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PART OF THE
LIBERAL PLAN FOR OUR DENOMINATION
Sunday-keeping Adventist
Churches
ARE YOU READY
TO GO ALONG WITH IT?
In the 1960s, our people
were shocked to read, in the latest issue of the National Geographic,
that our churches in Tonga (earlier called the Friendly Islands) were
keeping the Bible Sabbath on Sunday.
"Tongans are
scrupulous observers of the Wesleyan Sabbath, and it is possible to be
arrested for fishing on Sunday. Even the Seventh-day Adventists, who
elsewhere take Saturday as their Sabbath, here observe the Sabbath on
Sunday. The local Adventist pastor explained his church's stand to me.
" When God made the
world, He made the day go from west to east, he said. On the map,
the so-called Date Line actually makes a jog to the east here. We maintain
that what is called Sunday in Tonga is actually Saturday, since we are
really on the eastern side of the Date Line [if it ran in a straight
line]." Luis Marden, "The Friendly Isles of Tonga,"
National Geographic, March 1968, p. 358.
Obviously, this is a
rationalization, since the magazine article mentions that those who work
on Sunday (and catching fish is about the only work available) will be
arrested by the Methodist-controlled government. So, amid a population of
nearly 80,000 people on 35 inhabited islands, our Tongan Adventists work
six days a week and rest on the Methodist holy day.
That is very convenient
till the National Sunday Law arrives. And it will be very convenient
afterward.
We have other church
members who wish they lived that close to the International Dateline, so
they, too, could become Adventist Sunday-keepers.
OUR SPECIAL SEPARATING WALL
How do liberal Adventists
differ from other Protestants in America? Not much, and each year the
differences lessen still further.
They both eat meat, drink
coffee, and are saved by grace apart from obedience to the law of God.
They play golf, eat the same junk food, watch movies and the same sporting
events. Many of them drink wine and eat at restaurants on Sabbath.
But there is still that one
barrier dividing the two, and it is a wall which many of our liberals
would like to tear down. Part of that wall (the necessity of obedience to
the law of God) is now gone, but part still remains (the Sabbath church
service).
It was Gods plan that
His holy commandments were to be a "wall of protection" around
us (1 BC 1105). The Sabbath is a "separating wall between the
true Israel of God and unbelievers" (EW 33). The church is Gods
vineyard, "hedged about by the precepts of His law . . Obedience to
these principles was to be their protection" (COL 287).
Sabbath worship would not bar evangelism, but would keep His people from
assimilating to the world.
The liberals among us are
trying to break down that wall. Although they have personally discarded
obedience to the Ten Commandments as of any consequence, they are still
saddled with Sabbath church services. If there was but some way that one
remaining hurdle could be overcome, they would be welcomed by Evangelicals
and the unchurched would find our church services more inviting.
Think not that this problem
is being ignored. Not only our liberals, but some of our church leaders
wish they could figure out ways to bring in non-Adventists in droves into
our congregations.
The Celebration churches,
with their lack of standards, were started in the late 1980s to increase
attendance. Standards had been another hindrance to baptisms.
In the mid-1990s, the church planting project began with the same
objective in mind: Devise a worship meeting format which worldlings
would want to attend; that was the challenge.
SEARCHING FOR A WAY
TO INCREASE ATTENDANCE
In the back of one of
Samuele Bacchiocchi's books, he mentions that the Roman Catholic Church,
also concerned about how to increase attendance at weekend mass, was
tinkering with the idea of Saturday evening services. An increasing number
of Catholics were using Sunday as a holiday to watch football games or go
somewhere. So why not get the faithful to attend Saturday night mass?
In order to bring in extra
money, the Vatican was willing to hold weekend worship services on the
night it thought was the sixth day of the week (although it is actually
the beginning of the first). Rome was willing to sacrifice attendance
on Sunday, if it could increase the inflow of donations into church
coffers. Money and popularity are powerful incentives, not only to
politicians but also to many religious organizations.
It was obvious to some of
our leaders that the biggest hurdle was our Sabbath morning church
services. Worldlings want to attend jazzed-up, exciting meetings; and
they do not want them on Saturday morning. Church-going Protestants want
worship services on Sunday; and non-churchgoers want the meetings at night
or late in the afternoon, before they head off for the evenings
frolic.
