The Church is a Safe Haven for Healing and Growth
The Seventh-day Adventist Church is one of many Christian denominations. The name comes from the observance of the seventh-day Sabbath
and a belief in the second coming (advent) of Jesus. Adventists attend church
on Saturday joining together for worship, for fellowship and for Bible study.
The Bible is the source of our Christian beliefs.
The Adventist Church welcomes all people to their worship
services. Formal membership includes being baptized by immersion, symbolizing
our union with God, the forgiveness of sins, and our desire to enter into a new
life. The most important function of the church is to demonstrate the love of
God and to proclaim hope for people in a troubled world. Church membership is
our way of declaring that we need God and each other if life is to be
meaningful. (Ezekiel 36:26; 1 John 4:7; 1 Corinthians 12:14-26)
Perfect Beginnings
Adventists believe in the biblical account of creation. God
made everything the heavens, the earth, the sea and every living thing. His
creation was glorious and perfect in every detail. The Bible says, God saw
everything that he had made, and, behold, it was very good.(Genesis 1:31) His
crowning work was the creation of man and woman formed in His very own image.
Adam and Eve spoke with their Creator face-to-face. God did not force His
childrens love and obedience, but gave them the freedom to obey or disobey
Him. (Genesis 1:1; Genesis 1:26; Psalm 33:6-9; Joshua 24:15)
Very Bad News
Sadly, Adam and Eve chose to disobey God, and experience the
effects of sin. Their sin distanced them from their loving Creator. The trust
relationship was damaged, and they could no longer communicate with Him
face-to-face. The earth, once a place of life, joy, peace and love, would now
experience death, disease, suffering, sorrow, hatred and misery. Thats how the
human story began. (Genesis 3:8-11, 17-19)
Very Good News
But thats not how the story ends, because there is good
news, really good news. Even before Adam and Eve made their fatal choice, God
had prepared the plan of salvation a plan to bring back perfect harmony.
Jesus would come to earth and die to restore the perfect world that had been
broken by sin. (I Peter 1:18-20; Ephesians 1:3-4; Matthew 25:34)
The Gift of a New Life
The death of Jesus teaches us that sin is best understood,
not simply as breaking the law, but rather as breaking the loving heart of God.
The death of Jesus on our behalf teaches us that Gods love is so great He will
do whatever it takes to restore our eternal friendship with Him. God gave us
the ultimate gift of His Son, and He continues to give us new life daily as
part of that gift of grace. (John 3:16; Romans 3:23-24; 2 Corinthians 5:17)
The Gift Giver: Perfect God, Perfect Man
Salvation and new life are gifts from Jesus, who is God in
human form divinity and humanity perfectly united. Because He is God, He has the power and authority to forgive and
save us. Because He is man, he experiences our joys and sorrows. Although born
into a sinful world, He lived a perfect life on our behalf. Because of His
great love for us, He died on a cross, was resurrected, and went to heaven
where He is now with the Father. Yet He is with us through His Holy Spirit our
Comforter every day, every minute. (John 1:14; Ephesians 2:8; Hebrews
4:14-15; John 14:16)
How Life Can Be Really Good
In His Ten Commandments God explains how we can have a
loving relationship with Him and with each other. The commandments are a trustworthy
guide for living an abundant life. The first four guide us in our relationship
with God, the remaining six remind us to treat our fellow human beings with
love and respect.
Obedience to these commandments requires choices. When you
love someone, you naturally choose to express your affection and appreciation.
Thats how it is when you love God. Living the Christian life arises from
gratitude to God and a desire to honor Him. And when we fall short of His plan
for us, God reminds us that he offers forgiveness as a gift of grace through
Jesus.
In addition to the Ten Commandments, we learn how to live
from Jesus teachings and example. He teaches us to love God, to love each
other and to love ourselves. He eagerly gives us the gift of His love to make
such love possible. (Exodus 20:3-17;
Deuteronomy 10:13; John 13:34-35; John 14:15; 1 John 3:16)
God Listens When We Pray
Through prayer, we open our hearts to God as if talking with
a friend. If we can talk, we can pray. Indeed, if we can think, we can
pray. No topic is too great or too small. Jesus taught His disciples to praise
God in their prayers, to ask for daily bread and to share the burdens on their
hearts. While God already knows what we need, prayer provides the way for us to
receive the good things He wants to give us.
But sometimes we dont receive what we ask for, and that can
be very difficult. We dont always understand why our prayers arent answered
as we wish, but through faith we can be absolutely sure that God loves us, has
our best interests in mind, and is with us no matter what happens.
Too often our conversation with God is one-sided. It is
important that we not only talk to God, but that we listen to Him as well. If
were willing to listen, we can hear Gods voice through Bible study, through
the still small voice of His Holy Spirit, through His created wonders in
nature, and through our deepest human relationships. (Psalm 55:22; Romans 12:12; Jeremiah 29:11-12; Psalm 119:10-11)
Guarding Our Good Health
God gives each of us the opportunity to be all that He
intends for us to be. Seventh-day Adventists believe that a wholesome lifestyle
contributes to good physical, mental and spiritual health.
Why are Adventists so passionate about good health? The Bible says, Dont you know that you
yourselves are Gods temple and that Gods Spirit lives in you? . . . For Gods
temple is sacred, and you are that temple. (I Corinthians 3:16-17) Enjoying a
healthful diet, refraining from harmful substances, and getting adequate
exercise, water and rest are very important ways to care for our
body-temples. (I Corinthians 10:31; 3 John 2)
Rest From Stress, Fear and Anxiety
The Bible tells us that after God created the world in six
days, He rested on the seventh day. He sanctified the Sabbath set it apart as
a holy day. Later, when He gave the Ten Commandments to Moses, God explained
the Sabbath in more detail. The Sabbath is a day to remind us that God is the
Creator and worthy of our worship.
The Sabbath is not an ordinary day for ordinary activities.
The Sabbath is a day to put aside work, secular pursuits and self-interests a
day to shut out the clamor and pressures of everyday life to receive the needed
gifts of peace and rest. God rested on the first Sabbath day, not because He was
exhausted from His work of creation, but because He knew His weary children
would need a day of rest.
Celebrated from sunset Friday to sunset Saturday, the
Sabbath is a spiritual experience as well as a time of physical rest. During
His earthly ministry, Jesus made it clear that the Sabbath was made for our
benefit. It was not to be a burden or encumbered with unreasonable man-made
rules. Jesus celebrated the Sabbath by attending the synagogue, healing the
sick and spending time with those He loved.
Following Jesus example of healing, Adventist Health
hospitals continue to meet the needs of their patients during the Sabbath
hours. All essential medical care and services are provided every day. (Genesis
2:1-3; Exodus 20:8-11; Mark 2:27; John 5:1-16)
A Very Happy Ending
Adventists believe that Jesus will return to this earth to
take us home with Him forever. I am
going there to prepare a place for you, Jesus said. When everything is ready,
I will come and get you, so that you will always be with me where I am. (John
14:2,3) On that happy day, the entire universe will know beyond a doubt that
God is indeed a God of forgiveness and love, and that His ways are best.
The Bible says Jesus will come in glory to deliver His
people and to restore all things. Loved ones who have rested asleep in their
graves will be called back to life to join us in our new home in a perfect
world a world free from pain, suffering and death. We dont know all the
details about heaven, but we believe it is a very real place. A place where
people from every generation, every culture, and every nation on earth will
experience everlasting life, love and joy in fellowship with one another and
with our wonderful Lord. (Acts 1:11; Revelation 1:7; I Thessalonians 4:16-17;
Revelation 21:3-4)