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Four Adventists among dead in Chile earthquake

9 Mar 2010 at 5:54am

Four Seventh-day Adventist church members in Chile are confirmed dead in the wake of the magnitude 8.8 earthquake that struck the southern part of the South American nation on February 27, church officials have confirmed.

Chile’s President-elect Sebastian Piñera and United States Secretary of State Hilary Clinton spoke with ADRA volunteers during a visit to the Santiago Airport Tuesday, March 2. ADRA is currently working to distribute food and clean water to earthquake survivors. [photo: ADRA Chile]
U.S. Secretary of State Hilary Clinton
Two church headquarters have been severely damaged, while more than 10 places of worship have “been almost completely destroyed,” according to Pastor Erton Köhler, president of the church in South America.

At the same time, the division reports United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met with ADRA volunteers at Santiago’s airport on March 2 and commended the group’s relief efforts.

“Thanks to those who prayed and continue praying for our brothers and all who have suffered from the earthquake that happened last Saturday in Chile,” Köhler wrote in an e-mail message March 5. “We remain united in intercession and supporting our fellow Chileans.”

Köhler added, “Until now we have news of four killed Adventists and some still missing. We’re still waiting for more news. Furthermore, we have two headquarters, the South Chile Conference in Temuco and Central Mission in Talca, Chile, [that are] highly compromised. More than 10 churches have been almost completely destroyed and some [church-related] academies and schools suffered significant damage. Many of our brothers are homeless, struggling to find food, water and a place to stay.”

According to Köhler, the Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) is continuing its assistance in the region. “ADRA is supporting the delivery of food, blankets and tents, as well as having a Canadian team working with water purification and a group of nearly 100 volunteers helping in Santiago to arrange the food to be sent to needy regions,” he reported.

According to Karen Cordovez writing for the region, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met with the outgoing Chilean President Michelle Bachelet and spoke with President-elect Sebastian Piñera while at the Santiago airport.

During the state visit, Project Coordinator for ADRA Chile Cristián Pincheira spoke with Clinton about the work that ADRA is doing in the country to help the earthquake survivors after Clinton approached the volunteers at the airport, Cordovez reported.

“Clinton expressed her appreciation for the work of the volunteers and related her own awareness of ADRA’s work in the United States,” Cordovez said.

– With information from the Adventist Church in South America

Why will some Adventist teens remain in church as adults?

4 Mar 2010 at 12:21pm

A study of active Seventh-day Adventist youth in Europe offers a snapshot of what factors could be associated with young Adventists who foresee themselves in the church in 20 years.

Key preliminary indicators include a congregation that offers a “thinking climate.” The study suggests that youth who felt they could develop an original position in their faith by asking questions and challenging church leaders said they are more likely to remain in church compared to youth in congregations that just emphasize conformity.

Other preliminary results from the research involving 6,000 respondents suggest that personal sharing and interaction with a father on issues of faith greatly increases the possibility of young people foreseeing themselves as Adventists in adulthood.

Manuela Casti is the chief researcher for Valuegenesis Europe. Results will be published in a book scheduled for release this autumn. [photos courtesy Euro-Africa Division]
ManuelaCasti.jpg
The Valuegenesis Europe study is the first of its kind for the Adventist Church on the continent. Researchers hope the new data can serve as a tool for church leaders shaping management of Adventist ministry in Europe.

Researchers used a 335-question survey in 17 languages to study Adventists between the ages of 14 to 25. About 42 percent of respondents said they were unsure about their future in the church, while another 6 percent said were against the idea of being in church in 20 years.

Results from the 2006-2007 study are now being analyzed by a team of Adventist scholars from Newbold College in England, Friedensau Adventist University in Germany, and Saleve Adventist University in France.

Conclusions are due out in a book this autumn.

Manuela Casti, the study’s chief researcher, said high exit rates among youth in Europe motivated her involvement in the study. “Where I was raised in Italy, probably 70 percent have left the church,” said Casti, who also lectures at the church’s Newbold College in Berkshire, England.

