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"Finally, be s rang in the Lord and in his mighty power." Ephesians 6:10 NIV

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1 .0.. -.* 1 SO',:•; .1 1 • * The President's Outlook *

Seventh-day Conference Ministerial Association which gives a Christ-centered explanation for the Oullook 27 fundamental beliefs of Seventh-day Official organ of the Mid-America Union Conference of Adventists Adventists. It is simply entitled, Seventh- Seventh-day Adventists, P.O. Box 6128 (8550 Pioneers day Adventists Believe, and I think it is an Blvd.), Lincoln, NE 68506. (402) 486-2550. indispensable volume which every Advent- ist in Mid-America should own. Why do I Editor James L. Fly Believe Editorial Assistant Shirley B. Engel say this? Because in no other book pub- Typesetter Cheri D. Winters lished before will you find such a simple, Printer Christian Record Services comprehensive, and appealing presentation of what we believe. Change of address: Give your new address with zip code and include your name and old address as it appeared on The price of this 400-page hard cover previous issues. (If possible clip your name and address book is astonishingly low—$5 to $6 at from an old OUTLOOK.) your Adventist Book Center. So important did the General Conference consider this f" Mid-America Union book, they subsidized it heavily to keep the 5.= C,NITREV I 01 SF, VIII DAY .4.1 cost down. The Review and Herald Pub- lishing Association printed it at cost. Two hundred thirty pastors, evangelists, admin- Mid-America Union Directory istrators, and scholars from the world President J 0. Tompkins Secretary George Timpson church contributed their insights to the Treasurer Duane P. Huey project. Assistant Treasurer Arthur Opp The book, however, is not a formalized Adventist Health System creed, for Adventists have but one creed: Middle & Eastern J. R. Shawver Joel 0. Tompkins Church Ministries Ken L Bushnell the Bible and the Bible alone. It is rather a Communication, A.S I James L Fly For the last several months we have fea- practical summary of our beliefs based on Education Don Keele tured guest editorials on the subject of Scripture. How many times has someone Associate Education Melvin E. Northrup Christ Our Righteousness, the one great asked you, "What do Seventh-thy Advent- Health, Temperance, Inner City George Timpson belief around which all of our others center. ists believe?" You know you can never Ministerial & Evangelism We have done this to focus your attention answer that question in just a few minutes. Coordinator James A. Cress on the Centennial of the 1888 General Con- But now you can lend or give people a Publishing and HHES Hoyet L. Taylor ference Session held in Minneapolis, book which provides the answers, all 27 of Associate Publishing William Dawes Associate Publishing Lynn Westbrook Minnesota. them. Associate Publishing/HHES Bob Belmont This month I would like to introduce you Joel 0. Tompkins, President Religious Liberty D. J. Huenergardt to a new book published by the General Mid-America Union Conference Trust Services George Woodruff

Local Conference Directory CENTRAL STATES: J. Paul Monk, President; E. F. Carter, Secre- tary; Leroy Hampton, Treasurer, 5737 Swope Parkway, Kansas City, MO 64130; Telephone (816) 361-7177. Correspondent, Nathaniel Miller Outlook for October DAKOTA CONFERENCE: Don Shelton, President; Marvin Lowman, Secretary; Douglas Hilliard, Treasurer, P.O. Box 520, 217 North Grand, Pierre, SD 57501; Telephone (605) 224-8868. ABC, Star Route 9, Box 170, Bismarck, ND 58501; Telephone (701) 258-6531. Correspondent, Marvin Lowman Circle Unbroken As D.A.A. Reopens page 4 IOWA-MISSOURI: W. D. Wampler, President; Walter Brown, Secretary; G. T. Evans, Treasurer; P.O. Box 65665, 1005 Grand Ave., West Des Moines, IA 50265; Telephone (515) 223-1197. Correspondent, Herb Wrate First-Day Jitters page 9 KANSAS-NEBRASKA: Gordon Retzer, President; J. Roger McQuistan, Secretary; Norman Harvey, Treasurer; 3440 Urish Road, Topeka, KS 66614-4601; Telephone (913) 478-4726. The Minneapolis Story Part II page 10 ABC, 4745 Prescott, Lincoln, NE 68506; Telephone (402) 488- 3395. Correspondent, John Treolo

MINNESOTA: C. Lee Huff, President; Raymond R. Rouse, Union College Remembers Myrl Manley page 12 Secretary-Treasurer, 7384 Kirkwood Court, Maple Grove, MN 55369; Telephone (612) 424-8923. Correspondent, Barbara Huff

