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Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pacifist Christian denomination (1920-)
Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement
Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement Church in Ruda Śląska, Poland
ClassificationProtestant
OrientationAdventist,Arminian,Christian pacifist
PolityModified presbyterian polity
RegionWorldwide (132 countries)
FounderGroups of Seventh-day Adventist in different countries
Origin1925
Gotha, Germany
Separated fromSeventh-day Adventist Church
Members42,285
Other nameReformed Adventist Church (informal)
Official websitelegacy.sdarm.org

TheSeventh Day Adventist Reform Movement is aProtestantChristian denomination in theSabbatarianAdventist movement that formed from a schism in the EuropeanSeventh-day Adventist Church duringWorld War I over the position its European church leaders took onSabbath observance and on committing Adventists to the bearing of arms inmilitary service forImperial Germany inWorld War I.[1]

The movement was formerly organised on an international level in 1925 atGotha, Germany, and adopted the name "Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement". It was first registered as aGeneral Conference association in 1929 inBurgwedel, nearHanover, Germany. Following the General Conference association's dissolution by theGestapo in 1936 it was re-registered inSacramento,California, United States in 1949. Its present world headquarters are inRoanoke, Virginia, USA.[2]

The Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement is governed by aGeneral Conference, a worldwide association of constituent territorialUnits consisting of Union Conferences, State/Field Conferences, Mission Fields and Missions not attached to any other unit. Through its local church congregations and groups of adherents, affiliated publishing houses, schools, health clinics and hospitals, the Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement is active in over 132 countries of the world.

The movement'sbeliefs largely reflect its distinctive Seventh-day Adventist Church heritage andfoundational pillars, with some small divergences. See the "Beliefs" section below.

History

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1914-1918 schism

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The Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement came about as a result of the actions ofL. R. Conradi and certain European church leaders during the war, who decided that it was acceptable for Adventists to take part in war, which was in clear opposition to the historical position of the church that had always upheld thenon-combative position. Since the American Civil War, Adventists were known asnon-combatants, and had done work in hospitals or given medical care rather than combat roles.[3] The Seventh-day Adventist leaders in Europe when the war began, determined on their own that it was permissible for Adventists to bear arms and serve in the military and other changes which went against traditional Adventist beliefs.

TheGeneral Conference of Seventh-day Adventists sentSeventh-day Adventist minister and General Conference SecretaryWilliam Ambrose Spicer to investigate the changes these leaders had instituted, but was unable to undo what L. R. Conradi and the others had done during the war.[4][5][6] After the war, the Seventh-day Adventist church sent a delegation of four brethren from the General Conference (Arthur G. Daniells who was president ofGeneral Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, L. H. Christian,F. M. Wilcox,M. E. Kern) in July 1920, who came to a Ministerial Meeting in Friedensau with the hope of a reconciliation. Before the 200 Pastors and the Brethren from the General Conference present at this meeting, its European church leaders, G. Dail, L. R. Conradi, H. F. Schuberth, and P. Drinhaus withdrew their statement about military service and apologized for what they had done. The Reformers were informed of this and the next day saw a meeting by the Adventist brethren with the Reform-Adventists. A. G. Daniells urged them to return to the Seventh-day Adventist church, but the Reform-Adventists maintained that the European church leaders had forsaken the truth during the war and the reconciliation failed.[7] Soon after they began to form a separate group from the official Adventist church. A related group which also came about for the same reasons was theTrue and Free Seventh-day Adventists (TFSDA) which formed in the Soviet Union at this time, whose most well known leader wasVladimir Shelkov.

1951 schism

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A major division then took place within the Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement itself at itsGeneral Conference session held atZeist,Utrecht (province),Netherlands in 1951. The cause for the division involved tensions that had arisen over unresolved issues of the preceding years. Charges of arbitrariness and authoritarianism by the Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement leader and on the part of the General Conference administration towards member Units, failures by the General Conference committee to adequately resolve moral failings among leaders, issues concerning mal-administration of Church finances, and procedural and organisational irregularities prior to and during the Session itself are cited by the present organisation as significant contributing factors.[8][9]

After two weeks of deliberations within the Session trying to resolve some of these tensions, a move was made by a number of delegates to read a declaration enumerating the main problems involved and requesting that a committee to address the entire situation be established. The motion carried on the first vote but was overturned by the chairman. To signify their protest at what was held to be an arbitrary decision of the chair, 45% of delegates present, led by the then Secretary of the General Conference, left the Session room. The Session's proceedings faltered at this point. Efforts to reconcile the situation while all delegates were still present inNetherlands failed.[10][11]

