Annual
Council 2003
Opening
Address by Pastor Jan Paulsen,
President,
General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
October
10, 2003
In
my address to this Committee immediately after I came to this position four-five
years ago, I made some
comments about the urgency of the Gospel, and stated in that connection that
I
would seek to make the Church, in her planning, focus particularly and
primarily on 'Mission'. I am convinced today, more than ever, that that has to
be at the top of our agenda. When we do, the members come alive and their gifts
and potentials in Christ and His Spirit are realized. When we don't, the
Church changes character, and everything conceivable goes wrong with her, as so
readily happens in any community living just for themselves The Church has a
cause to live for, and 'finishing the work' will keep the Church focused on
Christ and sensitive to the lateness of the hour.
Yes,
we have a variety of business items to care for when we meet in council,
but our primary business is to tell
others - all others, including the difficult-to- reach peoples of the 10/40
window and people in the highly secular post-modernistic world - it is our
first business to tell them all about Jesus and his return; and what it means
to live at this late and uncertain hour in history. And in respect to 'mission'
nothing is routine. We will focus on bringing a witness to ALL, simply because
that is our mandate. The administration, departments, and services at the GC
are working, thinking, and planning together for this to happen. To reinforce
this commitment to evangelism and to strengthen our capacity to do it well, I
hope to place before you, while we are here in council, a proposal to set up a
"Center of Global Evangelism" at the General Conference, built on the mandate
for which the Council on Evangelism and Witness was established, and will ask
you to appoint at the General Conference a director of world evangelism, who
will work in close consultation with the world Divisions as well as with the
departments at the GC all of whom, in one way or other, carry global
initiatives in mission.
It
would be a mistake to think that the appointment of a Director of Global
Evangelism signals the end of something
else - anything else - or that someone already on the team is not doing his or
her job well. You have helped us staff the departments and services in this
house with the most gifted and talented professionals we have, and they work
tirelessly, driven by their love for the Lord and His church. But, frankly, the
size of the assignment and the urgency which it carries compels us to ask: What
more should we do.
See
the establishment of this additional service at the General Conference as
an attempt on our part to be
creative and to offer a broad range of ideas for witness and evangelism aiming
both at ministry and laity. The center will work with the Divisions to offer
workshops and training programs in evangelism. It will seek and develop
effective ways by which particularly the younger half of our world membership
can define their use of time and resources in favor of witness and evangelism.
It will seek to stimulate young professionals to redefine their vocation so as
to allow 'mission' to rise to the fore; and, then, everything else they do
professionally will be done to make that possible! It is becoming increasingly
clear to me and my colleagues that laity holds the key to the finishing of the
work.
You
know well the oft-quoted
counsel of the Lord's Servant, which in a real sense place us under orders:
"Those who have
the spiritual oversight of the church should devise ways and means by which an
opportunity may be given to every member of the church to act some part in
God's work. This has not always been done in the past . . . . The leaders in
God's cause . . . . are to give special study to the work that can be done by
the laity for their friends and neighbors. The work of God in this earth can
never be finished until the men and women comprising our church-membership,
rally to the work, and unite their efforts with those of ministers and church
officers." (Atlantic Union Gleaner, Nov.
4, 1908; cf. Testimonies, 9, pp.
116,117)
And,
so, reflecting the priority of mission, initiatives such as "Go 1 Million", "Sow 1 Billion", "2004 Year of
Evangelism", as well as the nurturing values which the Church seeks to bring to
its own members, will be the first items of business we will attend to when we
convene Sunday morning. You know these initiatives by several labels, and they
have been presented by different individuals, but are they really one
integrated whole - they flow into each other and out of each others. One may
define a vision for mission, the other will provide a tool, and yet another
will focus on harvesting the fruit of decisions for Christ. None is more
valuable than the other, and none is possible without the other.
The
success of all of this can only be measured in part, for the truth is that
in soul-winning numbers can be
misleading and will tell only part of the story. The success of the growing and
maturing process, which makes us into persons and communities which are what
God wants us to be, only He can measure. But that's all right, for we are not
reliable assessors of each others spirituality and growth. God is the only one
who does that well, and he does so with grace, mercy, and with forgiveness
without which we would all surely fail.