The new data could highlight a need for increased administrative support for the church’s Family ministries, said Corrado Cozzi, Youth director for the church’s Euro-Africa region, who also serves on the study’s research committee. He said a young person’s decision to become an Adventist was found to be more influenced in the long run by family, a church pastor and other adults at church than by a youth pastor or peers.

And while researchers said that mothers are usually the “bedrock” of faith in the home, it’s fathers who might actually determine a positive decision for church. Survey respondents who discussed faith issues with their father were 70 percent more likely to foresee themselves remaining in the church than those who said their father didn’t discuss religion with them.

Research committee member Paul Tompkins, who serves as Youth director for the church’s Trans-European region, said data “showed very clearly that as men, some of us are not so good at talking about our faith to our kids. We can talk about cars or sport, but even if we discuss religion, it’s often with other men.”

The European study builds on studies of Adventist youth in the United States. Two studies, in 1990 and in 2000, also named Valuegenesis, lead to an increased support for youth ministry, said Bailey Gillespie, chief researcher of the U.S. studies. A third Valuegenesis study in the U.S. is scheduled to launch in October.

“Churches are going to need to step it up a bit and recognize the importance of this ministry for church growth,” said Gillespie, director of the John Hancock Center for Youth and Family Ministry at the church’s La Sierra University in Riverside, California, United States.

In one longitudinal study over 10 years, nearly 50 percent of Adventist youth surveyed had left the church or were inactive members by their mid-20s.

“It became increasingly evident that the congregational climate was a big factor, not what leaders do at the [Adventist Church world headquarters]” said Roger Dudley, author of the book Why Our Teenagers Leave the Church, based on the 10-year study.

“Many people said they loved their church,” Dudley said. “Their congregation accepted them, gave them important jobs, they made it feel like a wonderful, safe place. On the other hand many people didn’t like [their particular congregation] because they didn’t feel part of it. It was easy for them to drop out and stop going.”

Part of the ad campaign promoting the youth study in Europe.
Slogan Valuegenesis2.jpg
European researchers said they hope the new study will offer insight on a specifically European viewpoint of a young person’s faith. Respondents were older than those in the U.S. and were surveyed at churches, unlike in the U.S., where surveys were mainly conducted at schools. There are far fewer Adventist schools in Europe than in the United States.

Casti, the chief researcher for Valuegenesis Europe, said new data pointed to a need for intergenerational contact both at home and at church. Interactions with peers in person or through social media aren’t enough to keep young people in the church, she said.

“When we give responsibility to a young person, it’s usually in the youth department, or music,” she said. “But an involvement in other areas would allow for more contact with older generations.”

Not that youth ministry involvement is a bad thing, Casti said. It can help young people mature and contribute to generational diversity; however, when youth lead other youth, a pattern of generational segregation might emerge. The trend is seen in the Adventist Church and in other denominations, she said.

Many times a young person graduates from youth ministry and ends up also graduating from church, Casti said.

In addition to the importance of family and other adults, researchers found relevance in church programming itself. Respondents who heard preaching that was “helpful to their daily lives” at church were 450 times more likely to want to remain active in their faith than those who didn’t identify with weekly sermons.

Whether a young person has supportive parents or church congregation, the key is to provide an environment of “frank, open and transparent exchanges,” Casti said. She said she is grateful to adults who allowed her to grow up in such an environment.

“That’s why I’m still here.”

–Helen Pearson contributed to this story

In Ghana, German grants fund conservation projects at Adventist university

3 Mar 2010 at 10:28am

Sherry Ayitey, left, Ghana’s Minister of Environment, visits with Helge Wendenburg of Germany’s Ministry of Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety following the inauguration of the Baobab Centre for Ecological Studies at Valley View University, Tuesday, February 23. [photo courtesy VVU]
Sherry Ayitey
Grants from the German government and universities are helping a Seventh-day Adventist University in Ghana become one of the most conservation-conscious universities in West Africa, school officials said.