Another factor affecting the administration of the Session at the time was the international situation behind theIron Curtain.[12] Many of the units attached to the General Conference were unable to send delegates to the Zeist session due to restrictions on religious bodies in communist lands.[13] Proxy letters from a number of Union Conferences were held by the General Conference Secretary[14] enabling the session to convene legally (a provision enabled in the 1949 corporate registration), though the proxy holder still only had one vote regardless of the number of proxies held. Those Units not represented directly accounted for approximately 60% of the organization's membership. Consequently, neither of the two factions that became evident at the Zeist session were in a position to make any unilateral decisions.[15]

Over the course of the next year, steps were taken by both parties to explain the situation to their respective member bodies (Union Conferences) that were affiliated up until this time to the one worldwide church administration. Both factions re-organised themselves as General Conference committees independently of each other and proceeded to take the oversight of theSDARM General Conference affairs.

SDARM General Conference Headquarters in Roanoke, Virginia, USA

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The Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement had been first registered as a general conference association inBurgwedel, nearHanover, Germany in 1929. Though never approved by the inaugural 1925GothaSDARM General Conference Session, the designation "International Missionary Society" was added to the beginning of the name. The full registered name at that time took the form "International Missionary Society, Seventh-day Adventist Reform Movement, General Conference". The reasons for adding the designation to the beginning of the name were purely pragmatic, and done in the interests of securing General Conference finances on loan to one of its member Units, namely the German Union Conference. The SDARM General Conference operated under this German registration until 1936 when the association was dissolved by theGestapo.[16]

From 1936 until the conclusion of theWorld War II, there was no legally registered SDARM General Conference entity anywhere in the world, and would not be until 1949. The international situation during those years prevented the convening of a General Conference Session. It was not until 1948, when the first post-war General Conference session was held, that the delegates agreed to re-register the worldwide interests of the Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement by incorporating the SDARM General Conference as an association in the USA. They also agreed to do this "under the name that was adopted by the General Conference delegation in session in 1925". This decision was carried out in 1949.[17] The registered name was now correctly, "Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement General Conference." It was under the By-Laws of this newly incorporated body that the 1951Zeist General Conference Session was convened.[18]

By 1951 the SDARM General Conference affairs and financial interests were formally associated with the USA registered entity. Consequently, in the aftermath of theZeist session, legal proceedings to establish the recognized administrators of the registered General Conference corporate entity commenced. These proceedings were finalised in May 1952 in an out-of-court agreement between the two factions. Representatives of the faction that had engaged in the protest walk-out in 1951 were left in control of the registered SDARM General Conference association.[19][20]

By 1955, when the next Session of Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement General Conference convened under the auspices the USA registered association, delegates present represented "9000 members (1000 less than in 1951)". This was a representation of 90% of the worldwide church membership recorded prior to the 1951 division.[21]

International Missionary Society (IMS)

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Following the 1952 legal proceedings, in June of that year, representatives of the faction that had been the subject of the protest at Zeist conducted a second re-organisation. To distinguish themselves from their opposing faction, they adopted the name "International Missionary Society, Seventh-day Adventist Reform Movement, General Conference" with headquarters inMosbach,Baden in Germany.[22] As mentioned previously, the Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement, as a general conference association, had been registered under this name in Germany in 1929 and operated under that name until 1936 when the association was dissolved by theGestapo.[23] "International Missionary Society" was a name that had been associated with the German Union Conference of the Seventh-Day Adventist Reform Movement from its inception in 1919?. As the inaugural 1925 SDARM General Conference session did not agree to use this designation in its official name, the 1949 registered entity did not use it. With the opposing faction now adopting this designation and adding it to the 1925 agreed name, the designation "International Missionary Society" thereafter became associated exclusively with those affiliated with the interests of that faction.

