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A
THEOLOGICAL RATIONALE FOR FAMILY MINISTRIES
As God's ambassadors
in His mission of reconciling all things unto Himself in Christ,
we in the Seventh-day Adventist Church face a unique and demanding
challenge. In a society characterized by broken and alienated relationships
we must become living and trustworthy expressions of God's love.
This challenge requires a church strategy in light of the fact that
Adventist marriages and parent-child relationships are fracturing
at an alarming rate. We need to provide a ministry that enables
its membership to become living extensions of God's self-giving
love. A ministry which effectively enables people to express genuine
love must begin at the most basic levels of relationshipsthose
learned and acquired in the home and family environment. Historically
Adventists have always affirmed that such ministry has a vital role
in the final proclamation of the gospel. We have traditionally respected
and given full support to the concept of marriage and family life
as a sacred gift from God to humanity. As indeed we see that the
time has come for God's last call to His grace, a family ministry
must by necessity become an urgent, vital, and integral function
of church life and outreach. We believe this basic affirmation for
a ministry in marriage and family life is deeply grounded in the
following Scriptures and Adventist doctrine and experience.
On The Nature
Of God
We affirm
that the God of Scripture is the eternal "I am" whose
essential nature is that of self-giving love. Thus He reveals Himself
to man as existing in a perfectly harmonious and loving triune relationship,
indicating that love can only find expression through the mutuality
of people in relationship. We also affirm that He is the Creator
of the universe, creatively bringing into existence all things to
express His nature of perfect harmony and love in relationships.
Thus all creation reveals His glory.
Exodus 3:14; 2 Corinthians 13:14; Psalms 33:6,9; John 1:1-5, 9,
14; Psalms 19:1-6.
On The Nature
Of Persons
Scripture
instructs us on our self-understanding. We, as males and females,
were created by God to reflect His image. In our creation we were
given the capacity to exist in harmonious and loving relationships,
with the purpose of reflecting His own relational nature and thus
bringing glory to Him. Scripture affirms that men and women were
not to exist in isolation but in intimately satisfying interpersonal
relationships. These relationships were to be carefully safeguarded
as man and woman sustained a loving relationship with their Creator.
Genesis 1:26, 27; Genesis 2:15-25.
On The Fall
And Sin
Scripture
describes the fall of man and woman primarily as a falling out of
relationship. A loving and trusting relationship with their Creator
was not sustained; therefore, neither could they sustain their own
relationship of trust and love. After the fall, mistrust, hostility
and estrangement damaged human relationships. These broken relationships
are a tragic expression of our human sinfulness. They are offensive
to God because they are contrary to His very nature.
Genesis 3:2-19; 1 John 1:5-10; 1 John 3:4-10.
On The Work
Of Christ
Christ,
coming to earth as God's own Son, emphasized God's relational nature.
He came to man and woman as the Healer of their broken relationships
and He Himself would be wounded in the task of healing. Fully incarnating
Himself with humanity, He willingly accepted and placed upon Himself
all the consequences of a broken relationship with God, providing
the opportunity for complete healing. In so doing He enabled man
and woman to identify with and accept each other's brokenness, to
acknowledge their sinfulness, and to accept Christ's redemptive
healing in their lives. Christ is God's way of expressing His relational
loving nature to humanity.
Matthew 3:17; Genesis 3:15; John 1:14, 18; Hebrews 2:14-18; 1 John
4:7-11.
On The Mission
Of The Church
Christ
established His church as an ongoing extension of His work in healing
and restoring broken relationships. The church is not just an institution
but a community of caring people involved in the creative task of
bringing healing and restoration to alienated relationships. However,
in this task the church is not dependent on its own resources. Rather,
the resources are divinely provided through the healing power of
God's voice in His Word. Sensitive Christians, experiencing God's
healing power in the process of sanctification, will be the channels
through which God's voice speaks. Thus the church will incorporate
into its evangelistic mission the sound of God's healing voice in
the midst of human tragedy and brokenness. As the body of Christ
the church must demonstrate that Christ is humanity's burden-bearer,
thus winning the hearts and souls of men and women unto Himself.
Christ's own definition of the church's mission was "to make
disciples." To make disciples is to be involved in the task
of all relationships between men and women with God. The family
is a major training center for discipling since it is within the
family that a developing person first is introduced to living, caring,
trusting and nurturing. Thus the church must continually enhance
and strengthen the discipling process within families.
Matthew 10:1-8; Matthew 28:18-20; Ephesians 5:21; Ephesians 6:4;
1 Corinthians 12:27, 28; 2 Corinthians 3:18-20.
On The Kingdom
Of God
We affirm
Christ's prayer on the establishing of God's kingdom on earth: "Thy
kingdom come." The present establishment of God's kingdom of
grace through the actual and personal work of the Holy Spirit brings
healing and restoration to the hearts and minds of men and women.
The work of the Holy Spirit, as the third person of the triune God,
is to enable all men and women to experience in the present a foretaste
of the joys of restored relationships, to be experienced fully in
God's kingdom of glory. The establishment of God's kingdom of glory
on earth, will be characterized by all things being made new and
all universal relationships perfectly restored.
Revelation 21:1-5; 1 John 3:23, 24; Galatians 5:22-26; Matthew 24:29-31;
John 14:26, 27.
On Christian
Lifestyle
We affirm
that a sensitivity and ability to enrich personal relationships
with self-giving love must permeate all of Christian life. Thus,
Christian men and women will indeed be co-laborers with the Holy
Spirit as He leads them to heal, enrich and nurture lives. Only
then will Christian lifestyles be an extension of Christ's ministry
of reconciliation. All church teaching and doctrine must enhance
the Christian's sensitivity to work together with God in the task
of healing and reconciling men and women to each other and to God.
For instance, the doctrine of the Sabbath enables the Christian
to share the Sabbath gifts of grace, rest, and time with individuals
in troubled relationships. The doctrine of Christ's incarnation
becomes a living dynamic in Christian lifestyle as the incarnate
Christ manifests Himself in His disciples bringing healing and wholeness
to each other and to society.
As the church seeks to fulfill its evangelistic mission, seeking
to be a 'caring' church, it needs to strengthen its objectives for
winning people to the church. At times we have placed too much emphasis
on conveying information and communicating facts. However, this
emphasis has frequently created only short-term loyalties to Christ
and His church. Outreach must be relationship-oriented. Its goal
is to bring people into genuine, lasting relationships based on
self-giving love. Such a strategy of church outreach will bring
to fruition the harvesting of others to the love of Christ and His
church. An emphasis on relationships, especially those within the
family, will bring maturation in Christ as new members are freed,
nurtured, and enabled for service.
1 Corinthians 12; 1 Corinthians 16:14; Acts 2; Matthew 28:18- 20;
Galatians 2:20; Colossians 3.
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Reprinted from an unpublished paper "A Proposal for Family
Life Ministry in Southeastern," prepared by Nurture Committee
Taskforce, Southeastern California Conference of Seventh-day Adventists,
Riverside, California, September 20, 1984. Used by permission.
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