Interesting read...
Rest on the Sabbath. Heed Old Testament dietary codes. And be ready for Jesus to return at any moment.
If these practices sound quaint or antiquated, think again. They're hallmarks of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the fastest-growing Christian denomination in North America.
Rest on the Sabbath. Heed Old Testament dietary codes. And be ready for Jesus to return at any moment.
G. Jeffrey MacDonald, Religion News Service
If these practices sound quaint or antiquated, think again. They're hallmarks of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the fastest-growing Christian denomination in North America.
Newly released data show Seventh-day Adventism
growing by 2.5% in North America, a rapid clip for this part of the
world, where Southern Baptists and mainline denominations, as well as
other church groups are declining. Adventists are even growing 75%
faster than Mormons (1.4 percent), who prioritize numeric growth.
For observers outside the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the growth rate in North America is perplexing.
"You've got a denomination that is basically
going back to basics ... saying, 'What did God mean by all these rules
and regulations and how can we fit in to be what God wants us to be?',"
said Daniel Shaw, an expert on Christian missionary outreach at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena,
Calif. "That's just totally contrary to anything that's happening in
American culture. So I'm saying, 'Whoa! That's very interesting.' And I
can't answer it."
Seventh-day Adventists are asking a different
question: Why isn't the church growing much faster on these shores,
which is home to just 1.1 million of the world's 16 million Adventists?
Despite its North American roots, the church is growing more than twice
as fast overseas.
"We don't feel that we're growing very much, and
that is a source of concern, especially for North America," said Ron
Clouzet, director of the North American Division Evangelism Institute at
Andrews University in Berrien Springs, Mich. Hispanic Adventists are
"the one group that is growing very well," he added. "If we didn't have
that group, we would look even more dismal."
With Saturday worship services and vegetarian
lifestyles, Seventh-day Adventism owns a distinctive niche outside the
Christian mainstream. But being different is turning out to be more of
an asset than a liability.
Since the mid-19th century when the movement
sprang up in New Hampshire, Seventh-day Adventism has had an urgent
mission to bring the gospel — with a distinctive emphasis on Christ's
imminent second coming — to the ends of the earth. Adventists find the
essence of their mission in Revelation 14:12, where the end of the age
"calls for patient endurance on the part of the people of God who keep
his commands and remain faithful to Jesus."
The church's traditional, global focus is now
bearing fruit in new ways. Newly arrived immigrants in the United States
often come from parts of Latin America or Africa where Seventh-day
Adventism has long-established churches, schools and hospitals.
Those who migrate from Brazil to Massachusetts,
or from Mexico to Texas, are apt to find familiarity in a local
Adventist church led by a pastor who knows their culture and speaks
their native language, said Edwin Hernandez, a research fellow at the
Center for the Study of Latino Religion at the University of Notre Dame.
Immigrants aren't the only ones embracing
Seventh-day Adventism. Many in the general public have noticed
Adventists tend to be superstars of good health and longevity; research
shows they tend to live 10 years longer than the average American. With
strong track records for success in health and education, Adventists
find they get a hearing among skeptics who share those priorities.
Publicized research on Adventists' health "has
helped bring some objective evaluation of Adventism... particularly all
up and down the West Coast," said G. Alexander Bryant, executive
secretary for the denomination's North American division. "So we talk to
people about our lifestyle."
Some newcomers to Adventism also appreciate the
church's clarity about what's expected of Christ's followers. Diana Syth
of Kent, Wash. attended many types of Protestant churches for years.
But she said she "never got the information I needed to know about what
it meant to be a Christian" until she and her husband learned of
Seventh-day Adventism from a sibling six years ago.
"My (adult) son has seen a change in us," Syth
said. "He sees a new calmness in us. There's hope where there wasn't
hope before."
Adventists are also reaping the rewards of their
extra efforts in evangelism. Responding to a national initiative, more
than 80% of the 6,000 Adventist churches in North America staged
weeks-long outreach events in hotels and other settings in 2009.
Bryant said in an ordinary year, one-third to
one-half of Adventist congregations put on such events, and North
American church growth rates would hover around 1.7% — still high enough
to top the rates of other large denominations in North America.
Creativity seems to be paying dividends, too. The
church has seen some of its strongest gains come in non-religious
regions such as the Pacific Northwest. In Washington, for instance, the
denomination has established "Christian cafes," where people can relax
and ask questions without feeling the pressures of church.
"You're not necessarily inviting them to church,"
Bryant said. "You're just sitting around, talking with people, building
relationships — and slowly talking to them about Christ."
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