Post-1952 re-unification attempts

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With both factions formally organized, affiliations of Union and Field Conferences associated under one or the other of the two corporate administrations. Though they remained separate both in administration and worship, thetheological beliefs espoused by each entity's adherents were common to both.[24] Despite this common platform of belief, tensions from the 1951 schism continued to remain high. Consequently, official efforts in 1967 and again in 1993 to reconcile both administrations at a General Conference level were unsuccessful.[25][26]

Post–World War II relations with Seventh-day Adventist Church

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In 2005, the mainstream Seventh-day Adventist church tried to make amends and apologized for its failures during World War II, as the issue from the actions of L. R. Conradi continued during that war also.[27] Some members see it as the first attempts to reconcile the Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement with the mainstream Seventh-day Adventist church. However, the actions of the SDA Church towards those who took a conscientious stand against all military service during World War I, were not acknowledged in the apology. The position of the SDA Church towards those engaged in military service, particularly combatants, remains an unresolved issue today.[28]

Naming of congregations

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While local church congregations use the name Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement, those affiliated with the International Missionary Society General Conference also combine the designation "International Missionary Society" into their name to distinguish themselves from SDARM General ConferenceUnits.[citation needed]

Beliefs

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The Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement (SDARM General Conference) identifies itself with a conservativeSeventh-day Adventist theological andeschatological heritage. While it holds to the basic tenets of the Seventh-day Adventist faith, commonly referred to as thepillars or landmarks of the faith for these landmark teachings, there is a divergence in degree on some post-1914 doctrinal positions taken by L. R. Conradi and some of the European church leaders of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in both interpretation and application.

The Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement's official position asconscientious objectors[29] in relation to war and military service reflects thepacifist position of the Seventh-day Adventist Church during the 1861-1865American Civil War. This is in direct response to what L. R. Conradi and others presented to the members and distinct from the official Seventh-day Adventist Church position which is one ofnon-combatancy, though in practice Seventh-day Adventist members have served incombatant roles in the military services.[30]

Other divergences include the Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement's positions on divorce and remarriage,closed communion, the sealing work of Revelation 7 (the SDARM holding to a pre-1914 view of its literal and number-limited nature), and theremnant church of Revelation 12:17.[31]

The Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement, as does the officialSeventh-day Adventist Church, maintains the belief thatEllen G. White, a co-founder of theSeventh-day Adventist Church, manifested theNew Testament "Gift ofProphecy". Though she had died before the formation of the SDA Reform Movement, herinspired writings, commonly referred to as testimonies, are held in the highest regard by the movement as a whole. Consistent with the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the SDA Reform Movement believes her inspired works do not take the place of the Bible. Rather they are considered a help to the believing church in bringing men and women back to the neglected truths of the Bible, with an emphasis on the need for professed believers to be faithful in the practice of its principles.[32]

Whereas the Seventh-day Adventist church emphasisesthe message of the three angels ofRevelation 14:6-12, the Reform Movement places a distinct emphasis on a fourth angelic message based on Revelation 18:1-4.[33] The movement claims that the message of this other angel was first given at1888 Minneapolis General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. This claim is maintained by the Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement as the unique purpose for its existence as a distinct organisation separate from the Seventh-day Adventist Church.[34] The message is captured in the expression "Christ our Righteousness", the foundation for "Justification by Faith".

Aside from the divergences, an examination of the SDA Reform Movement's published beliefs, indicate many similarities in theology with the traditional Seventh-day Adventist beliefs and also the more conservativeHistoric Adventism andLast Generation Theology wings of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.[35]

A list of beliefs, along with an expanded explanation, may beviewed online.

Officers

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President
TermPresidentNationality
1925–1934Otto WelpGermany
1934–1942Wilhelm MaasGermany
1942–1948Albert MuellerGermany
1948–1951Carlos KozelGermany
1951–1959Dumitru NicoliciRomania
1959–1963Andre LavrikRomania
1963–1967Clyde T. StewartAustralia
1967–1979Francisco DevaiBrazil
1979–1983Wilhelm VolppGermany
1983–1991João MorenoBrazil
1991–1995Neville S. BrittainAustralia
1995–2003Alfredo Carlos SasBrazil
2003–2011Duraisamy SureshkumarIndia
2011–2019Davi Paes SilvaBrazil
2019–presentEli TenorioBrazil
Vice-President
TermNameNationality
1928–1931Wilhelm MaasGermany
1931–1948vacant
1948–1951Albert MuellerGermany
1951–1959Andre LavrikRomania
1959–1963Dumitru NicoliciRomania
1963–1967Emmerich Kanyo BenedekBrazil
1967–1971Ivan W. SmithAustralia
1971–1979Wilhelm VolppGermany
1979–1987Francisco Devai LucacinBrazil
1987–1995Daniel DumitruArgentina
1995–1997Neville S. Brittain - First Vice-PresidentAustralia
1995–1999Duraisamy Sureshkumar - Second Vice-PresidentIndia
1999–2003Duraisamy Sureshkumar - First Vice-PresidentIndia
1999–2007Branislav Jaksic - Second Vice PresidentAustralia
2003–2011Davi Paes Silva - First Vice-PresidentBrazil
2007–2015Peter Daniel Lausevic - Second Vice-PresidentAustralia
2011–2015Duraisamy Sureshkumar - First Vice-PresidentIndia
2015–2019Peter Daniel Lausevic - First Vice-PresidentAustralia
2019–2025Rolly Dumaguit - First Vice-PresidentPhilippine
2025-presentDavid Zic - First vice-presidentCanadá
Secretary
TermSecretaryNationality
1925–1934Wilhelm MaasGermany
1934–1948Alfred RieckGermany
1948–1951Dumitru NicoliciRomania
1951–1955Clyde T. StewartAustralia
1955–1963Ivan W. SmithAustralia
1963–1967Alfons BalbachLituania
1967–1971Alex Norman MacdonaldUSA
1971–1980Alfons BalbachLituania
1980–1987Alex Norman MacdonaldUSA
1987–1995Alfredo Carlos SasBrazil
1995–1999Davi Paes SilvaBrazil
1999–2001John GarbiUSA
2001–2003Benjamin BurecUSA
2003–2007David ZicCanada
2007–2011Paul BalbachUSA
2011–2019Eli TenorioBrazil
2019–PresentLiviu TudoroiuRomania