ROCKY MOUNTAIN: Don C. Schneider, President; Marshall Red And Black Legalists page 13 Chase, Secretary-Treasurer, 2520 So. Downing, Denver, CO 80210; Telephone (303) 733-3771. Correspondent, Robert McCumber

Vol. 9, No. 10, October, 1988. The Mid-America Adventist OUT- LOOK (ISSN 0887-977X) is published monthly by the Mid- Outlook On The Cover America Union Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, 8550 Pio- neers Blvd., Route 8, Lincoln, NE 68506. Printed at Christian Record Services, Second-class postage paid at Lincoln, Nebraska.• October: Denver-based Adventist geologist Daniel Poleschook Jr. captured this Rocky Mountain Annual subscription price, $8.00. POSTMASTER: Send address Bighorn Ram with Nikon equipment and Kodachrome 64 film. Readers might remember Poleschook's changes to Mid-America Adventist OUTLOOK, P.O. Box 6128, golden eagle which appeared on the February cover of this year. He works for Amoco Production Lincoln, NE 68506. Company.

2 OUTLOOK October, 1988 The Message of 1888 and the Caring Church (Topic 4 of 5) Christian Perfection And The Caring Church

BY GEORGE R. KNIGHT

hristian perfection has been an perfection. It certainly called for vast context of the statement on page 69 of C important concern of Seventh-day changes in my lifestyle. Before many Christ's Object Lessons. On the previous Adventists from their inception. After all, months had passed I could tell you what two pages, for example, Ellen White are not the 144,000 of Revelation 14:5 was wrong with almost anything a person explains what she means by perfectly declared to be "without fault" (KJV) or might want to eat, do, or think. In my reproducing the character of Christ. "Christ "spotless" (RSV)? Beyond that, Revelation exuberance over health and diet, for is seeking to reproduce Himself in the hearts 14:12 claims that God's last day people, in example, I managed to get down to about of men . . . There can be no growth or contrast to those who have the mark of the 120 pounds. Some feared that I might die fruitfulness in the life that is centered in self. beast, will "keep the commandments of of "health reform." If you have accepted Christ as a personal God" and have "the faith of Jesus." In my desire for perfection I had become Saviour, you are to forget yourself, and try to Some have held "the faith of Jesus" perfect all right. I had become what A. T. help others . . . As you receive the Spirit of (which can also be translated as "faith in Jones had referred to in 1895 as a perfect Christ—the Spirit of unselfish love and labor Jesus") to be the same kind of faith that "tell-me-anything-more-to-do-and-I-will-do- for others, you will grow and bring forth fruit Jesus had. Therefore, God's last day people it Pharisee." I had become a perfect monk . . . Your faith will increase, your convictions can have the same quality of faith and life on the order of Martin Luther before he deepen, your love be made perfect. More and that Jesus did. The description of this kind discovered Romans 1:16, 17. more you will reflect the likeness of Christ in of people in Revelation 14 comes all that is pure, noble, and lovely" (COL, pp. immediately before the great Second 67-68, emphasis supplied). Coming harvest of verses 14-20. It is little Perfectly reproducing the character of wonder that Adventists have had a deep Christ, therefore, means the caring concern with Christian perfection. relationship. It is not, as we see from the In Christ's Object Lessons Ellen White parable of the sheep and the goats in presents an interesting parallel to the Matthew 25:31-46, what we eat or even sequence of Revelation 14 that helps us how we keep the Sabbath. Those lifestyle understand the meaning of God's "spotless" issues are important, but only within the ones who "have the faith of Jesus." "Christ," context of the truly caring Christian life. she writes, "is waiting with longing desire That is essentially what Jesus tried to tell us for the manifestation of Himself in His in Matthew 5:48 when He said: "Be ye church. When the character of Christ shall therefore perfect, even as your Father which be perfectly reproduced in His people, then is in heaven is perfect." That command is in He will come to claim them as His own" (p. the context of the admonition to love our 69, emphasis supplied). enemies. The parallel passage in Luke 6:36 The words "perfectly reproduced" are is quite enlightening: "Be ye therefore George R. Knight central to that quotation. What does it mean merciful, as your Father also is merciful" to perfectly reproduce Christ's character? (For further discussion of this topic see There are at least two lines of In my desperate quest for perfection I From 1888 to Apostasy, pp. 132-58.) interpretation of those words. I sought to had come face to face with the paradox of Thus the perfect Christian is the caring, follow one of them early in my Adventist perfection: the harder I tried the more self- merciful Christian. It is that characteristic experience. Soon after I was converted to centered I became and the more judgmental that God wants for his "spotless" end-time from agnosticism at the age of and harsh I was with those who did not people who have "the faith of Jesus" and 19, 1 read this statement, looked at the agree with me. Thus, the harder I tried, the have "perfectly reproduced" the character imperfect church around me, and worse I became. of Christ. Such a caring people will be a consciously vowed in my heart that I would I had yet to learn the true meaning of demonstration to the universe that God can be the first perfect Christian since Christ. perfectly reproducing the character of Christ truly transform lives. As a result, I began to earnestly and and the lesson that came so hard to Paul As Seventh-day Adventists we must never sincerely study to discover the way to and Luther—that Christian perfection is forget that "the last message of mercy to be intimately related to the surrendering of the given to the world . . . is a revelation of His George R. Knight is Professor of Church self to God. My road to perfection was a character of love" (COL, p. 415). When that History at the Seventh-day Adventist manmade road. It was self-defeating in the Christlike character "shall be perfectly Theological Seminary of Andrews sense that it did not work. reproduced in His people, then He will come University. The author of several books, his 1, and those who had to endure living to claim them as His own" (COL, p. 69). two latest are From 1888 to Apostasy: The , with me, could have been saved a lot of Thus the message of 1888 is pre-eminently case of A.T. Jones and Myths in . trouble if I would have read carefully the the message of the caring church.

