T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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545.1 | | KIRKWD::FRIEDMAN | | Wed Sep 14 1988 13:47 | 15 |
| In southern California there is a town called Loma Linda. Most
of the town's residents are Seventh Day Adventists. They have a
university there with a famous medical school and hospital. If
you may recall, a couple of years ago there was a controversial
case there where a baboon's heart was transplanted into a child.
The Seventh Day Adventists in that town appear to be complete
vegetarians. Many of the fast-food outlets offer "vegi-burgers."
The supermarkets sell a lot of products made with textured soy
protein spun to look like bacon, sausage patties and links, etc.
Jews who keep kosher like to shop in the supermarkets there because
of the interesting pareve foods.
|
545.2 | More on Seventh-day Adventists | PAXVAX::NIEMI | hi | Wed Sep 14 1988 17:50 | 37 |
| SDAs are Christians who, unlike many other Christian denominations, feel that
much of the "Old" Testament Scriptures are applicable to Christians today.
They observe the 7-day Sabbath since it was created and hallowed at creation,
is part of the 10 Commandments, and was observed by Jesus and the Apostles.
They feel that the other annual Sabbaths were part of the "ceremonial" law
that is no longer in effect now that Messiah (Jesus) has come. They are
looking forward to the second coming of Christ and these two key doctrines
are how the name "Seventh-day Adventist" was chosen. They came out of the
Millerite movement in 1844 (when a faulty interpretation of Daniel resulted
in the belief that Messiah would come on October 23, 1844) but were not
incorporated as a church body until around 1863. Tithing is taught as the
Biblical method of supporting the work of the church, and although it is not a
test for membership, many do give 10% of their earnings. Basically what they do
is view parts of the 613 commandments as not applying today (e.g. requirements
dealing with the Temple, etc.) but they do refrain from eating pork, shellfish,
etc. since there was some type of distinction between clean and unclean animals
before the Flood. A vegetarian diet is recommended (and about 50% of the 5
million members are vegetarians - some do not even use milk or eggs) since
man's original diet in the Garden of Eden was vegetarian and since they believe
there will be no killing in the "New Earth". They are very anti-smoking and
originated the "5-day Plan" to stop smoking. They are also against drinking
alcoholic beverages, and do not recommend coffee or cola drinks. Perhaps
because of these habits, a recent study in California has show that Adventists
have a 6-7 year longer life expectancy than the general population with far
lower death reates from cancer, heart disease, and strokes. They have about 8
colleges in this country (Atlantic Union College in So. Lancaster, Mass for
those readers in the Maynard area), 2 universities (Loma Linda, mentioned in a
previous reply, and Andrews University in Berrien Springs, MI) and many
elementary and secondary schools. The same holds true for other countries,
giving them the largest Protestant ***perochial*** school system in the world.
Their church services, not unlike many other Christian churches, consist of
a Sabbath (instead of Sunday) School where various topics and books of the
Scriptures are studied, and the Worship service which consists of singing hymns
of praise, prayers, worship by giving an offering, and the sermon. Incidently,
the recent Sabbath School plan instituted is to study through every book of
the Bible, including the "Old" Testament. The Sabbath is also observed
from sundown on Friday night to sundown on Saturday night.
|
545.3 | Some Adventism Explained (by an Adventist!) | SCOMAN::BARBIERI | | Thu Sep 15 1988 10:05 | 105 |
|
Hi,
I'm a Seventh Day Adventist and so I think maybe I can offer
a bit on this subject. Let may say that I was Roman Catholic
and gradually became interested in the Lord and after some
searching came to believe that the doctrinal position that is
Adventism is closest to Bible truth. I guess I'm saying that
I didn't become an Adventist because 'ma and dad were', but
because I really think I was open and neutral in my pursuit
of truth.
I'll say a bit here by commenting on the second reply.
>SDAs are Christians who, unlike many other Christian denominations,
feel that
>much of the "Old" Testament Scriptures are applicable to Christians today.
