::
Seventh-Day Adventists are:
- A rapidly growing worldwide fellowship of Christians
who love Jesus Christ and strive to make Him the center
of all we believe and do
- A church eager to share the truth about what God is
really like – as seen in Christ’s life,
character, and death.
- A community of believers who accept the Bible as our
supreme authority for what to believe and how to live.
- Evangelical Protestants committed to sharing with
others certain Bible truths that over the centuries
have been largely lost sight of, or that have become
mixed with serious errors.
- A spiritual family which God has called into existence
and which has arisen in fulfillment of Bible prophecy,
to share certain urgent end time prophetic messages
with the whole world and to carry forward to its conclusion
some work left unfinished by the Protestant Reformation.
- A caring, accepting Christian fellowship deeply interested
in health – health of mind, body, and spirit.
:; Now, perhaps it would be helpful
to mention here a couple of misconceptions about Seventh-day
Adventists that arise occasionally:
- We do not believe that only Seventh-day Adventists
will be saved, or that we are the only church around
that teaches the Bible truth. God has “many other
sheep which are not of this fold” (John 10:16).
And God’s great desire is to unite His sheep into
one body, one faith, and one fold. It is truth that
brings God’s people together.
- We also do not believe in salvation by works (being
good). We do not believe that we are saved by clean
living, Sabbath keeping, or by keeping the Ten Commandments
alone – but only by trusting entirely in the saving
pardon and power of Jesus.
:: As a Christian church, Seventh-day Adventists are
a faith community rooted in the beliefs described by
the Holy Scriptures
As a Christian church, Seventh-day Adventists are a
faith community rooted in the beliefs described by the
Holy Scriptures. Adventists describe these beliefs in
the following ways:
:: God's greatest desire is for you to see
a clear picture of His character. When you see Him clearly,
you will find His love irresistible.
For many, "seeing God clearly" requires that
they see God's face. However, how He looks is not the
issue. Seeing and understanding His character is what's
most important. The more clearly we understand Him,
the more we will find His love irresistible. As we begin
to experience His love, our own lives will begin to
make more sense.
God most clearly reveals His character in three great
events. The first is His creation of man and woman--and
His giving them the freedom of choice. He created humans
with the ability to choose to love Him or to hate Him!
The death of Jesus Christ, God's only Son, on the cross
as our substitute is the second great event. In that
act He paid the penalty we deserve for our hateful choices
toward God and His ways. Jesus' death guarantees forgiveness
for those choices and allows us to spend eternity with
Him. The third event confirms the first two and fills
every heart with hope: Christ's tomb is empty! He is
alive, living to fill us with His love!
Jesus' disciple John wrote that if everyone wrote all
the stories they knew about Jesus, the whole world could
not contain them. Our knowledge of God helps us understand
His love, character, and grace. Experiencing that love
begins a lifelong adventure in growth and service. This
knowledge and experience powers our mission to tell
the world about His love and His offer of salvation.
:: Scripture is a road map. The Bible is God's
voice, speaking His love personally to you today.
The Bible speaks the Creator's directions to us, like
a detailed road map that clearly shows the exit ramp
directly into heaven. It is also much like an owner's
manual for a life ready to be lived on the cutting edge
of liberty.
Sometimes His voice speaks through stories, such as
those of David and Goliath, Ruth and Boaz, Naaman's
little servant girl, Christ on the cross, and fisherman
Peter learning how to tend sheep. Some of these stories
teach us how to handle the troubles we face each day.
Others fill us with hope and peace. Each of them is
like a personal letter from God to you.
Portions of Scripture are direct instructions and laws
from God such as the Ten Commandments, recorded in Exodus
20. These tell us more about God and His expectations
for us. When people asked Jesus to summarize these commands,
He focused on the way God's love affects the way we
live. "Love the Lord your God with all your heart,
mind, and soul," He said. "And love your neighbor
as you love yourself."
On other pages the Bible gives God's practical advice
and encouragement through parables, lists, promises,
and warnings. Amazingly, though many different writers
throughout thousands of years wrote the Bible, each
page describes the same God in ways we can understand
and apply in our lives today. This book is always His
voice talking personally to anyone who is willing to
read and hear.
God loves us even when we choose to reject His love.
In those times He allows us to walk away into the life
of our own choices. Yet He is still there, always ready
to redeem us from the results of our decisions.
:: Jesus is the one who never changes in a universe
that always does. Jesus is Creator, Sustainer, Saviour,
Friend, God's Son, and God Himself!
Everything in this world is always changing, even our
desires, interests, skills, and body shapes. But Jesus?
He's consistent. He's always the same. Sure, He's always
surprising us and touching our lives in thousands of
new and different ways, but His character is unchanging.
He's God's Son, the Creator, our Saviour, and Friend.
Jesus has promised to be all of that, and more, for
each of us. We can trust His promises because He is
God. When the words of Colossians say "in Him all
things hold together" (1:17, NIV) that includes
everything in our lives. He keeps us whole when the
enemy is trying to make us fall apart.
Seventh-day Adventists believe that Jesus is one of
the three persons, called the Trinity, who make up our
one God. The Bible describes Jesus, the Father, and
the Holy Spirit as each being committed to our growth
as Christians and to our salvation as their children.
They made this salvation possible when Jesus came to
Bethlehem as a human baby. He lived a life perfectly
in accord with God's will and then died innocently for
all of our sins. He was placed in a borrowed tomb, but
He came back to life three days later. Now he is in
heaven interceding with the Father for us, preparing
for our deliverance from sin and death.
