Trans-European Division

Paseggi Wins Excellence in Communication Award at GAiN Europe

Adventist Review senior news correspondent is honored for faithful reporting to the world church.

Montenegro

Tor Tjeransen, Norwegian Union Conference
From left to right: Paulo Macedo, Williams S. Costa Jr., Marcos Paseggi, Vanesa Pizzuto, David Neal.

From left to right: Paulo Macedo, Williams S. Costa Jr., Marcos Paseggi, Vanesa Pizzuto, David Neal.

[Photo: Tor Tjeransen/Adventist Media Exchange (CC BY 4.0)]

Marcos Paseggi, senior news correspondent for Adventist Review, received the Excellence in Communication Award at the Global Adventist Internet Network (GAiN) Europe conference held November 15-19 in Budva, Montenegro. The GAiN Europe conference is an annual professional gathering for European Adventist communicators and other church leaders.

Adventist Review is the 175-year-old flagship magazine of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.

For the past eight years, Paseggi has crisscrossed the globe as a freelance journalist, writing inspiring stories of what God is doing both in and through the Seventh-day Adventist Church.

Paseggi was born in Argentina and is a licensed English-Spanish translator, with a degree in translation from River Plate Adventist University. He taught financial translation and communication at the university for 11 years. While working there, he took theology classes during the summer “just for fun,” he says.

“When Marcos does anything, he does it 110 percent,” Paulo Macedo, Communication, and Public Affairs and Religious Liberty director for the Inter-European Division (EUD), said as he read a citation when presenting the award together with his counterparts in the Trans-European Division (TED), David Neal and Vanesa Pizzuto.

“Marcos is not only a journalist of the Adventist message, but an embodiment of it who has helped others see the global work through the Adventist lens.”
“Marcos is not only a journalist of the Adventist message, but an embodiment of it who has helped others see the global work through the Adventist lens.”

The citation said in part: “We recognize Marcos’s ministry for embodying our values: humility, dedication, and trust in God. His story is one of divine guidance, resilience, and an unwavering commitment to serving others.”

Paseggi was only 28 years old when he became the academic secretary in the School of Humanities and Education at River Plate University, responsible for the academic wellbeing of 700 students and 110 professors, including some professors who had taught his father at the university.

In comments at the award ceremony, during the Saturday (Sabbath) program, Williams Costa Jr., Communication director for the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, praised Paseggi for the high standard of his reporting, which is his hallmark.

The Adventist Review editor, Justin Kim, who was unable to be present due to an assignment in a different part of the world, said in a message of appreciation, “Paseggi helps the Adventist Church understand what God is doing locally. The world church is deeply grateful for his dedication.

“Marcos is not only a journalist of the Adventist message, but an embodiment of it, and one who has helped others see the global work through the Adventist lens,” Kim added.

Leaders commented on how Paseggi’s background in financial translation and communication, combined with his love for theology, has been a great asset in his current job. God prepared him for this assignment long before he knew anything about it.

“I am very thankful for being recognized, but an award is not essential for the job,” Paseggi said after receiving the award. “And I’m always looking ahead for the next story on how God is active in His church.”

The original article was published on the Trans-European Division website.

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