General Conference Sessions

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YearCityCountry
1.1925GothaGermany
2.1928IsernhagenGermany
3.1931IsernhagenGermany
4.1934BudapestHungary
5.1948The HagueNetherlands
6.1951ZeistNetherlands
7.1955São PauloBrazil
8.1959São PauloBrazil
9.1963Groß-GerauGermany
10.1967São PauloBrazil
11.1971BrasíliaBrazil
12.1975BrasíliaBrazil
13.1979Bushkill FallsUnited States
14.1983PuslinchCanada
15.1987Bragança PaulistaBrazil
16.1991BreubergGermany
17.1995VoineasaRomania
18.1999ItuBrazil
19.2003ItuBrazil
20.2007JejuSouth Korea
21.2011SebiuRomania
22.2015RoanokeUnited States
23.2019ituBrazil
24.2025(Medellín)Colombia

See also

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References

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  1. ^Holger Teubert, "The History of the So called "Reform Movement" of the Seventh-day Adventists," unpublished Manuscript, 9.
  2. ^See on "The Name of Our Church", official SDARM Website,http://www.sdarm.org/origin/his_12_name.htmlArchived 2013-01-20 at theWayback Machine
  3. ^http://www.sidadventist.org/lead/index.php/resources/essent/89-leadership[permanent dead link]
  4. ^"International Missionary Society SDA Adventist Church Reform Movement". Archived fromthe original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved2011-07-26.
  5. ^"1914-1918-The Great Crisis". Archived fromthe original on 2013-03-25. Retrieved2010-09-14.
  6. ^Seventh-day Adventist Encyclopedia. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald. 1996. pp. 266–267.ISBN 0-8280-0918-X.
  7. ^http://www.sidadventist.org/lead/index.php/resources/essent/89-leadership[permanent dead link]
  8. ^Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement General Conference, "Our GC Delegation Sessions" 1948,http://www.sdarm.org/origin/his_11_sessions_III.html#1948Archived 2011-10-03 at theWayback Machine Accessed April 1, Zeist 2011.
  9. ^Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement General Conference, "Our GC Delegation Sessions" 1951,"Our GC Delegation Sessions". Archived fromthe original on 2011-10-03. Retrieved2011-04-01. Accessed April 1, 2011.
  10. ^Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement General Conference, "Our GC Delegation Sessions" 1951,"Our GC Delegation Sessions". Archived fromthe original on 2011-10-03. Retrieved2011-04-01. Accessed April 1, 2011.
  11. ^"International Missionary Society Seventh-day Adventist Church Reform Movement - About IMS""International Missionary Society SDA Adventist Church Reform Movement". Archived fromthe original on 2011-03-12. Retrieved2011-04-01. Accessed: April 1, 2011.
  12. ^Ward R & Humphreys R,Religious Bodies In Australia 3rd Edition. New Melbourne Press, Victoria, Australia. p.171. 1995.
  13. ^Alfons Balbach,History of the Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement, Reformation Herald Publishing Association, Virginia, USA, 1999, pp 97-98.
  14. ^Ward R & Humphreys R,Religious Bodies In Australia 3rd Edition. New Melbourne Press, Victoria, Australia. p.171. 1995.
  15. ^Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement General Conference, "Our GC Delegation Sessions" 1951,"Our GC Delegation Sessions". Archived fromthe original on 2011-10-03. Retrieved2011-04-01. Accessed April 1, 2011.
  16. ^Alfons Balbach, "History of the Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement", Reformation Herald Publishing Association, Virginia, USA, 1999, pp.129-130.
  17. ^Balbach, p.130.
  18. ^Balbach, pp. 130-131
  19. ^Newspaper Article: Adventist Suit Over Control is Withdrawn,The Sacramento Union, May 8, 1952.
  20. ^Kramer, Helmut H., "The Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement (German Reform)", Biblical Research Institute, General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. p.23. 1988.
