before. I find myself admiring their characters,<br />

and the scars suddenly look beautiful.<br />

When I ponder what it means to live a truly great life of valor, of<br />

honor, of compassion, and of altruism, I think of Christ. Then it struck<br />

me. Christ’s perfection allowed His hands to be pierced and scarred by nails in order to save us, to erase our<br />

filthy scars eternally. His scars removed ours. Now, His scars remain in representation of the gift. I picture<br />

Christ’s hands in my mind, and I’ve decided His hands hold the most beautiful scars our world has ever<br />

seen. I keep thinking that I should not let the beautiful scars be without cause. Perhaps I should give more.<br />

Perhaps I should risk more. Perhaps I should stop letting walls prevent me from living an authentic life of<br />

purpose.<br />

Kimi was right. Scars mean you lived. I understand now what I could not before: scars hold true beauty.<br />

And I need to wholeheartedly clasp Christ’s scarred hands in thanks. n<br />

Stacey Cunningham writes from Loma Linda, California.<br />

www.<strong>Adventist</strong><strong>Review</strong>.org | March 21, 2013 | (255) 31

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