Adventist Global Family to Meet in St. Louis, Missouri

Silver Spring, Maryland, United States
ANN Staff
Stlouisarch

Stlouisarch

The world session of the Seventh-day Adventist Church will bring an international flavor to St. Louis, Missouri, the heart of the United States of America. The gathering will be representative of the 25 million-strong Adventist family from around the glob

Five years ago 70,000 people attended the General Conference Session of Seventh-day Adventists in Toronto Canada.  It is during this business session that meets every five years that 2,000 voting delegates will determine the direction of the church for the next five years.
Five years ago 70,000 people attended the General Conference Session of Seventh-day Adventists in Toronto Canada. It is during this business session that meets every five years that 2,000 voting delegates will determine the direction of the church for the next five years.

The world Session of the Seventh-day Adventist Church will bring an international flavor to St. Louis, Missouri, the heart of the United States of America. The gathering will be representative of the 25 million-strong Adventist family from around the globe, and will meet under a theme of “Transformed in Christ.”

Convening the Session will be Pastor Jan Paulsen, world president of the church, who shared his expectation that the meeting will be a “time of wonderful fellowship and spiritual refreshment.” He added that the theme of the St. Louis gathering “provides the spiritual focus of the Session—it will be a celebration of what Christ has performed in our lives, and a reminder that we also have been called to be agents of transformation within our communities.”

The Session, to be held June 30 through July 9, is primarily a business meeting for the global church family. Denominational leaders are elected, church business is attended to, and policy decisions are often made. Because the core “business” of the Adventist Church is proclaiming the Gospel of Jesus Christ, that challenge will permeate activities at the St. Louis 2005 convocation, Paulsen said.

“At the heart of all that we will do, and all our decision-making, there is really only one objective: to better prepare and equip our church for the mission God has given us,” Paulsen said. “We are essentially a witnessing community, living in anticipation of the return of our Lord, Jesus Christ.”

Some 2,000 voting delegates from all over the world will gather at the America’s Center/Edward Jones Dome in downtown St. Louis to participate in meetings that will determine many of the church’s administrative actions for the next half decade. They will receive reports on the church’s growth in those parts of the world where the Christian message is “reaching the unreached,” and have the opportunity to meet fellow believers and church workers from other lands.

Participants of such world convocations have often favored the international evening programs, which feature reports from all over the world. Other special events associated with the Session will aim at creating global awareness and sensitivity to the world community, which is part of the Adventist mission to the world.

Highlights of the St. Louis 2005 event will be broadcast on Adventist Television Network and other communication delivery organizations, including Adventist World Radio. Regular reports will be available to delegates of the Session and church believers around the world through the church’s weekly magazine, Adventist Review, and the worldwide press coverage of the Adventist News Network.

Organized by the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, the highest administrative body in the church’s worldwide system, the quinquennial world Session will be the 58th for the denomination since its first in 1863. The St. Louis convocation marks the first time Adventists have held their worldwide gathering in the United States in 15 years. Daily attendance at the event is expected to average more than 10,000 people; on the two weekends, more than 70,000 are expected to attend.

Around the world, Adventist Christians are among the fastest-growing churches today. Adventists work in 203 of the 228 countries and areas recognized by the United Nations, and communicate in more than 717 languages. The church also operates one of the largest Protestant educational networks in the world, with 6,846 elementary through university level schools worldwide. Of those, 101 are colleges and universities, and more than 1 million students attend Adventist institutions each year.

Session meetings are open to the general public. More information can be found at www.gcsession.org.

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