The Heart of Adventism
Editor's note: Please welcome Kendra Perry—our newest blogger. This is her debut blog with Adventist Today.
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"God is love" (1 John 4:16), and that's why I'm an Adventist.
At its heart, the Bible is a love story. It's the story of God's True
Love for people, people's rejection of that love, and God's attempts to win
them back. It's the story of people's broken attempts to replace True
Love with other things, and God's attempts to restore their brokenness.
At its most beautiful, the Bible tells the story of people allowing God's love
to transform their lives in amazing ways. At its most tragic, the Bible tells
the story of people rejecting and rejecting and rejecting God's love until he
can't reach them any more to save them from themselves.
The Bible shows us that God's love is warm, fuzzy, unconditional, unabashed,
crazy-about-you love.
But not only that.
It shows that God's love is also wise love, the kind that doesn't let you have
candy when you should be eating broccoli.
It's patient love, the kind that keeps on loving you when you curse in its face
and spit on it.
It's tough love, the kind that sees your potential when you can't, pushes you
beyond what you thought you could do, and helps you grow into the world-class
athlete you only half-believed you could be.
Because "love" that lets you eat candy for three meals a day, seven
days a week isn't True Love; it's neglect.
"Love" that gives up when you reject it isn't True Love; it's
self-interest.
"Love" that sees what you could be but never tells you isn't True
Love; it's selling you short.
God's love is True Love, and the Adventist faith is the faith I have found that
best reflects that love.
I don't mean that all Adventists or the church structure or administration
reflect God's love perfectly (though I sincerely hope they're trying).
What I do mean is that, at their core, Adventist beliefs and their relationship
to the Bible best embody God's love and the ways he wants to make it visible in
our world today.
Adventism teaches that, because he is love, God created us to be in
relationship with him and with each other, setting aside the Sabbath each week
to celebrate that relationship. It teaches that, when we rejected his
love and destroyed that relationship, he allowed us to exercise free will and
gave us an opportunity to see what would happen. Sin and pain and sorrow and
the whole Great Controversy are the result of God's creation trying to see what
happens when we separate from him and do things our way instead of his.
Because God is love, he had a plan for salvation to restore the perfect
relationship he wanted. He doesn't blast us when we screw up (as we ALL
do, ALL the time), but blasted himself instead so he could give us all the
second chances we want and need.
Because God is love, he won't force anyone who doesn't like him to hang out
with him forever. He also won't allow us to go on destroying ourselves by
living contrary to love forever. Instead, he asks us to choose: True Love
or our own way. Based on our choice, he will, fairly, after proper
investigation, execute judgment. Because God is love, he won't torture
people throughout eternity if they choose their way instead of his.
Because God is love, he doesn't leave us alone in our choice. Through the
incarnation, he shows us how True Love looks and acts and feels when it walks
around on earth. Through Scripture and the Spirit of Prophecy, he gives us the
information we need now to know what True Love is and how it works, how to have
healthy minds, bodies, and relationships that work the way he designed
them. As long as we let him, he gets down in the trenches with us through
the Holy Spirit, helps us out in any way he can.
Finally, because God is love, he asks the church, people who love him, to help
make his love visible on earth so everyone can make an informed choice: their
way, or his Way.
I want to be one of those people. I want to be part of a movement of
people whose highest goal is to renew True Love in the brokenness and
separation of our world. I want to help restore people's relationships to
God, to each other, and to the world around us. This is the church I
believe in; this is the church I belong to.
It's time to refocus our eyes on this, the true heart of Adventism. For
(to paraphrase Paul), if we can apply the best hermeneutic to our Bible
reading, or argue down the opposing side with the best logic, or even smile
brightly at everyone we meet, but have not Love, we are nothing.
- Kendra Perry's blog
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![]() | Kendra Perry | Kendra Perry teaches English at an urban public charter high school in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Her family is also part of the church planting team at Renew Community Church in the suburbs of the Twin Cities. Kendra has an MA in English from Andrews University and a Master of Library & Information Science degree from University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. She has been teaching English, ESL, and German at various levels since 1998. Her blog will explore what it means to understand, experience, and make God's love visible in the world around us. |


Comments
Re: The Heart of Adventism
Kendra has spoken with electric words. She has analyzed, compressed, and shared the heart of the gospel that Adam once heard and everyone since who has given our Creator a chance to speak to us. How neatly she has combined mercy with justice--two terms that are most often separated in "Christian" talk. Here we have the Great Controversy theme warmly and neatly unfolded--God is preparing, not merely forgiven rebels but joyful, restored sons and daughters back home. All our theology and biblical interpretations are beside the point if we do not see this overriding purpose of God's plan for our salvation. Give us more, Kendra. Cheers, Herb
Re: The Heart of Adventism
Re: The Heart of Adventism
How easy it is to become Bible junkies living in our own little sub culture. Without the love that the Adventist message teaches we are nothing. It is our core belief and purpose in life - reflect God's love. Thank you Kendra.
Re: The Heart of Adventism
Re: The Heart of Adventism
You have nailed it. It is not surprising that this perspective comes as a result of interaction with those outside of the Adventist community. Such interaction forces you to distill the essence of what it is you really believe, and why. (There's a lesson to be learned here, isn't there?)
Thanks for such a refreshing and well-adjusted approach.
Re: The Heart of Adventism