Top Seventh-day Adventist leaders worship at the Battle Creek Tabernacle in Battle Creek, during the start of annual council business meetings in Michigan, United States, on October 13, 2018. Photo by Henry Stober, Adventist News Network

Seventh-day Adventists should emulate the church’s pioneers by being faithful and proclaiming the “good report” of Jesus’ soon return despite any obstacles, Adventist Church president Ted N.C. Wilson said at the church’s birthplace in Battle Creek, Michigan, United States.

Wilson, speaking in his annual pastoral address to church leaders, also warned against influences from inside and outside the church that seek “to derail and destabilize” its mission.

The audience — comprised largely of world church leaders gathered for Annual Council, a yearly church business meeting — joined Wilson in celebrating the joy of soul-winning with the onstage baptism of a businessman from Mexico.

“My message today is for every local church member around the world, including us here in Battle Creek since we are all local members somewhere,” Wilson said in his October 13, 2018 sermon, “The Past With a Future — Looking Back to Move Forward Led by God,” in the Battle Creek Tabernacle.

Adventist Church president Ted N.C. Wilson giving his annual pastoral address to church leaders as world division officers, many dressed in 19th-century attire, listen at the Battle Creek Tabernacle in Battle Creek, Michigan, United States, on October 13, 2018. Photo by Henry Stober, Adventist News Network

“Let us hold fast the confession of our faith as the pioneers did,” he said. “They faced many obstacles and antagonism just as we do, but let us hold fast our belief in God’s Truth, His Word, and His love for His church. This church will not fail and will not fall apart. Your church, God’s church, will go through to the end through the power of the Holy Spirit.”

A number of listeners looked like they had stepped out of the 19th century, the era of the pioneers. Men, including Wilson, had beards and old-fashioned neckties, while women wore long dresses and shawls. The clothing was meant to pay tribute to the pioneers on the 155thanniversary of the founding of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Battle Creek in 1863.

As part of the anniversary celebration, Annual Council participants also attended heritage-themed seminars and tours around Battle Creek, including to the grave of church co-founder Ellen G. White, during a Leadership Educational and Development (LEAD) Conference on Oct. 11-13.

Remembering the Past

In his sermon, Wilson expressed hope that the LEAD Conference and the 19th-century attire would help attendees “remember how God led this movement in the past and to gain confidence that He will continue to do so now and in the future.”

Israel Leito (right), recently retired president of the Inter-American Division, preparing to baptize Mexican business owner Jorge Molina in the Battle Creek Tabernacle in Battle Creek, Michigan, United States, on October 13, 2018. Photo by Henry Stober, Adventist News Network

He noted that beloved pioneer Ellen White herself had found inspiration in remembering how God had led in the past.

“She wrote, ‘In reviewing our past history, having traveled over every step of advance to our present standing, I can say, “Praise God!” As I see what the Lord has wrought, I am filled with astonishment, and with confidence in Christ as leader. We have nothing to fear for the future, except as we shall forget the way the Lord has led us, and His teaching in our past history,’” Wilson said, reading from White’s book Life Sketches, page 196.

“This is one of the primary reasons we are meeting for the 2018 Annual Council in Battle Creek, where our church was nurtured and had so much evidence of God’s leading during the formative years of the Advent movement,” Wilson said.

Church members around the world have been praying for God’s guidance for the three days of Annual Council, which starts October 14. Wilson called for prayers in a video message released October 10, and other church leaders have made similar appeals. At the top of the Annual Council agenda are unity and the church’s mission to spread the gospel.

Seeking Unity

Wilson said the pioneers struggled at times to find unity, and he encouraged church members to keep their eyes on Jesus.

Israel Leito (right), recently retired president of the Inter-American Division, embracing Mexican business owner Jorge Molina after baptizing him in the Battle Creek Tabernacle in Battle Creek, Michigan, United States, on October 13, 2018. Photo by Henry Stober, Adventist News Network

“Some in your local church may manifest a strange independence of spirit leading to disunity,” he said. “But there are many in God’s church around the world resisting these attempts, and the Lord will prevail! The pioneers faced similar situations, but the same God who guided them is still leading us today.”

He spoke strongly about the need for Adventists to stand firm in the biblical truth that the Godhead consists of “three divine and equal persons from eternity to eternity.”

“There are those who may proclaim some aberrant and confusing anti-trinitarian heresy,” he said. “Our pioneers faced this and were led to a right understanding by the Scripture and the guidance of Ellen White’s writings.”

Wilson also warned against “overemphasizing social issues while downplaying or neglecting biblical truth and its relevance for today’s society” and appealed for Adventists to be faithful to the Sabbath, the biblical six-day account of Creation, and the biblical marriage between one man and one woman.

Giving a Good Report

Turning in the Bible to Numbers 13, Wilson read about the 12 spies sent by Moses to Canaan and the return of only two with a good report. The other ten spies forgot God’s miraculous leading in the Israelites’ recent past and delivered a bad report.

Adventist Church president Ted N.C. Wilson preaching in the Battle Creek Tabernacle in Battle Creek, Michigan, United States, on October 13, 2018. Photo by Henry Stober, Adventist News Network

“What kind of report will you bring back from this 2018 Annual Council?” Wilson asked. “A report of retreat away from the distinctive Seventh-day Adventist message that has made the church such a strong beacon of light to the world, or will you rally under God’s guidance as we move forward in mission toward the Promised Land?”

Wilson shared positive mission reports about recent trips to Russia, Germany, Norway, and Mexico, and he invited Jorge Molina, owner of an event-planning company in Cancun, Mexico, onto the stage. Molina has worked with Adventists for years and, impressed with what he saw in the church and read in the Bible, decided to be baptized.

“Jorge is a wonderful example of the results of Total Member Involvement — many church members, pastors, and administrators involved in helping Jorge know Jesus as His personal Savior,” Wilson said. “Jorge, it is a privilege to have you as one of the newest ‘pioneers’ of the Seventh-day Adventist Church.”

Molina joined Israel Leito, recently retired president of the Inter-American Division, in a baptismal pool to the side of the stage and was baptized. Pastor Presen Delgadillo, who had studied the Bible with him, watched.

Wilson invited church leaders to take home a good report from Annual Council.

“God is counting on all of us to bring back a good report! … That good report is that He is coming soon!” he said.

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