In the SDA church the GC cannot make official “teachings.” Our basic beliefs are only based on Scripture and can only be voted as “official” when we have a world-wide conference of elected representatives.
So the Adventist church does things in a similar way to the Catholic Church. That’s good to know
It would be good if Adventists realised this, because too many Adventists out there quote newspaper clippings and church bulletins as official sources of Catholic teaching, e.g. to show that the Catholic Church allegedly claims that the Church, apart from the Apostles, changed the Sabbath. In reality, the Church teaches no such thing - several popes and at least once Council have explicitly stated that Sunday observance was begun by the Apostles. The issue of which day is correct aside, misrepresentation of Catholic teaching just to gain points doesn’t go down well when people actually look up official teaching.
“These guidelines were approved and voted by the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists Executive Committee at the Annual Council session in Silver Spring, Maryland, October 12, 1992.”
Note that these are “guidelines.” The church does NOT “permit” abortions. The “guidelines” clearly put the decision in the hands fo the women.
To repeat the paragraph:
"4. The Church does not serve as conscience for individuals; however, it should provide moral guidance. Abortions for reasons of birth control, gender selection, or convenience are not condoned {note the following!} by the Church.
The Adventist church serves as a conscience when it comes to pork, alcohol, and in the past, dress code and jewellery, and which day of the week to worship on.
If it were truly pro-life it would serve as a conscience regarding murder. Or at least take a stand as strong as it does on beer and bacon.
Women, at times however, may face exceptional circumstances that present serious moral or medical dilemmas, such as significant threats to the pregnant woman’s life, serious jeopardy to her health, severe congenital defects carefully diagnosed in the fetus, and pregnancy resulting from rape or incest. The final decision whether to terminate the pregnancy or not **should be made by the pregnant woman **after appropriate consultation. She should be aided in her decision by accurate information, biblical principles, and the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
I hope that the bolding, coloring and editorial comment in the text helps. Does that make it clearer? If not maybe this will help:
“… not condoned by the Church …”
“… not condoned by the Church …”
“… not condoned by the Church …”
Except in exceptional circumstances, such as eugenics, as stated above, after permitting the Holy Spirit to lead the woman to abort for reasons of eugenics.
If she is to be guided by biblical principles, why don’t the guidelines on the official Adventist website tell us what those principles are when it comes to this issue, the 6th commandment, as it does with alcohol, pork, and the 4th commandment, etc?
If the official Adventist website posts these as guidelines, it has some degree of formality. Were the USCCB website to post such guidelines, the Vatican would come down hard on them.
Maria’s right - those guidelines are posted on the official Adventist website, not on the actual page
adventist.org/beliefs/fundamental/index.html but linked from the guideline page it links to, on the same official Adventist website.
adventist.org/beliefs/guidelines/main_guide1.html
Unlike the misrepresentation by newspaper clippings, and unlike Martin Malachi, the official Adventist website is a lot more official. They don’t put a disclaimer at the bottom of the page saying the guidelines are not official, nor do they state as much in their disclaimer.
djconklin:
Note that this was voted on by the “General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists Executive Committee” and not by the church as a whole. The guidelines, as they are clearly labled, are just that. The Executive Committee (which I never heard of before this!) does not have the power to dictate to the individual members what they will believe, nor can they kick you out of the church (and thus not be saved) if you contradict what they say.
The “General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists Executive Committee” sounds very much like the title of an official governing body, or an official branch thereof, that is not linked to a mere local conference.
If you haven’t heard of them before, how do you know that they’re not in a position to formulate official statements, or kick you out? If you checked up on this, could you cite some explanation (an official one, preferably) that can enlighten us?