Valley View University, home to some 3,000 students, has received 1.3 million Euros (US$1.78 million) for campus conservation projects, including a wastewater recycling to fuel conversion system, rainwater harvesting and storage, tree planting and a new study center for environmental science.

“This center will create opportunities for interaction between local as well as international experts in the field of ecology,” said Seth A. Laryea, president of Valley View, during a February 23 ceremony to dedicate the Baobab Centre for Ecological Studies. On hand were project partners from Germany, Ghanaian ministers of state, students and faculty.

Helge Wendenburg of Germany’s Ministry of Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety, said he hoped “to illustrate that not only here at Valley View University but also as a whole, German-Ghanaian cooperation in the field of climate protection is on a good track.”

The university’s conservation efforts were given a boost some six years ago when the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research provided a grant for the development of the university’s plan to become an “eco-friendly” campus.

The Baobab Center for Ecological Studies was built with a grant from conservation proponents in Germany.
The Justus-Liebig University in Giessen, German is collaborating with the university to plant 10,000 trees on campus and in the surrounding community, as well as the preservation of existing tree species native to the area.

The Ecological Engineering Society is undertaking rainwater harvesting and storage while the University of Natural Resources and Applied Sciences in Vienna, Austria is responsible for the water treatment.

In another project, dry toilets are reducing water usage and human waste is used to produce bio gas to supplement the liquid petroleum gas used for cooking in the university’s cafeteria.

Sherry Ayitey, Ghana’s Minister of Environment, praised Valley View University for its determination to showcase and disseminate conservation initiatives and promised to work with the university in replicating initiatives for other institutions.

Valley View became Ghana’s first accredited private university in 1995 and the country’s first charted private university in 2006. The university is located in a rural setting some 20 miles northeast of Accra, Ghana’s capital city.

Accreditation guidelines for proposed Adventist medical schools set for vote

2 Mar 2010 at 5:31am

Seventh-day Adventist Church education leaders are establishing formal guidelines for new medical, dental and pharmacy schools, requiring institutions to demonstrate the ability to support a program before earning accreditation.

New guidelines will set accreditation standards for Seventh-day Adventist Church-run institutions wishing to add medical, dental or pharmacy schools. Loma Linda University is the Adventist Church’s medical school in Loma Linda, California, United States. [photo: Rajmund Dabrowski]
Loma Linda University Medical Center
The accreditation guidelines, which could go into effect April 1, were created partly in response to an increase in requests for new medical, dental and pharmacy schools from institutions around the world, said Ella Simmons, the world church vice president overseeing the church’s Education department.

Simmons said there is a growing need for medical and health care around the world, and the Adventist Church has a unique responsibility to respond to such needs.

“However, along with this call to service and ministry comes the responsibility to provide care and healing that are of the highest quality,” Simmons said.

According to the guidelines, institutions must show their ability to support, house and maintain a new school before they are granted conditional accreditation. The conditional accreditation is subject to a mid-year and final review during the trial school year.

The previous guidelines used by the Adventist Accrediting Association addressed general accreditation standards and didn’t specifically target medical, dental and pharmacy schools, said Lisa Beardsley, associate secretary for the church’s department of education.

Major contributors to the new guidelines included members of the Education department of the Adventist world church. The Adventist International Board of Education (IBE) and the Adventist Accrediting Association (AAA) oversaw the creation of the guidelines and will vote on the document at the end of the month.

If the two boards feel more work must be done on the document, the guidelines will be revised and voted on again during Annual Council, October 8 to 13, Beardsley said.

For more information and to see the complete guidelines, visit education.gc.adventist.org.

Church infrastructure severely damaged in major Chile quake

28 Feb 2010 at 3:06pm

An 8.8-magnitude earthquake, one of the most powerful in recorded history, shook the South American country of Chile early Saturday morning, taking hundreds of lives and damaging public and Seventh-day Adventist Church infrastructure around the quake’s epicenter, some 200 miles south of the capital, Santiago.