And
with an eye to mission may I
also say that 'evangelism', as traditionally defined and as experienced in the
big public event, although more effective in some countries than in others,
will always have its place, not least as a moment of celebration, as occasion
for 'hoisting of the flag' in public, and as the public marking of reaping a
harvest which has been prepared for a longer period of time. It gives the
community of believers a sense of an occasion. But the comprehensive, lasting
growth, which contains decisions based on understanding and which brings people
of mature commitment into the church, is an evangelism which grows out of the local 'soil',
such as you find it in parts of the world, whether in the Americas, Africa, Asia,
Europe, or the islands, where mission and out-reach are
essentially done in 'small-group' activities - involving the laity of the local
church. I see this type of activity as one of the arrival points for "Sow 1
Billion."
This
is where the study of the Word and a corresponding maturing of decisions
are made over a period of time. The
study of the Word, accompanied by decisions is made in a familiar culture. It
is done mainly with people who are part of that culture and who understand how
the Word speaks to life as it is lived locally in that culture. Close
friendships are formed; belonging is experienced, and when the moment of
baptism comes, there is for that individual already a community and a sense of
the family. It is in such initiatives that the 'doctrine of laity and ministry
working together' can be most fruitfully demonstrated.
The
added value of this is that the local church comes to experience ownership
of mission. The work will not be
finished until members worshipping in the pews on the Sabbath accept their
ownership right and responsibility as part of a witnessing community. We are
surrounded by the considerable force of youth in our churches. So, I say to
them: "Don't just sit there! Do something useful for God. Go and plant a
church!"
As some have done that in various
parts of the world, we often, alas, find faults with what they do, or with what
they say, and not always unfairly. As we speak words of correction, appropriate
as they might be, let us also thank them, and let there also be words of
support expressed in a spirit of care and love. Our youth and young
professionals, without whom we are not going to finish the work, have been
endowed with an immeasurable wealth of energies, creative ideas, and spiritual
gifts which must find ways of flowing to the glory of our God. I believe that
is his will.
Next
to mission, but not really separate from it, in the thinking and planning
of our resource allocation, is
education - higher education especially. The International Board of Ministerial
and Theological Education is consulting with you to develop workable and
flexible procedures that can best fit the various customs and situations around
the world and at the same time protect and secure that which we call good and
holy. Christian education is a sacred ministry, and the consumers are our own
children and youth. As we teach them today, our church will be tomorrow.
The
Commission on Higher Education which has been at work for the past 18 months,
is ready to present its report
to this council. The question we ask is: How can we, from the General
Conference, best and most effectively serve you, the Divisions and Unions of
our world family -
-you who have an
ever-expanding number of universities and graduate programmes;
-you who are
caught in the tension between local needs, community expectations, government
good-will, but very limited financial capacity;
-you who are only
too well aware that the church and our mission will not be served by our
institutions just cutting themselves loose settling with whatever identity
comes;
The question we ask is: How can we
as an international community together develop a link-up system which is
workable, effective, and acceptable to the local university/college? As we all
know, ours is a free community, it is built on consultation and good-will, with
delegated responsibility. Only that which you find attractive and effective
will actually work. Anything else is just frustration. So, I ask you to help us
not to walk away from this one, but to find a workable system.
Let
me move to another matter - a
matter you are all well familiar with; it is not on the council agenda this
year, but it will be next year. I am referring to the conversation we have
going between faith and science as the two talk to each other about origin and
creation. It is a necessary conversation, but it was never going to be an easy
one. I know there are some who wonder what possible good could come out of
such a conversation. But this is a conversation which the church as a healthy
community needs to have, and fear is not a valid restrainer in an open, free,
and strong community such as ours.
From
the earliest times of our church we have held that if someone has a divergent
understanding on a given
issue, i.e. different from that held by the church, let that person be given
an opportunity to present it in an appropriate forum of colleagues and peers.
And
in speaking to a group of some 100 educators and theologians in this hall a few
months ago I stated that there is a proper forum for the airing and testing of
such views or 'new light'. But it is my view that that forum is neither the
classroom, nor the pulpit, nor the church's official papers. Whether the
appropriate forum be a BRICOM or a specially set up committee of scholars and
leaders, the church must and will provide the opportunity where seriously held
views can be stated, assessed, and responded to. And that is what is happening
in the conversation between faith and science.