>They observe the 7-day Sabbath since it was created and hallowed at creation,
>is part of the 10 Commandments, and was observed by Jesus and the Apostles.
>They feel that the other annual Sabbaths were part of the "ceremonial" law
>that is no longer in effect now that Messiah (Jesus) has come.
Yeah, this is all true. The belief is that the ten commandments
are an immutable standard of righteoussness not demarcated in any
way by time. While our Christian brethen keep the first day because
of hallowing the resurrection event, Adventism does not primarily
for three reasons:
One being that God in His Word never commanded the keeping of the
first day and a second one being that the spiritual interpretation
of the Sabbath commandment as written in Deuteronomy encompasses
*all* that God had to do to "Create in me a clean heart O God"
(as the Psalmist so beautifully puts it). While the resurrection
certainly is seen by Christians to be a blessed event, it in and
of itself is not seen by Christendom as *alone* being sufficient
to redeem man. Therefore the Sabbath day commemorates all that
God had to do while Sunday commemorates one part of what Christendom
believes God had to do.
A third reason is that the Sabbath
commandment, it is believed, was made known to Adam (as it was made
before sin even entered the world). Indeed we know that 40 years
before Sinai, God's Chosen rested on the Sabbath. Just as "Thou
shalt not murder" was not mentioned in Scripture until way after
Cain sinned (and sin is the transgression of the law) by murdering
Abel and "Thou shalt not commit adultery" was not mentioned until
way after Joseph knew it was wrong (when tempted by Potiphar's wife),
it is apparent that while scripture had not yet recorded the ten
commandments, God taught Adam and they were known from patriarch
to patriarch. It just makes simple sense.
>They are
>looking forward to the second coming of Christ and these two key doctrines
>are how the name "Seventh-day Adventist" was chosen. They came out of the
>Millerite movement in 1844 (when a faulty interpretation of Daniel resulted
>in the belief that Messiah would come on October 23, 1844) but were not
>incorporated as a church body until around 1863.
Here's where I disagree pretty significantly. Adventists believe
that the *time portion* of the seventy week prophecy in Daniel as
understood by William Miller was correct, but that *the event* as
understood by Miller was wrong.
Let me emphasize two things here: One, Miller was not alone. Pockets
of people throughout the entire world *independent of each other*
were predicting the second coming in or around this time. And all
by the same Scripture. They assessed the time location of the seventy
weeks (understood as prophetic day = literal year = 490 years)
and surmised that the angel did not give Daniel sufficient under-
standing of the proclamation "Unto 2300 evenings and mornings, then
shalt the sanctuary be cleansed." They concluded that the angel
gave Daniel understanding by assuming that 70 weeks (or 490 years)
comprise the first section of the 2300 prophetic days (= literal
years). Know where the 70 weeks fits historically and one then
knows where the 2300 days fits.
Secondly, all of mainline Christianity at that time believed that
the antitypical sanctuary was Earth. Cleanse that and there must
be no sin. It follows that all of mainline Christianity considered
this eventh to be in fact the second return of Christ.
This is why I disagree. The problem was not an erroneas interpretation
of the 2300 days/70 weeks prophecy, as much as it was an *incomplete
understanding of the fullness of the truth*. Much truth was learned.
But, not all.
So 1844 came and went. There were, as mentioned, the offshoots.
Many became unbelievers. Some continued to be 'datesetters.' Another
group simply could not believe the time element was incorrect.
They studied further seeing that Moses was given the sanctuary
'after a pattern' and seeing in the New Testament books of Revelation
and Hebrews that there is a heavenly sanctuary. They came to believe
that the event marked by the 2300 days was something other than
they felt it was pre-1844. Indeed it had to be! Incredible truth
unfolded. Sanctuary truth. Truth neglected by Christendom. Adventism
saw the 2300 day prophecies as marking the onset of the Christian
Day of Atonement with Christ ministering as High Priest.