The church’s Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) is coordinating with federal emergency officials to provide aid and a small crew is assisting with urban rescue efforts among collapsed buildings.

An 8.8-magnitude earthquake struck Chile Saturday morning, damaging infrastructure and collapsing numerous buildings near its epicenter, about 200 miles south of the capital city of Santiago. Above, neighbors assess damage over the weekend. [photo courtesy South American Division]

chile top pic.jpg

The Adventist radio station in Chile, La Radio Nuevo Tiempo, is announcing that fellowship halls at Adventist churches are available to the public in need of assistance, said Magdiel Perez, executive secretary of the church’s South American Division, based in Brasilia, Brazil.

More than 700 people have died in the disaster, an estimated 500,000 homes have been destroyed and 1.5 million others have suffered damage, according to Chile’s National Office of Emergencies and Information (ONEMI).

Several Adventist Church buildings were destroyed in the city of Talca, including the Central Chile Mission administration office, an ADRA warehouse and the Talca Central Adventist Church, officials for the church in South America reported.

Church officials also reported structural damage to sanctuaries in Los Angeles, the Chile Union Mission office, located in Santiago, the South Chile Conference office, located in Temuco, and Chile Adventist University in Chillán.

“The ground was moving like ocean waves,” said Nancy Roa Vidal, a resident of Santiago. “[The earthquake] lasted approximately two minutes. We’re in a state of catastrophe.”

Residents near the epicenter remain jittery as aftershocks continue. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has recorded more than 105 aftershocks stronger than 5.0-magnitude since the quake struck Saturday at 3:34 a.m. local time.

“People are out of their homes, and many are thinking of sleeping outside for fear of the aftershocks,” said Jorge Alé, country director for ADRA in Chile.

ADRA dispatched a truckload of water, which left Saturday afternoon from Santiago to the cities of Talca and Concepción. Mattresses, blankets, and other basic necessities are also being procured for distribution.

ADRA’s urban rescue team is also coordinating aid to the city of Villa Alemana, near Valparaiso.

ADRA International and ADRA of South America have pledged an initial $105,000 to help in relief efforts Chile.

ADRA is accepting donations for the Chile Earthquake Response Fund at its Web site, adra.org, by phone at 1-800-424-ADRA, or via mobile phone in the U.S. — text “CHILE” followed by a space and the donation amount to the number 27138.

Chile is no stranger to earthquakes. According to the USGS, Chile endured in 1960 a 9.5-magnitude quake, the most powerful earthquake ever recorded.

The long, narrow nation lies near a fault line between the Nazca tectonic plate in the Pacific Ocean and the South American plate. While building codes in the past few decades were designed to withstand earthquake damage, Saturday’s quake was nearly unprecedented.

There are some 120,000 Adventist Church members in Chile, worshiping in about 600 churches and 260 organized groups.

More information will be provided when confirmed reports are available.

Former Adventist world church associate secretary dies at 82

24 Feb 2010 at 12:43pm

Maurice T. Battle, retired longtime Seventh-day Adventist Church administrator and a former associate secretary at world church headquarters, died at his home in Ellicott City, Maryland, last evening. He was 82.

During denominational service spanning more than 50 years, Battle served as a pastor and administrator. Beginning in 1948 with pastoral work in the church’s South Atlantic Conference, his career later led to posts in West Africa and England before beginning service at world church headquarters in 1970.

Maurice T. Battle’s decades of denominational service led to his election in 1978 as the world church’s associate secretary. [photo courtesy Archives and Statistics]
MauriceBattle246.gif

Colleagues remember Battle as a skilled bridge builder among people, supplying a voice of reason amid conflict and fostering positive relationships despite previous distrust.

“Promoting friendly, stable relations among groups of people is probably one of his biggest contributions to the church,” said Bert B. Beach, former director of the Adventist world church’s department of Public Affairs and Religious Liberty.