In
addressing the opening meeting
of this 'Creation Conference' just over a year ago, I reminded those in
attendance - although 'reminding' was hardly necessary for all participants
were of our family of faith - of the uncompromising position that we hold on
the primacy of Scripture; and we were mindful of the inspired counsel of Ellen
White that "God has permitted a flood of light to be poured upon the world in
discoveries in science and art; but when professedly scientific men lecture and
write upon these subjects from a merely human stand-point, they will assuredly
come to wrong conclusions. The greatest minds, if not guided by the word of God
in their research, become bewildered in their attempts to investigate the
relations of science and revelation." (Ellen G White, Signs of the Times, March 13, 1884)
We
are a conservative church. Yes, we wish to be open, responsive, and sensitive,
as must any strong and free
community of believers be. But we are conservative in the sense that we wish
to
stay close to Scripture, and, in the words of Paul to Timothy, we "guard that
which has been entrusted" to us (1 Tim. 6:20). We see the Bible not as a mere
cultural product, but as a book in which God speaks to us. We hold it to be
reliable and trustworthy. And in its account we are told that God created this
earth, and the living things upon it, and he did it in six literal days. That
is the testimony of Genesis 1 and 2, and this is the position we hold as a
church. We say: "That is the origin of the earth and life on it as we know it
today."
I
know of nothing that is about to move us as a church away from that position.
But we will, in a congenial
environment of shared faith and shared commitment to the Lord, and with mutual
respect, talk about this matter and examine whether and how what we believe is
impacted by views and 'findings' so-called. It is good for us to learn to talk
also about difficult things. It would be good, however, for all of us to
remember that when we have corrected those who differed from us, we did not
forget to call them 'brothers' and 'sisters', for that is what they are. Loved
by Christ, and bonded in a love which keeps us together as a family. It is
precisely that 'love of Christ', for us and in us, which will bring out the
best in us all.
At Annual Council next year, after
the final segment of this conversation is over, a full report will be brought
to this Executive Committee.
Continuing
the theme of "Unity",
selected at the beginning of the quinquennium, our emphasis at this Council
will be on "United in the Warmth of Fellowship". You will see various phases
of
this motif reflected in the devotional presentations.
Now,
leaving the agenda aside, as we have now entered the Sabbath hours, I invite
you to reflect with me for a
few moments on one of the paradoxes of the Gospel, namely the fundamental
enmity which there is between the world of unbelief and the world of Christ,
an
enmity which nevertheless - and herein the paradox - is permeated by the
uncompromising love of Christ for lost sinners. Consider what this says to us
as a church community entrusted with a mission. Our assignment is to move out.
We are to reach out. People are what matters.
God acknowledged this enmity when
he cursed the serpent after the fall of our first parents. They had been
deceived and were seemingly trapped, for having yielded once they would have no
power in themselves to resists the forces of evil. (E. G. White, Patriarchs
and Prophets, p. 53). They were caught. And
that's the nature of humanity. And, in a sense, from that moment on we find
ourselves in enemy territory. But in that same moment he declared that victory
over the evil forces will come and will prevail. God had at no time the
intention that faith-hostile forces of a secular world, with its values, would
be allowed to so encircle men and women that the rays of hope and the sound of
the promises could not reach them. God is in the business of finding, reaching
out for, loving, and saving people who are lost and who have no future without
God's help.
But
it is a fact that since that fateful day in the garden there has always been
a world of evil forces - a
world of values and conduct - which expressly rejects or is hostile to the God
whom we know as our Father, and His Son, Jesus Christ. The annals of humanity,
whether read from the pages of the Holy Writ or from the never-ending abundance
of secular literature, illustrate where these forces would take us, and how
they would like for us to think, to be, and to behave.
In
the New Testament especially, and particularly by the apostles John and Paul,
we are reminded of the polarity
which exists between darkness and light, between the flesh and spirit; and an
appeal is made to the believers to recognize the radical difference between
them. In other words, do not so gloss over these differences as to make them
into just innocent cultural choices. Secular society has never recognized that 'rights' and 'wrongs' has anything to do with God. They are to them just
social and cultural choices. The Bible makes the distinction. The appeal is to
make a choice which in fact constitute a crossing "over from death to life"
(John 5:24). The sad reality, said Jesus, is that men have come to love
darkness instead of light because their deeds are evil (John 3:19). That's the
nature of the world which surrounds us. In a sense mankind is caught in enemy
territory.
This
is the polarity which Jesus Christ reminds the disciples of during the final
moments he has with them
before he crossed the Kidron Valley. He said: "If the world hates you, keep in
mind that it hated me first. If you belonged to the world, it would love you as
its own. As it is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of
the world" (John 14:18, 19); "In this world you will have trouble. But take
heart! I have overcome the world" (16:33); and so he prays to his Father that
he will "protect them from the evil one" (17:15).