  21. ^Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement General Conference, "Our GC Delegation Sessions" 1955,http://www.sdarm.org/origin/his_11_sessions_IV.html#1955Archived 2011-10-03 at theWayback Machine Accessed April 1, 2011.
  22. ^Kramer, Helmut H., "The Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement (German Reform)", Biblical Research Institute, General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. p.23. 1988.
  23. ^Alfons Balbach, "History of the Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement", Reformation Herald Publishing Association, Virginia, USA, 1999, pp.129-130.
  24. ^Kramer, Helmut H., "The Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement (German Reform)", Biblical Research Institute, General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. p.23. 1988.
  25. ^"International Missionary Society Seventh-day Adventist Church Reform Movement - About IMS""International Missionary Society SDA Adventist Church Reform Movement". Archived fromthe original on 2011-03-12. Retrieved2011-04-01. Accessed: April 1, 2011.
  26. ^Kramer, Helmut H., "The Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement (German Reform)", Biblical Research Institute, General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. p.23. 1988.
  27. ^"Adventist Review : Adventist News". Archived fromthe original on 2007-10-06. Retrieved2007-10-31.
  28. ^For a discussion of the present dilemma of the Seventh-day Adventist Church's position on Military Service, see Phillips, K. & Tstalbasidis, K.,I Pledge Allegiance - The Role of the Seventh Day Adventist Church in the Military. Keith Phillips-Karl Tsatalbasidis. pp.35-36. 2009. (ISBN 978-0-9799402-0-0)
  29. ^"Our Attitude Toward Civil Authorities", "This We Believe (Expanded)", Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement Website,"Fundamental Bible Doctrines". Archived fromthe original on 2011-07-28. Retrieved2010-12-25. Accessed 25 December 2010.
  30. ^Ronald Osborn, "A Brief History of Seventh-day Adventists in Times of War", November 2003, Adventist Today Magazine [Online]"A Brief History of Seventh-day Adventists in Times of War | Adventist Today". Archived fromthe original on 2010-12-14. Retrieved2010-12-25. Accessed 25 December 2010.
  31. ^Gerhard Pfandl, "Information on the Seventh-day Adventist Reform Movement", Adventist Biblical Research Institute, [Online]http://www.adventistbiblicalresearch.org/Independent%20Ministries/SDA%20Reform%20movement.htm Accessed 25 December 2010.
  32. ^"Fundamental Bible Doctrines". Archived fromthe original on 2013-05-07. Retrieved2013-02-28.
  33. ^Ward R & Humphreys R, 1995, "Religious Bodies In Australia" 3rd Edition. New Melbourne Press, p.171.
  34. ^That Other Angel:"Fundamental Bible Doctrines". Archived fromthe original on 2011-01-04. Retrieved2011-04-01.
  35. ^http://www.sdarm.org/beliefs.phpArchived 2013-12-27 at theWayback Machine. Compare SDARM Beliefs with Seventh-day Adventist theology onEschatological,Christological andSoteriological views (see hyperlinked "Expanded edition" of these doctrines "The Investigative Judgment", "The Present Truth", "The Son of God", "The Gift of Prophecy" on the referenced SDARM web page.)

Sources

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  • The Seventh-day Adventist Encyclopedia, Review & Herald Publishing Association
  • History of the Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement, Alfons Balbach, Reformation Herald Publishing Association, 1999.
  • Tarling, Lowell R. (1981). "The Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement".The Edges of Seventh-day Adventism: A Study of Separatist Groups Emerging from the Seventh-day Adventist Church (1844–1980).Barragga Bay,Bermagui South,NSW: Galilee Publications. pp. 100–12.ISBN 0-9593457-0-1.

External links

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SDARM sites

Sites criticizing

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