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A Brief History of Adventism

A Brief History of Adventism. UK Heritage. St Patrick – 388 AD. St Columba – 521 – 597 AD. William Tyndale ( 1494?-1536 First translator of the English Bible. Martin Luther. John & Charles Wesley. William Miller. Sir Isaac Newton. Edward Irving. Millerite Prophetic chart.

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A Brief History of Adventism

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  1. A Brief History of Adventism

  2. UK Heritage • St Patrick – 388 AD

  3. St Columba – 521 – 597 AD

  4. William Tyndale (1494?-1536 First translator of the English Bible

  5. Martin Luther

  6. John & Charles Wesley

  7. William Miller Sir Isaac Newton Edward Irving

  8. Millerite Prophetic chart Early Adventist believers 1st Seventh-day Adventist church, Washington New Hampshire

  9. 125 Churches 3,500 members Officially named: 1860 Organised as a church, May 21, 1863

  10. Go ye into all the world

  11. Michael Belina Czechowski - 1864 – to Europe J. N. Andrews – 1874 – First official Missionary J. N. Loughborough – Landed in Southampton 30 December 1878 British Union Conference formed - 1903

  12. British Isles from 1883 • 72 Heneage Road, Grimsby. The headquarters of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in theBritish Isles from 1883

  13. Holloway

  14. Stanborough Park

  15. ✦ In 1900 Dr and Mrs Olsen came from the United States to join Dr and Mrs Kress in pioneering health evangelism, ✦ In 1907 Stanborough Park was purchased (ministerial training had begun in 1902 at Duncombe Hall, London). ✦ The end of World War I signalled the beginning of the first ‘Golden Age of Evangelism’. J. D. Gillatt, O. M. Dorland, George Hyde, William Maudsley, Lionel Barras and R. A. Anderson were to be the big names. ✦ In 1932 a Queen Anne mansion, Newbold Revel, became the ministerial training centre. ✦ The British Mission to East Africa had been founded in 1906 but, in the inter-war years, the British Union supported a massive missionary programme in both East and West Africa. ✦ In 1949 the Voice of Prophecy began to broadcast from Radio Luxembourg and the Bible Correspondence School was founded. ✦ Evangelism was top priority in the Vandeman era, 1951-1956. ✦ In 1978 – four years after being presented with a positive programme for solving ethnic tensions in Britain – GC president R. H. Pierson visited Britain and brokered a ‘package’ which owed much to the four-year-old programme. The arrival in 1979 of ten top-drawer pastors, largely from the Caribbean, led to a period of church growth and harmony. ✦ In 1980 the John Loughborough School was founded in Tottenham, North London. ✦ In 1981, at the South England session held in the Portsmouth Guildhall, the first Black conference president was elected. Dr Silburn Reid did much to heal any remaining rift and, in 1982, organized the first camp meeting. ✦ In 1991, at a British Union session in Harrogate, the first Black Union president – Pastor C. R. Perry – was elected on a vote that was by no means drawn on ethnic lines. ✦ In 1999 the membership of the British Union topped 20,000 for the first time. By the end of this year it is expected to reach 29,000 – with considerably more then that in attendance each Sabbath.

  16. 28,500

  17. 15,000,000 Go ye into all the world

  18. We have this hope thatburns within our hearts …Hope in the coming of the Lord. www.adventist.org.uk

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