Roman politicians learned
that lesson centuries ago. Give the people bread and circuses at a
convenient time, and they will come.
OUR LAS VEGAS SUNDAY CHURCH
"Adventist Sunday
Church" was the name
emblazoned on the headline of the February 2000 issue of the Pacific
Union Recorder. The lead
article was all about a new Adventist congregation in Las Vegas, Nevada. Church
leaders were proud of their accomplishment and wanted the more than
200,000 Adventists in the Union to know about it.
Was this Pacific Union
Recorder article talking about a church service or an evangelistic
effort? The article said it was merely an evangelistic effort. But five
facts loudly declared it to be a new type of Sunday morning worship
service:
First, in the bold
title, the Recorder called it an "Adventist Sunday
Church."
Second, the subtitle
stated "Reaching the Unchurched in Las Vegas"; that is,
providing a church for the unchurched.
Third, the name of the
congregation (which is still in operation) had a churchy name: "Higher
Ground Community Church"; so prospective visitors would think
it was a non-denominational community church. When they walked in the
door, that is what they were given—a church service, but more
exciting than most.
Fourth, the advertising
flyers, mailed out by the thousands, referred to it as a church. "Is
this your idea of church?" "Its for people who have given up
on the traditional church."
Fifth,
it was an ongoing church service, Sunday morning after Sunday morning,
month after month. It did not just continue for a few weeks, as
evangelistic efforts do. Those Sunday worship services continue to be
held today.
The Recorder article
said that Adventists are inviting non-Adventists to attend their
"Sunday services." Amazing. Do our leaders really think it is
possible to use Sunday worship services to teach the necessity of Sabbath
worship services?
Our largest Union paper had
published an article on it, praising the activity and recommending it to
other local congregations in Pacific Union Conference territory (seven
conferences in five states, plus several western Pacific islands) as
something good for them to also begin doing.
Like so many other of our
"new-modeled churches," this Sunday-keeping congregation had
repudiated the name, "Seventh-day Adventist."
Their church sign said they are the "Higher Ground Community
Church." Our leaders will sue faithful believers who put
"Seventh-day Adventist Church" on their meetinghouses while they
themselves are ashamed to use the name.
But the Recorder article
told us more:
In its flyers, this new
congregation declared that attending regular church services is like
"a sentence to prison."
The Sunday worship
service has a song service with drums and mike-amplified guitars, followed
by a sermon.
This strange
"Adventist Sunday Church" is another sampler of the "church
planting program," which our North American Division is urging our
people to conduct in every conference in America.
The credo of these
"planting programs" is "anything goes,"
as long as it brings outsiders into our churches. We live at a time
when far too much is going: our standards, beliefs, and even the Bible
Sabbath. (See our book, The Truth about Church Planting, 44 pp.
8 x 11, $3.50 + $2.50.) We are no
longer on the Scripture standard; we are now on the gold standard.
In exchange, those who are
coming are non-Adventists who never wanted our standards or teachings to
begin with. They come for the
coffee, rolls, and loud electrified music.
The Recorder article
also mentioned that, at that time, Andrews University was also using a
Sunday morning worship service to train our young ministers, so they can
hold Sunday worship services when they go out into the field.
The Recorder article
was obviously printed to get our members, throughout part of the nation,
comfortable with the idea of Adventist Sunday church services.
Our members in Las Vegas
will be ready when the
National Sunday Law is enforced. They are already worshiping on Sunday.
THE RIVERSIDE SUNDAY CHURCH
Our Riverside, California,
Church was searching for a way to increase its membership.
Located near Loma Linda and La Sierra, the area does not lack for
Seventh-day Adventists. But attendance at the Riverside Church had been
dropping for several years, until it had gotten down to eighty members.
So last fall, Tami McGrew,
senior pastor of the Riverside Church, drove down the street to the
Southeastern Conference Office (which is also in Riverside) and asked for
a grant of money to "try new things as an experiment." It was
agreed that most anything could be done that would bring non-Adventists
through the doors.
With a sizeable part of the
money, Tami (a woman) bought all the band instruments, guitars, drum
sets, electronic devices, and powerful amplification equipment needed for
rip-roaring church services.
