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Australian Union Conference of Seventh-day Adventists

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The Seventh-day Adventist Church in Australia is formally organised as the Australian Union Conference of Seventh-day Adventists (often abbreviated as the Australian Union or simply "the Union"), a subentity of the South Pacific Division of Seventh-day Adventists. As of 2007, church membership stands at just over 50,000.[citation needed] Despite its small size, the Australian church has made a significant impact on the worldwide Adventist church.

Controversy surrounded Robert Brinsmead and Desmond Ford. Apart from Ford, other respected theologians include Norm Young, Arthur Patrick and others.

Contents

[edit] History

See also: South Pacific Division of Seventh-day Adventists

The first Seventh-day Adventist church in Australia was the Melbourne Seventh-day Adventist Church, which formed on January 10, 1886 with 29 members.[1]

According to one article,

"Australia has supplied the Adventist church in North America with many very able college teachers, theologians, and other professionals who have contributed ideas and insights that have become part of the church heritage. Some of those 'Aussies' have also been disturbing and have contributed to tensions within the church."[2]

Robert Brinsmead was a controversial figure in the 1960s and 70s.

The 1980 Glacier View controversy regarding Desmond Ford's rejection of the investigative judgement, a fundamental belief of the church, was particularly devastating for the Adventist church in Australia. Ford has been a prominent lecturer and speaker within the church, and had taught many students at Avondale College. Within eight years of his expulsion from the church, 182 ministers in Australia either designed or were dismissed (there were also other causes), many teachers lost their jobs, and many members either chose to leave the church or were forced to.[3]

Arthur Patrick's research regarding church cofounder Ellen White has been influential in the scholarship of the world church adopting a more progressive position regarding her inspiration since the 1970s and 80s.

Norman Young is another well respected scholar who wrote a supplement to Anglican John Wenham's book on biblical Greek. Both Ford and Young completed doctorates under the highly respected scholar F. F. Bruce.

Number of people who consider themselves Seventh-day Adventists:

  • 1911. 6095
  • 1922. 13965
  • 1947. 17550
  • 1961. 31633
  • 1971. 41617
  • 1981. 47474
  • 1991. 48341
  • 1996. 52655
  • 2006. 55257[4]

The 1996 National Church Life Survey revealed that of all churches in Australia, Seventh-day Adventists have the highest level of church attendance, highest proportion of members with post-graduate degrees, and the highest proportion who regularly contribute financially to their church. They are also the least open to change and most opposed to speaking in tongues.

According to the 2001 Australian census, 53844 people identified as Seventh-day Adventist. The National Church Life Survey estimated average weekly attendance at church is 36600, which is 68% of the first figure.[5]

For a representative sample of Adventist theology as taught by Australian lecturers and church leaders see the textbook Meaning for the New Millennium: The Christian Faith from a Seventh-day Adventist Perspective. It is not an "official" statement of belief (the 28 Fundamentals play this role), but rather "constitute[s] how a representative group of Australian teachers explain their beliefs."[6]

[edit] Organisations

The church's main tertiary educational institution is Avondale College in the Lake Macquarie region in New South Wales. It offers numerous degrees including nursing, teaching and theology.

Despite being one of the smaller churches in Australia, the Adventist church in Australia operates one of the largest school educational systems of any religious group.[7]

The Signs Publishing Company which serves the division, is based in Victoria. The church also operates the Sydney Adventist Hospital and the Sanitarium Health Food Company based in Australia and New Zealand.

The Adventist church in Australia is a senior member of the Australian Christian Research Association. Adventist pastor Bob Steed was voted its president in 2007.[8]


[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Seventh-day Adventist Church South Pacific | Australia
  2. ^ https://www.atoday.com/magazine/2002/09/avondale-australia-church-recognizes-tensions by James Stirling
  3. ^ 25 Years After Glacier View by Arthur Patrick
  4. ^ Australian Census 2006
  5. ^ "Census vs Attendance (2001)". National Church Life Survey. Accessed 2007-12-17
  6. ^ Meaning for the New Millennium: The Christian Faith from a Seventh-day Adventist Perspective, p.iii
  7. ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics, http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/2f762f95845417aeca25706c00834efa/c21d5dbcc4f5c89dca2570ec00787e6e!OpenDocument
  8. ^ Record 112:44 (November 17, 2007), p.5

Other resources:

  • Seventh-day Adventist Encyclopedia, "Australia", esp. 135-40
  • S. Ross Goldstone. The Angel Said Australia (Warburton, Victoria, Australia: Signs, 1980)
  • Alwyn Salom, ed. The Seventh-day Adventist Church in Australia. Kew, Victoria: Christian Research Association, 2002 (publisher's page)
  • Brown, Reginald K. (2005). Beginnings Down Under: The Story of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Australia New Zealand and Papua New Guinea. Victoria, Australia: Signs Publishing Company. ISBN 0 646 44928 1. 
  • Arthur Patrick. Christianity and Culture in Colonial Australia: Selected Catholic, Anglican, Wesleyan and Adventist Perspectives, 1981-1900 (Sydney: Fast Books, 1993). PhD dissertation
  • Milton Frederick Krause. The Seventh Day Adventist Church in Australia, 1885–1900. MA Thesis, University of Sydney, 1969
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