Anyway, this is my emphasis. The interpretation by Miller was
simply incomplete. Yes, in that sense it was faulty. There was
just more to learn. And let me say, there is more, so much more!!!!
So Long,
Tony
|
545.4 | Very interesting! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Sep 15 1988 11:44 | 17 |
| Thanks for all the interesting information! I guess the adventists
are not as similar to the other local Christian churches around
as I thought - it is not unusual for the local Catholic churches
to hold services on Saturday (as well as Sunday), though maybe they
do so for people to whom a Sunday service would be a hardship somehow;
I guess that is what I thought the adventists were doing. Does
anyone know if they celebrate any other Jewish holidays in ways
that we would recognize? I mean, do they hold Passover seders,
fast on Yom Kippur, celebrate Purim, etc.? I guess since we will
be going past their assembly hall on the way to the synagogue on
Yom Kippur, I will try to remember to look and see if the place
seems to be occupied or not. They definitely (at least the local
group) drive on Shabbat: their meeting hall has a real small parking
lot, and on Saturday morning there are cars all along the street
in front of it (of course, I drive on Shabbat too; we belong to
a liberal congregation). Do they use Hebrew in their liturgy?
|
545.5 | Our CEO? | ATLAST::DROWN | SAD ):| SAD | Thu Sep 15 1988 13:05 | 2 |
|
Isn't Ken Olsen a SDA?
|
545.6 | ko | VAXWRK::ZAITCHIK | Existence is NOT a predicate | Mon Sep 19 1988 17:32 | 2 |
| >> Isn't Ken Olsen a SDA? <<
I believe he is a Mormon, no?
|
545.7 | neither | TRACTR::PULKSTENIS | Things go better with hugs | Tue Sep 20 1988 10:17 | 24 |
|
re: < Note 545.6 by VAXWRK::ZAITCHIK "Existence is NOT a predicate" >
-< ko >-
>> Isn't Ken Olsen a SDA? <<
>I believe he is a Mormon, no?
No, on both counts. There is a reprint of an article on the multi-faceted
and highly fascinating Ken Olsen [Fortune magazine, I believe...that
featured KO on the cover] which also discusses his religion. While I
can't remember exactly what the denomination is called, it did clear
up the myth that he's a Mormon.
In fact, someone who works with him also confirmed this to me.
There was also a note in Christian conf. on this from someone who
attends the same church...if there's interest, I'll look it up for
you.
Irena
|
545.8 | official non-discriminatory company | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | obviously, member of some cabal | Tue Sep 20 1988 13:12 | 3 |
| re:.last few
Isn't it great that we _don't_ know KO's specific religion?
|
545.9 | I find this delightfully amusing ;-) | TRACTR::PULKSTENIS | Things go better with hugs | Tue Sep 20 1988 14:23 | 28 |
|
RE: < Note 545.8 by DELNI::GOLDSTEIN "obviously, member of some cabal" >
-< official non-discriminatory company >-
>re:.last few
>Isn't it great that we _don't_ know KO's specific religion?
I think if he was Jewish, we'd have periodic reminders...;-)
Now, please don't flame at me, but...
I light of your question, the following from another topic
tickled my funnybone:
< Note 549.29 by KIRKWD::FRIEDMAN >
>-Isn't Kitty Dukakis Jewish?
Irena
|
545.10 | KO? | MAMIE::SAADEH | Will there ever be peace over there | Wed Sep 21 1988 11:50 | 15 |
|
Well of course, Ken "my good friend" Olsen is Moslem (suni) to
be exact. I remember seeing him during the holy month of Ramadan
at the local mosque here in Paramus NJ.
.......................................
Kul sena winta saalim,
L'Shannah Tova ,
and Have a happy New Year
Good day,
-Sultan
|
545.11 | ...No, I'm serious... | FXADM::SELIMA | | Mon Dec 26 1988 05:45 | 2 |
| Ken Olsen is a member of the Lutheran church. Really.
|