Adventist outreach earns church role in world mission conference <br> Sharing Christ in 21st century among collaborative event

Edinburgh/Silver Spring, MD/USA | 02.08.2010 | APD |

Seventh-day Adventist mission experts were among representatives from more than 100 Christian denominations who met in Edinburgh, Scotland last month to envision the future of Christian mission in the 21st century. Christians from all over the world joined in unity and explored different ways of Witnessing to Christ Today.

The event marks 100 years since the first Edinburgh World Missionary Conference, considered a watershed in the collaborative shaping of mission.

While three Adventist church leaders attended the 1910 meeting as delegates, including L.R. Conradi, vice president of the General Conference and president of the European Division, representing the Advent Mission as Mission director, and two Adventist pastors from North America, today’s church leaders participated for the first time this year, a testament to the denomination's reputation for outreach.

"World Christianity can no longer address mission without factoring in the impact of Adventist mission worldwide," said Ganoune Diop, director of the Adventist Church's Global Mission Study Centers, who co-chaired the Foundations of Mission session, one of nine session themes during the conference.

Other topics included Christian mission among other faiths, mission and postmodernists, Christian communities in contemporary contexts and authentic discipleship.

Delegates -- among them Adventists Cheryl Doss, director of the church's Institute of World Mission; and John McVay, New Testament scholar and Walla Walla University president -- represented 77 national entities, 65 countries of origin and 62 languages.

During the June 2 to 6 conference, delegates shaped mission and Christian witness in the 21st century, and also reviewed landmarks in mission since the 1910 conference. Among milestones profiled was the Adventist Church's medical ministry at Andrews Memorial Hospital during the 1940s in Jamaica, where today about one in 11 citizens is Adventist.

Diop said delegates learned to view mission as the "heartbeat of God," a "humbling and refreshing" experience.

Having key conversation on mission and working with other faiths to propel mission at events such as the unique Edinburgh World Missionary Conference does not mean the church is compromising its distinct beliefs, doctrinal integrity or mission outreach, Diop said.

"Adventists are in fact encouraged to collaborate with any agency that promotes Christ," said Diop, referencing a statement in the church's Working Policy: "We recognize those agencies that lift of Christ before men as a part of the divine plan for evangelization of the world, and we hold in high esteem Christian men and women in other communions who are engaged in winning souls to Christ." [Working Policy, no. 75].

"As Adventists, we are not part of the ecumenical movement. It is clear that we cannot be restricted in our doctrines and values, but the theme of this conference was witnessing, with Christ as a mobilizing force. That's certainly an area of commonality we can rally around," Diop said.

The participants of the Edinburgh Centenary celebration produced a final document, which can be found in the APD website at: http://www.stanet.ch/apd/news/2617.html

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