Next, she changed the name
of the church. What was
needed was a nice, groovy name that would appeal to the unbeats. It is now
called the Riverside Community Church.Com.
At this juncture, Tami had
herself all the trappings for a way-out meetinghouse. But there was
still that Saturday morning hang-up.
So Tami came up with the
idea of two church services, one on Sabbath morning at the usual time, for
the old-time deadbeats in the church, and a second at 5 p.m. each
afternoon. This, of course, would mean that part of each year, the
second church service would be held on Sunday.
Now, please understand: No
attempt has been made to call this second service "an evangelistic
effort," as Las Vegas tried to do. This is a full-blown Seventh-day
Adventist weekly worship service held late on every Saturday afternoon. In
winter, it is a Sunday service.
Tami's church will also
be ready when the National Sunday Law comes.
Just close down the morning service or switch it to Sunday morning. She is
ready; and, we will learn below, she fearlessly defends her decision.
A friend in Central
California Conference, who attended one of her 5 o'clock services, said Tami
walked onto the stage and up to the pulpit wearing jeans. When asked why,
Tami said they helped the audience feel comfortable. The organ had been
closed down, the band was in full sway, and coffee and doughnuts were
among the treats.
My friend up north also
spoke of a woman who, after attending one time, said she would never
return. When asked why, she said she was unexpectedly hit in the side
of her head with a beach ball! She said they were throwing them around the
church, as a way "to loosen up the audience." Welcome to the new
Adventism.
A SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY
Yes, Sunday worship
services are all right; at least that is what our liberals are deciding.
And, in order to convince staid church members, they are developing a
logical set of beliefs to defend their position.
I call it "desperation
theology." It is the same kind of mixed-up thinking you will find in
the books written by our liberals, defending "women's rights"
to be pastors and church leaders. Although called "Biblical
theology," it is nothing but a stack of flimsy excuses.
These people are
desperately in search of reasons to defend what they want to do.
I am sure you are well-acquainted with the vacuous excuses offered by
Protestant pastors, in defense of Sunday-keeping. Well, our liberals are
also using similar twisted arguments.
If you speak with Tami, she
will be quite willing to explain to you, as she has to others, why she
holds Adventist worship services on Sunday.
Tami considers it
"legalistic" to limit the hours within which the weekly worship
service can be performed to a certain time, or a certain day, of the week.
Tami says church services should be held when the maximum amount of people
will come, whenever that may be. The day of the week, she says, on which
the church service is held on is not important. If there are primarily
Muslims living in the area, hold it on Friday. If the objective is to
reach Protestants, hold it on Sunday.
She says the fourth
commandment does not specify the hour or day on which the church service
should be held, so it can be held at any time on any day of the week.
(In reply, as with the other commandments, the fourth commandment only
provide a very brief statement. Additional details are given elsewhere in
the Bible.)
As Tami sees it, the
Israelites in the wilderness did not go to the tabernacle for church
services. Instead, they stayed home in their tents and rested on that
day. Attending church service has nothing to do with "keeping the
Sabbath day holy." (But we are presented with clear-cut examples of
Sabbath church attendance in the life of Christ and in the book of Acts.)
In Tami's
thinking, the Sabbath symbolizes a rest from "works." Resting in
bed or sitting under a tree is Sabbath-keeping. But going to church,
singing, and going through the other motions involved in church attendance
is not.
The Sabbath truth
should not be mentioned in the church services, only in evangelistic
meetings. Therefore Tami says she never mentions the Sabbath at her 5
p.m. meetings for non-Adventists. (In this way, non-believers have
absolutely no idea she is an Adventist minister or they have entered an
Adventist church! The sign in front merely calls it a "community
church." Historically, the only reason for our people to hold
special Sunday meetings, to which all are invited, was when evangelistic
meetings were conducted. Yet Tami says it would be wrong for her to
mention doctrines in her Sunday church services—so they are clearly
not evangelistic meetings!
Two important points:
First,
Tami's radical views about the Sabbath must surely be accepted by the
conference office (The Riverside Church is the "conference
church"; for it is in the same town as the conference office).
The self-proclaimed "theologians" at Loma Linda and La Sierra
must fully agree. Otherwise, she would quickly be brought into line or
fired. It must be that her views are solidly supported by church
leaders.