Battle was instrumental in the Adventist Church’s efforts to dismantle Apartheid in South Africa, said Beach, who first met Battle when the two were serving the church in West Africa.

Born in 1927 in Oberlin, Ohio, Battle developed a love of reading — especially biographies — travel, gardening and stamp collecting. In 1948, he married Esther R. Coleman and earned a bachelor’s degree in theology from then Oakwood College in Huntsville, Alabama.

Battle later received an honorary doctoral degree from Union Theological Seminary, an independent graduate school of theology in New York, in recognition of his “outstanding contribution” to both his denomination and the community.

Battle spent a decade helping to strengthen the church in West Africa. He served as Adventist Church president first in Liberia and later in Sierra Leone. During his years in Ghana, Battle acted as regional secretary and also oversaw several departments, including Sabbath School, Lay Activities and Public Relations.

Battle first served the world church as associate secretary for the Lay Activities — now Personal Ministries — department, beginning in 1970. He was elected as an associate secretary of the Adventist world church in 1978.

Adventist World church President Jan Paulsen said he was “saddened” to learn of Battle’s death today. “[Maurice] was a friend and a highly valued colleague of mine for many years, going back to Africa,” said Paulsen, who served as a missionary in Ghana while Battle was employed there. Paulsen also recalled that Battle acted as one of the officiating ministers at his ordination service.

Battle is survived by his wife, Esther, and four children.

Singleton, one of first Regional conference presidents, dies at 101

24 Feb 2010 at 12:05pm

Harold Singleton was the first president of the Adventist Church’s South Atlantic Conference, based in Atlanta. [file photo courtesy GC Archives]
Thumbnail image for H.D. Singleton
Harold D. Singleton, who served as president of one of the first Seventh-day Adventist conferences established to serve African American congregations in the United States, died February 6 at a care facility in Maryland. He was 101.

Singleton was the sole surviving member of the first presidents of the nine Regional conferences in the Eastern United States in the 1940s. He was the first president of the South Atlantic Conference, formed in 1945, with headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia. He also served as president of the Northeastern Conference, then based in New York City, from 1953 to 1962. He was then elected to serve at the church’s world headquarters as secretary of the Regional Department, a department discontinued in 1979.

“We are very grateful to Elder Singleton for his pioneering work in the South Atlantic and Northeastern Conferences,” Adventist world church President Jan Paulsen said in a statement. “His leadership at the church’s world headquarters as Regional Department Secretary was highly effective and very much appreciated.”

Calvin Rock, a former vice president of the world church, described Singleton’s calm leadership style as “thoughtful” and “careful.”

“He wasn’t flamboyant, but his leadership showed by his impeccable record for picking pastors, like E.E. Cleveland and Maurice Battle,” Rock said. “He was always on target for selecting brethren to join the ministry.” Several of his ministerial candidates went on to become conference presidents.

Harold Douglas Singleton was born in 1908 in Brunswick, Georgia, and graduated from then Oakwood College in Huntsville, Alabama, during the Great Depression. He later continued his education at Union College in Lincoln, Nebraska and at the Adventist Theological Seminary, then located in Washington, D.C.
 
Upon entering the ministry, Singleton gained a reputation as a church planter, pastoring churches in Tennessee, Florida, and the Carolinas.
 
Later he served the Southern Union Conference as Regional Department secretary, overseeing the church’s work among African Americans in the South. In 1962, he was elected to serve at the church’s world headquarters, then in Takoma Park, Maryland, where he stayed until his retirement in 1975. Later, he was often called into active service to pastor churches.

Singleton is survived by Mary, his wife of 71 years, six children, five grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.