October, 1988 OUTLOOK 3 Dakota Adventist Academy Principal Larry Unterseher and business manager Marvin Denney stand in the "circle" surrounded by staff members and students. The circle is the place where everyone meets to socialize between classes. Circle Unbroken As D.A.A. Reopens

BY JAMES L. FLY

n a state where the last name of the loneliness of isolated farms, the fickleness of president of D.A.A.'s alumni association. I governor is Sinner, the saints of the unpredictable weather. They're tightening Patsy's daughter, Stephanie, has the Seventh-day Adventist Church, along with their belts and hunkering down, praying distinction of being one of a handful of their fellow North Dakotans, have suffered against hope that the drought will end next students to attend both of these academies. through the worst drought in half a century, spring and the grasshoppers will stay away. Stephanie, like many other D.A.A. students a "big dry" whose unrelenting sun has They know if they wait long enough the last year, was forced to attend a boarding weakened North Dakota's enduring motto, rain will fall again, producing bountiful academy outside of her home conference. "strength from the soil." harvests of wheat and corn. Twenty-three went to Platte Valley Crops have withered in the parched It is precisely this North Dakota tenacity Academy in Nebraska. Others went to fields, forcing some farmers to sell out. in the face of adversity that has helped Maplewood in Minnesota and Campion in Tithe has dropped more than eight percent them and their South Dakota neighbors to Colorado. in the Dakota Conference, the biggest loss prevail by reopening their academy just a While they felt welcome, they are happy in the Mid-America Union. year after closing it down due to financial to be back home again, reunited in North Dakota Adventists may be down problems. Only one other academy in D.A.A.'s famous "circle," a round area but don't count them out, for they are the North America this century, Mt. Ellis in located in the middle of the academy- sons and daughters of the pioneers, Montana, has ever done that, according to under-one-roof, the place where they survivors of howling blizzards and roaring Patsy Wagner, chairman of Dakota socialize between classes and jobs. hailstorms, men and women who brace Adventist Academy's newly established I watched Stephanie as she and the new themselves continually against the aching development committee and current D.A.A. principal, Larry Unterseher, raised