Similarly
Paul, maybe reflecting on his own life as it is approaching its end, writes
to Timothy: "Everyone who
wants to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted" (2 Tim. 3:12).
What
does this say to us, Seventh-day Adventists? How can we take this in without
becoming destructively
negative or developing unfriendly attitudes towards society and people -
attitudes which are counter-productive to our mission? How can we accept this
reality without running away and seeking to hide; actually the very opposite:
How can one accept this reality and still be pro-humanity, pro-society,
pro-community, friendly, loving, courteous, and hospitable? For the paradox of
the Gospel is God's uncompromising love for people simply because they are
human beings, and he has insatiable drive to reach people 'caught in enemy
territory' and bring them hope.
I think it is important for us as a
church always to be clear in our statements and teachings about the values we
stand for and advocate over against values and directions that we cannot share,
however popular and widely subscribed to they may be. That applies to
individual life-style values as well as to stands that we take as a church. It applies
to social issues as well as personal life-style choices. It is good and
important to be clear, and important to state why.
But
when that is done, I am as much concerned about how we relate to people who
may not be part of our personally
selected circle of friends. They may be strangers, or just new to my group. It
troubles me when a couple, professionally well-accomplished and well-employed,
very intelligent, sit down in my home and says: "I find our church on the whole
very unfriendly". - It does not bother me that they say this to me; In fact I
am glad that they know me well enough and feel that they can trust me to be
free to say that. But it does bother me that this is what they experience. And
I ask myself: Is it really so, and is it wide-spread? Is it an unfair
over-generalization? We are all social beings, and whether you are in or out of
the church, people need friends. We don't function well without them.
And then are those who have in fact
made precisely the choices that I stated I cannot accept. They are openly by
their choice of values different from me. Can I make friends with them? Should
I try? Is it not risky?
Listen
to the counsel of the Lord's
servant:
"I saw that those
who profess the truth should hold the standard high, and induce others to come
up to it. I saw that some would have to walk the straight path alone. Their
companions and children will not walk the self-denying pathway with them.
Patience and forbearance should ever characterize the lives of those lone
pilgrims, following the example of their blessed Master. They will have many
trials to endure, but they have a hope that makes the soul strong, that bears
them up above the trials of earth, that elevates them above scorn, derision and
reproach. Those who possess a hope like this should never indulge a harsh,
unkind spirit. This will only injure their own souls, and drive their friends
farther from the truth. Treat them tenderly. Give them no occasion to reproach
the cause of Christ; but never yield the truth to please any one." (Spiritual
Gifts, II, p. 266).
"He
who loves God will not only love his fellow men, but will regard with tender
compassion the creatures which God has made. . . . . We are to care for every
case of suffering, and to look upon ourselves as God's agents to relieve the
needy to the very uttermost of our ability. . . . There are some who manifest
great affection for their relatives, for their friends and favorites, who yet
fail to be kind and considerate to those who need tender sympathy, who need
kindness and love. With earnest heart, let us inquire, Who is my neighbor? Our
neighbors are not merely our neighbors and special friends, are not simply
those who belong to our church or who think as we do. Our neighbors are the
whole human family." (Sons and Daughters of God, p. 52)
"Kindness and love
and courtesy are the marks of the Christian. . . . In our association with each
other let it be ever remembered that there are chapters in the experience of
others that are sealed from mortal eyes; there are sad histories that are
written in the books of heaven but are sacredly guarded from prying eyes. There
stand registered long, hard battles with trying circumstances, arising in the very
homes, that day by day sap the courage, the faith, the confidence, until the
very manhood seems to fall to ruins. But Jesus knows it all, and He never
forgets. To such, words of kindness and of affection are welcome as the smile
of angels; a strong, helpful grasp of the hand of a true friend is worth more
than gold and silver." (My Life Today,
p. 242)
I am concerned about the quality of
life which is found in our churches. And I say to myself: if our communities
were to be known, by those who despair, who suffer from loneliness, or who are
ill and are gripped by fear, as a haven, a place of healing, a place where you
find and meet friends, would we not then more truly reflect the qualities of
life that Jesus Christ expressed? Is there not magnetism in this to draw people
to Jesus as Savior?
We will, I believe, be a more
complete witnessing instrument in the hands of the Holy Spirit, when our
teaching of the truth and standards of living, and our public evangelism, are
complemented by the atmosphere and spirit of compassion and friendliness coming
both from our church community and from me as an individual.
People who carried pain, anxiety,
and sorrow were drawn to Christ. Are they to me and my church?