–Reporting by Ansel Oliver and Adventist Review staff

Founder of Adventist Deaf ministry dies at 89

23 Feb 2010 at 11:28am

Arthur Griffith, who lost his hearing during a childhood illness, was a pioneering leader of the Adventist Church’s Deaf ministries. Some church leaders hope to increase outreach to the Deaf community, an often ignored and misunderstood subculture. [photos courtesy ADM]
Arthur Griffith portrait
Arthur Griffith once created Bible study movies for Deaf people by setting up a movie camera he could operate with a makeshift foot pedal.

In the 1960s, a sheet covering the window turned a room in his Portland, Oregon home into a movie set where Griffith would stand in front of projected slides to minister to other members of his often-neglected subculture and language group — the Deaf.

Griffith, who died last month at age 89, was ordained as the Adventist Church’s first Deaf minister in 1969, following a request for him to serve as the leader of a Deaf Bible study group. A former machinist lacking formal theology training, he founded much of the church’s Deaf outreach and served as a minister to Deaf church members around the country.

He studied with, converted and mentored most of the Deaf Adventist leaders currently serving the church.

“Many people’s lives have been touched by this great man of God,” said David Trexler, speaker/director of the Arizona-based Adventist Deaf Ministries, a supporting ministry of the Adventist Church.

In North America there are some 300 Deaf Adventist Church members and five all-Deaf congregations, said Esther Doss, a spokesperson for the ministry. Only 2 percent to 4 percent of the 2 million Deaf population in the United States attend a church of any kind, she said.

“Deaf people are a subculture and isolated in some ways,” said Griffith’s son Alfred, a pastor to two Deaf groups in Central California. He laments that other denominations are ahead of the Adventist Church in reaching out to that community.

Some denominations feature multiple Deaf congregations in one city, while others offer DVDs for the Deaf in multiple sign languages. One even has plans for a Deaf seminary. The church in North America has two full-time ministers and one part-time minister to the Deaf, as well as five Deaf campmeetings throughout the United States.

Though some Adventist congregations offer sign language interpreters, it can be difficult for the Deaf to follow proceedings and many phrases are lost in translation. In North America, speakers of American Sign Language must learn English grammar to read.

Some rituals at all-Deaf congregations are noticeably different — heads are not bowed during prayer, hymns aren’t sung but signed, and applause is replaced by a waving of hands.

Adventist world church undersecretary, Larry Evans, and a church vice president in North America, Debra Brill, have formed a task force to coordinate Deaf outreach, which has limited work globally. Evans first met Griffith while serving as a ministries coordinator for the church in Oregon.

Griffith was born in 1920 to Minnesota farmers, who soon moved to Alberta, Canada. Still a child, he and his brother contracted spinal meningitis. His brother did not live, and Griffith lost his hearing.

After seeing Griffith’s homemade Bible study movies for the Deaf, Adventist Church leadership sponsored a set of 12 professionally produced programs. Here he sits at center during the taping of one of the productions.
Arthur Griffith signing for a television show
In 1944, Griffith married Alyce Grove, whom he met at a Deaf campmeeting in Portland. In 1956, their seven-year old daughter Linda died after being struck by a car. From then on, his desire to see her again at the Second Coming drove him to passionately share the message of the gospel and the resurrection, his son said.

His simple films were seen by North American church leaders, who sponsored a set of 12 professionally produced films to share the church’s message with the Deaf.

Griffith later published a newsletter, drawing 500 subscribers, which allowed the Deaf community to better network with each other. He served as Deaf ministry leader throughout the country, and retired near Manteca, California. He is survived by his wife and four children.

Paulsen encourages Adventist youth to seek involvement in church

23 Feb 2010 at 4:04am

Young Seventh-day Adventists should continue reaching out to peers and seek more active roles in church, the president of the Seventh-day Adventist world church said to church members during a live television broadcast earlier this month.

Seventh-day Adventist world church President Jan Paulsen talks with young people from Inter-America about their importance in the church. The discussion took place on the 20th episode of Let’s Talk, an impromptu question and answer television series. [photo: IAD]
Let's Talk El Salvador participants
Jan Paulsen also told the group of young adults from the church’s Inter-American region, to embrace peers who are considering leaving the church or acting out in rebellion.