Second,
we have here a much more involved philosophy of thinking than I believe
Tami McGrew was able to develop by herself! I see her ideas as part of a
carefully thought-out theological defense, devised by theologians at
Loma Linda and La Sierra, in support of a plan which many of our liberals
are going to try to put into action as soon as it is feasible. They want
to gradually move our churches in North America over to Sunday worship
services.
Why is there such a
frenzied determination to increase church attendance, even though it costs
us our doctrinal beliefs? Unfortunately, the answer is money.
I assure you that if
Tami's project meets with success, Sunday worship services will be
started in other areas, first in Southeastern California Conference and
then elsewhere. The ultimate objective is for Seventh-day Adventist
pastors to be able to switch over, whenever they desire, to full-blown
Sunday worship services.
You thought you were
getting ready for the National Sunday Law. Our liberals are getting ready
for it too!
If they succeed,
Sabbath-keeping will die out from among us. This is because the church
service is the heart of the weekly cycle for believers. Change it to
Sunday, and we have become Sunday-keepers!
Tami said that both
Adventists and non-Adventists are now attending her afternoon service. She
is meeting with some success.
Her father, Ted Tessner,
former liberal pastor of the Claremont Church in San Diego, has come up to
strengthen her efforts. He is now associate pastor at Riverside and also
enjoys the full support of the conference office.
Perhaps he helps her
scrounge through the toy stores, searching for new gimmicks with which to
enchant the folk who come to the 5 o'clock worship services. Perhaps
they will start buying magicians stage tricks next, start a lending
library in Harry Potter books, and install video game machines and Coke
dispensers in the foyer. The sky is the limit, because the conference
fully backs her project. Anything goes, if it pertains to standards and
doctrines. Anything can be brought in, if it excites worldlings or is
approved by Sunday-keepers.
What identifies a church as
being part of the "Babylon" mentioned by the third angel
of Revelation 14?
"After the warning
against the worship of the beast and his image the prophecy declares:
Here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of
Jesus. Since those who keep Gods commandments are thus placed in
contrast with those that worship the beast and his image and receive his
mark, it follows that the keeping of Gods law, on the one hand,
and its violation, on the other, will make the distinction between
the worshipers of God and the worshipers of the beast."
Great
Controversy, 445-446.
It is true that both
Sunday-keeping and the natural immortality of the soul are two special
teachings of Babylon. But the Sabbath/Sunday issue will be the special
test in the Final Crisis, separating those who receive the mark from
those who receive the seal.
What does it mean "to
keep Sunday"? It means Sunday church service worship
(even though Tami coyly says that church services do not constitute an act
of worship)! We must not let it happen!
The Spirit of Prophecy has
said that, when the Sunday Law crisis hits, we can evangelize on Sunday or
quietly stay in our homes on that day. But we cannot participate in Sunday
worship meetings! To do so would be to bow to the image on the plains of
Dura. And Tami wants to do more than attend Sunday services, she wants
to pastor them!
When the Sunday Law crisis
hits, willingness to attend Sunday worship services will be the point on
which large numbers of our people will go out from among us and be lost.
Here are several Spirit of
Prophecy passages to look up. Each one deals with Sunday observance:
It is a virtual recognition
of the fundamental principles of Romanism (5T 712). The papacy will
receive honor in the homage paid in doing it (GC 579).
It will be the worship of
the beast and his image (GC 449; TM 133) and will fulfill
Revelation 13:11-16 (GC 578-579), because it is the mark of the
authority of Rome (Ev 234) and honors the pope above God (GC
449). It is the mark of the beast (7 BC, 976-980; Ev 234-235; GC
449; 8T 117; TM 133).
It is a plain contradiction
of Gods law, for those who do it after light has come (6T 193),
because it is a homage paid to Rome (GC 449). For those who do so,
knowing they should not do so, it is idolatry (FE 287). It is a
recognition of the cornerstone principles of Romanism (5T 712), an
act of homage to the papacy (SR 383), and allegiance to a power
opposed to God (GC 605).
Its enforcement [by a Sunday Law] will be a
sign that the end is near and that Gods forbearance has been reached
(5T 451). Men in responsible positions will urge it upon the people (ChS
155). vf
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