World Church: Adventist World Church Marks 140 Years

The 1888 Adventist Church Session in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Gathered from remnants of the 19th-century Millerite movement, the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, the official name of the world church's governing organization, celebrated 140 years of operating during its fall annual business meeting.
"We believe that the Lord's Spirit has led Seventh-day Adventists to a form of organization that carefully balances the need for local church authority with the need to effectively advance the gospel throughout the world," said pastor Matthew Bediako, secretary for the world church.
It was in 1863 that James White and other pioneer Adventist leaders, recognizing that some form of church organization was needed to enable a growing, and eventually global, work agreed on a church structure. The Adventist Church was a different organization in those days, as Bediako noted in his report: "In 1863 there were a total of 125 churches with a membership of 3,500. There were 22 ordained ministers and eight licensed ministers. The total tithe was $8,000," he said.
Today, there are more than 60,000 Adventist congregations, with worldwide baptized membership at well over 13.3 million. Tithe last year was nearly $1.8 billion U.S. dollars, an average of more than $4.8 million per day in contributions.
Resistance to such a move had been strong, since early Adventists, who seized upon the prophetic interpretations of a Baptist preacher, William Miller, as the keystone of their worldview, saw church organizations as part of the "confusion," or "Babylon," that other churches had fallen prey to.
According to Dr. George R. Knight, professor at Andrews University in Berrien Springs, Michigan, it took about 10 years, starting in the 1850s, for Adventist thought to move from seeing organization as "confusion" to accepting it as a necessary strategy.
"Both James White and [pioneer leader Joseph] Bates came from the Christian Connexion which was a congregational movement. However, James White realized that nothing effective could happen unless he could get an organization: how else could the church effectively gather funds and disperse personnel?," Knight told ANN in an interview.
Part of the challenge for James White was that "the form of a church organization was not spelled out in the Bible," Knight noted, which meant that White and his peers had to determine whether they would adhere solely to the letter of scripture or allow those things on which the Bible was silent. Eventually, White came to the latter view.
But the initial organization decided in 1863 had its various aspects; 40 years later, Knight said, leaders reorganized to place more authority in regional administrators and to bring Sabbath School, educational and medical organizations under the control of the world church organization. The goal, Knight said, was to enhance and achieve the church's mission.
Today, 100 years after the last reorganization, the Seventh-day Adventist Church has approximately 13 million members, hundreds of thousands of congregations, and a weekly attendance at worship of more than 20 million people worldwide. The organizational structure serving such a diverse group is doing its job, Bediako reports, a testimony to the vision and foresight of Adventist leaders who could barely grasp the size and complexity of today's international work.
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