“Let’s love them back,” said Paulsen, referring to Jesus’ example of the Prodigal Son. “God is in the business of saving people.”

The broadcast was the most recent installment of the Let’s Talk series, in which Paulsen fields impromptu questions from youth. The series has run more than 20 times in locations worldwide. The February 6 broadcast included interpreters for the Spanish-speaking studio audience of 18.

During the unscripted broadcast at San Salvador’s Channel 33 television studio, Paulsen reiterated themes from previous episodes. Again he encouraged youth to actively participate in church, and for church leaders to bring youth into positions of church leadership.

“To my colleagues … trust them enough to give them responsibility,” Paulsen said. “Many [young people] have said, if the church doesn’t need me today, I’m gone tomorrow.”

Paulsen also encouraged youth to share biblical principles with peers instead of feeing they need to adapt to other lifestyles to share the gospel.

“You don’t have to change any biblical values. You just have to talk about them as values which can enrich their life … both for a secure future and to shape the way we live now,” he said.

Regarding teens in the church who act rebelliously, Paulsen said, “Teenagers are very sensitive and can feel guilty very easily. Support your young people, show that you care for them.”

“Everyone makes mistakes,” Paulsen said, including himself in the statement.

Regarding local ministry and education resources, Paulsen said regional leaders were the ones to make decisions for their own areas. Responding to a question about the possibility of each country in Central America establishing its own Adventist university, Paulsen said there is no limit to the number of institutions that could be built, but the needs of the community and the nation need to be considered.

“We want it to be top quality with whatever we establish,” Paulsen said. The church now operates universities in the region in Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico and Venezuela.

Paulsen answered a question about sexual abuse, calling it a “huge challenge” for the victim, but saying that person should “not have any doubt that God loves them.”

“That person should find a trusted person to talk to … or some therapy. No one should have to carry that burden alone,” Paulsen said. He said sexual abuse should be reported to the authorities. “Even if it happened in the church,” Paulsen said, referring to the church’s written policy requiring such charges to be reported to the police.

The next Let’s Talk is scheduled for March 7 in the Netherlands.

Let’s Talk El Salvador from GC Communication on Vimeo.

Adventist media center in Middle East launches television channel

22 Feb 2010 at 10:44am

A new Seventh-day Adventist television channel in Beirut is expected to help spread the church’s message of hope among Arabic-speaking communities in the Middle East, a region “rich in Biblical history,” its director said last week.

(From left) Bertil Wiklander, Adventist Church president for Trans-Europe; Kjell Aune, church president in the Middle East; Amir Ghali, Al Waad director; and Brad Thorp, president of Hope Channel, unveil the church’s new media center in Beirut. [photo: courtesy Al Waad Media Center]
Church leaders unveil the Al Waad media center

Church leaders said the Al Waad Channel, launched along with the Al Waad Media Center February 13 at a packed Middle East Adventist University Church, will potentially reach an audience of more than 300 million Arabic speakers in the region.

The channel will “[share] hope with the Arab world and build bridges of understanding,” said Kjell Aune, Adventist Church president for the Middle East.

The Al Waad Channel is the newest member of the global Hope Channel, the Adventist Church’s official television network.

While the media center plans to include a radio and Internet presence as well, television is the team’s current priority — some 90 percent of the local community members watch television daily, while only 30 percent listen to the radio and just over 2 percent regularly use the Internet, church leaders said.

The Al Waad Channel, which derives its name from the Arabic word for “promise,” offers “the promise of hope” to the region, said Director Amir Ghali, who brings to the job a decade of experience producing radio programs for the Adventist World Radio’s Cyprus studio.

Salim Sahyouni, head of the Protestant Church in Syria and Lebanon, also spoke at the launch, applauding the new media center as part of a broader effort in the region to work toward not only physical peace, but also “everlasting” spiritual peace in Jesus.

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