When everything may be falling apart, when you feel
totally alone in the universe, Jesus is right there
in the center of it all, offering personal peace and
hope. Allow Him into your life. He immediately begins
"remodeling" who you are and how you live.
Jesus, in fact, is busily transforming His followers
into accurate representatives of God's character.
Look to Jesus, and you'll be looking into the understanding
and loving face of God.
:: God's vision for you is life as He lives
it! God loves you, and wants to give you the highest
quality of life imaginable.
No, not a second-rate existence somewhere on earth,
but the highest quality of life imaginable, here and
in eternity with Him! That's what God wants us to have.
The best!
This is why He provides church families where we can
belong. This is why He gives each of us special gifts
and talents, so we can live life fully. Amazingly, this
is why He's concerned about what you're doing, when
you're doing it, and how you relate to Him. God doesn't
want anything to get in the way of our friendship. He
especially doesn't want us to get involved in anything
damaging or hurtful. He's like a loving father or a
good big brother. He's someone who loves you so much
that He's always looking out for you.
When God designed you, He included special talents and
skills that will help you become a uniquely valuable
individual. These may be your ability to teach, your
love for others, or your leadership skills. Still, whatever
special gifts you have received, God has also provided
all of the energy and wisdom necessary for you to use
them well.
By the way, how God feels about death is part of the
quality life He offers. For followers of Christ, death
holds no fear. Remember, Jesus defeated death on Calvary
and has given us freedom from death. Cemeteries, then,
are filled with followers of God who are in the "peaceful
pause before the resurrection." Yes, they are dead,
but that death holds no power over their future. Jesus
is coming to take them (and those of us who are still
living) HOME! Death is almost like a wintery promise
of spring.
The Seventh-day Adventist faith in today and in the
future comes from seeing this life "overflowing"
with hope!
Because love is the key aspect of His character, God
is also deeply into gratitude. Before we even finish
saying thank you, He's already busy sending more blessings.
:: In the heart of God is a place you can experience
as home. God loves you, and wants to spend time with
you personally, one on one, as two close friends.
Because you and God are friends, you will spend time
together as friends do. Each morning you'll share a
hello and a hug and discuss how you can face the day's
events together. Throughout the day you'll talk with
Him about how you feel. You'll laugh with Him at funny
things and ache with Him over sadness and hurts. It's
pleasant being God's friend, able to snuggle comfortably
into the safety of your relationship. You can always
trust Him to treat you well, because He loves you.
The seventh day (Saturday) is an extra-special part
of the relationship. The Bible, from Genesis through
Revelation, describes the seventh day as the one day
God has set aside for focused fellowship with His people.
God has named that day "Sabbath" and asked
us to spend it with Him. "Remember the sabbath
day," He says, "to keep it holy." The
Sabbath is a whole day to deepen our friendship with
the Creator of the universe! A day when we're together,
Jesus with us and us with Jesus.
There's another great truth about friendship with God.
It doesn't end in a cemetery, for God is planning a
homecoming better than anything we can dream. A homecoming
filled with angels, trumpets, Jesus, and resurrections!
He's promised to bring His followers, those who have
accepted the offer of His life-changing love, from this
earth to His home, a place He calls heaven. A place
where our friendship can go on growing forever, endlessly,
joyfully!
:: God keeps a family album-and your picture
is in it. God loves you and has a plan for your life.
God's love is about you. Personally.
God made you and has a very special plan for your life.
It's a plan that will fill you with hope, love, peace,
and activity. In fact, when Christ paid the penalty
for sin on the cross, that gave Him the right to claim
you as His own. As a result, you can experience His
love and priceless salvation freely and fully without
limit.
By the way, pictures of everyone fill that album: Nepalese,
Brazilians, Nigerians, Yupiks, Germans, people of every
nation, culture, background, gender, hair color, and
foot size. In God's eyes all are equally "children
of the King"!
Salvation? God cleans away all our sins and replaces
them with His goodness. We don't have to be "good"
for Him to accept us. Nevertheless, we must accept His
promise and allow Him to clean out everything the enemy
has left in us. Then we begin to experience the transforming
power of His love. It's like a giant war: one side pulling
us toward empty pleasure and destruction, and God urging
us to accept His offer of peace and purpose.
Remember, Jesus has already won the war. He is victorious!
We celebrate His victory in our lives when we participate
in the Lord's Supper. This meal includes three symbols:
· Foot washing (which symbolizes our commitment
to love others as Jesus loves us),
· bread ("This bread is my flesh,"
Jesus said, "which I will give for the life of
the world," John 6:51, NIV), and
· wine or grape juice ("Whoever eats my
flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life." John
6:54, NIV)
To help us understand how God can transform us into
His children, Jesus modeled the process of baptism for
us. Baptism symbolized dying to self and coming alive
in Jesus. Seventh-day Adventists practice full immersion
baptism because by being fully buried beneath the water
we symbolize that God's grace fully fills us with His
new life for the future. Through baptism we are truly
born again in Jesus.
Eternal life, peace, purpose, forgiveness, transforming
grace, hope: Everything He promises is ours, because
He's offering it and He's shown we can trust Him to
do exactly as He promises. Accept His gifts, and you
immediately become an active part of His family, and
He joyfully becomes part of yours.
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