|
HISTORY
Organized ministry for families within the Seventh-day Adventist
Church began with the establishment of the Home Commission in 1919.
Arthur Spaulding, an educator and editor whom Ellen G. White had
convinced in 1913 to dedicate his life to the training of parents,
served from 1922 to 1941 as secretary of the Home Commission. Through
tireless efforts for nearly two decades he and his wife Maud brought
recognition and acceptance of family life education within the church
in North America and in many countries around the world.
The
Home Commission became part of the Department of Education in 1941
and during the next three decades marriage and family life programs
were promoted by Parent and Home Education secretaries: Florence
Rebok (1941-1947), Arabella Moore Williams (1947-1954), Archa O.
Dart (1954-1970), and W. John Cannon (1970-1975).
In
1975, to address more directly the need for stronger, more stable
Adventist homes, the Home and Family Service was organized. A husband
and wife team, Delmer and Betty Holbrook, organized and conducted
training seminars for administrators, pastors and laity in every
world division. A variety of instructional manuals and materials
covering a broad spectrum of family life issues were developed.
Karen and Ronald Flowers joined the HFS staff in 1980. D. W. Holbrook
directed HFS from 1975 to 1982 and Betty Holbrook served as director
from 1982 until 1985 when Home and Family Service became part of
the Department of Church Ministries.
Family
Ministries continued as a strong section of DCM through the efforts
of D. W. Holbrook (CM director 1985-1987), Betty Holbrook (until
her retirement in 1988) and Karen and Ronald Flowers. An infrastructure
of Family Ministries associates at division, union and conference/mission
levels was developed. The Family Ministries leadership training
curriculum was put in place and major initiatives were undertaken
to research Adventist families worldwide and stimulate activity
in local churches with annual emphases such as Christian Home Day,
Christian Marriage Day and Family Togetherness Day.
The
current Department of Family Ministries was established in 1995.
|