Seventh-day Adventist pastor Jermaine Johnson is one of 72 people who recently received a Governor General Medal of Honour in Kingston, Jamaica, for significant and exceptional contributions to their …… Source: https://adventist.news/en/news/adventist-pastor-receives-medal-of-honor-from-jamaicas-governor-general
Musica in campeggio 2023
“Progetto campeggio” Casuccia’s Music Camp 2023.
E anche quest’anno, presso la ‘Casuccia Visani’ ha ripreso vita il progetto dedicato ad un nuovo corso musicale. Si tratta, più precisamente di un’intera settimana totalmente avvolti dal verde, in un pezzetto meraviglioso delle nostre foreste casentinesi, proprio vicino al castello di Poppi. Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0wDxBW0YRLI
Inside Story: The Little Church That Could
By Andrew McChesney
It seemed the Seventh-day Adventist Church on Rügen island in Germany would have to close. Only six people worshiped there: four elderly members of a single family, and two other older people. Membership had dwindled from seven when the church was founded in 1940 and from its heyday of 33 members in the late 1950s. Conference leaders recommended selling the site.
“No, we want to keep the church,” Gunthardt, the church’s head elder, told them. “We don’t want to sell it.”
Membership fell after Germany’s 1990 reunification. Elderly members died, younger ones moved away, and the population of the former East German island grew very secular. Attendance only swelled when vacationers flocked to the island in the summer. Some vacationers were Adventist.
Gunthardt and his wife and parents joined the other two church members in praying for the church’s future. “Bring us new members,” they prayed.

Then an Adventist physician and his family moved to the island. Church members kept praying. A former member suddenly renewed his membership, and several other people joined. When membership hit 16, conference leaders changed their minds. They agreed to keep the church open.
But by then the church needed a new building. Members prayed and agreed to contribute 136,000 euros (US$136,000). While the sum fell far short of the final 730,000-euro bill, it encouraged them to keep praying.
Gunthardt, who had built several houses, designed a church building that also would serve as a center of influence. Church members from across Germany gave generously. The most unexpected contribution came after Gunthardt met a government leader at a business meeting. German politicians have authority to distribute state funds to private causes.
The leader, hearing about the initiative, put Gunthardt in touch with a local politician. Church members prayed before Gunthardt met with the politician and were delighted when the politician offered 300,000 euros. But he had a catch. “As a Christian,” he said, “I want the new church building to be used not only for social purposes but also to spread the Word of God.”
Today, 25 members and their children gather every Sabbath. “We have a new church building and no debt,” Gunthardt said. “God confirmed that our church should stay open.”
The Rügen church is waiting for more miracles. Located in one of the most secular places on earth, the church has a mission illustrating Mission Objective No. 2 from the Adventist Church’s “I Will Go” strategic plan, “To strengthen and diversify Adventist outreach . . . among unreached and under-reached people groups” (IWillGo2020.org). “The people here are not very religious,” Gunthardt says. “We are trying to connect with them.”
(0)The post Inside Story: The Little Church That Could appeared first on Sabbath School Net.
Source: https://ssnet.org/blog/inside-story-the-little-church-that-could/
Friday: Further Thought~Sharing God’s Mission
Daily Lesson for Friday 27th of October 2023
“Love for perishing souls inspired Abraham’s prayer. While he loathed the sins of that corrupt city, he desired that the sinners might be saved. His deep interest for Sodom shows the anxiety that we should feel for the impenitent. We should cherish hatred of sin, but pity and love for the sinner. All around us are souls going down to ruin as hopeless, as terrible, as that which befell Sodom. Every day the probation of some is closing. Every hour some are passing beyond the reach of mercy. And where are the voices of warning and entreaty to bid the sinner flee from this fearful doom? Where are the hands stretched out to draw him back from death? Where are those who with humility and persevering faith are pleading with God for him?
“Abraham was honored by the surrounding nations as a mighty prince and a wise and able chief. He did not shut away his influence from his neighbors. His life and character, in their marked contrast with those of the worshipers of idols, exerted a telling influence in favor of the true faith. His allegiance to God was unswerving, while his affability and benevolence inspired confidence and friendship and his unaffected greatness commanded respect and honor.”—Patriarchs and Prophets, pp. 133, 134.
Discussion Questions
- What other examples from Scripture show us an individual who fulfilled his call to mission? What about John the Baptist? Would you call him successful?
- Read Genesis 19:30-36. What does this tell us about the character of some of those saved from Sodom?
- What other lessons can we learn from the example of Abraham regarding mission and how it is done?
- Think about this: Would you deem Abraham’s intercession for Sodom and Gomorrah successful or a failure?
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God First Your Daily Prayer Meeting – October 26, 2023
Matthew 21:22 – "If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer." Tag someone in need of prayer and kindly share your prayer requests here. https://bit.ly/3GdFXpR Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lvNBNdL6a70