4 OUTLOOK October, 1988 the American flag together early Sunday morning, August 21—registration day. Then Stephanie raised the North Dakota flag by herself because it was smaller. "It sure feels good to be raising the North Dakota flag . . . " says Stephanie "It sure feels good to be raising the Wagner. Stephanie attended Mt. Ellis Academy in Montana last year. While she liked North Dakota flag and not Montana's," it there, she's happy to be back home again like the other D.A.A. students who were Stephanie said with a laugh. "I really liked forced to attend other academies when D.A.A. closed. Mt. Ellis, but I like it here better. It's home." Unterseher, the former education director small voice seemed to be saying, "This is "There's something special about this of the Dakota Conference, spent a year where I need you." area and these people." away from "home" himself as the principal "Friends told Rhonda (his wife and Unarguably, Tom and Ella Mae of in Spangle, registrar of the school), and me we were Thompson are two of the most special Washington last year. When he was called crazy to go from a 250-student school to people. They have been with Dakota to come to D.A.A. this year to reopen the D.A.A. because it would hurt our career, Adventist secondary education for 28 school, he turned the call down twice but but career doesn't mean anything if you're years-11 years at D.A.A. and 18 years at finally decided to accept it because a still not where the Lord wants you," he told me. Sheyenne River Academy, Harvey, North Dakota, the predecessor of D.A.A. Even when all the students and faculty left last summer, the Thompsons, along with their North Dakota colleagues Dennis and Cheryl Kaiser (maintenance man and food service director), checked the furnace several times a day during the long cold winter. They also cleaned rooms and kept watch over the $13 million empty academy building nestled on 1,300 acres in the rolling hills above the Missouri River on the Lewis and Clark Trail some 15 miles northwest of Bismarck, North Dakota's capital. "To know that there are students living in the dorms again is a beautiful feeling. It's good to be back in business," Thompson Sheldon Fisher of Richardton, North Dakota, helps his daughter, Shannon, move told me while carrying a plant through the into the girls' dorm at D.A.A. A farmer who has served on D.A.A.'s building "circle." committee and board, Fisher says he will only harvest about a third of a normal crop Dakota Adventist Academy would not of wheat, oats and barley this year due to the drought. be back in business if it were not for the October, 1988 OUTLOOK 5 His mother was in the hospital in a body cast and had no money to help him. When Marvin Denney told Brent's story to the Bismarck church on Sabbath, August 20, the members contributed $3,500, enabling Brent to go to school. "It's really wonderful that North Dakota people are willing to help a South Dakota boy get a Christian education," Allen Mayer, Brad's father, said on registration day. Mayer, who works for a sign company in Sioux Falls, and his wife, Mary, a nurse, are sending their son, Brad, to D.A.A. despite the fact that most other Adventist families in Sioux Falls choose to send their children to either Maplewood Academy in Minnesota or Platte Valley Academy in Nebraska, schools which are geographically closer than D.A.A. "It's the conference school and we feel like we should do everything we can to

Patsy Wagner, D.A.A.'s development comnuttee chairman and president of me alumni association, is working hard to make fund raising systematic for the academy. She and her husband, Wencil, live on a ranch near Lark, North Dakota. dedicated lay members of the conference "Money came in from every corner of who have given more than sacrificially to the conference. With a good school year, I make an impossible dream come true. don't see anything but an increase. We've Almost as soon as the academy closed last seen God leading 100 percent of the time in August 12, a lay advisory committee this project," Miller reported. headed by Cliff Kahler, a farmer from Bent over a computer terminal in the Goodrich, North Dakota, began school's business office, Dakota Conference investigating the feasibility of reopening the Treasurer Douglas Hilliard whose twin school. sons, Duane and Doug, attend the After much discussion and prayer, they academy, told me just how amazing the appointed Ron Miller, Dakota Conference response has been. ABC manager, as chairman of the "The people have really come through committee to reopen D.A.A. Miller and his with worthy student funds. Large donations committee members surveyed the 5,000 have come in at the last minute. It's a members of the conference by mail to pleasure to see these assets used in a determine whether or not they really productive way for the benefit of our wanted to see the academy reopen. The students. Youth evangelism is what we're majority did. Delegates to the February 28 all about," Hilliard said. constituency meeting made it official by Even with the extra worthy student voting to reopen the school 229 to 158. money, though, some students had to be Prior to that, Miller's committee had sent turned away, an agonizing decision for the members detailed information as to Unterseher and Marvin Denney, the exactly how much it would cost. D.A.A. business manager. would need $294,000 in cash to operate Fortunately, one of those students was debt-free for the 1988-89 school year, based not Brent Mercer of Sioux Falls, South on 55 students. By registration day the Dakota. Brent wanted to go to D.A.A. with members had sent in $300,000 plus over his friend, Brad Mayer, so badly that he $30,000 for extra worthy student money if went down to the hardware store and any more students wanted to attend the traded his bicycle in on a new pair of tennis school. This was badly needed since about shoes and pawned his radio so he could buy half of D.A.A.'s students require financial a new shirt and tie, trusting somehow that assistance. he would be able to go. 6 OUTLOOK October, 1988 support it and make it a success," Mayer said. Brent Mercer and Brad Mayer are two of 71 students enrolled at D.A.A. this year, 16 more than the 55 required to balance the budget, a surplus which has been a source of great encouragement to Unterseher and his staff. Not only have Dakota Adventists reopened their academy with a surplus of students, but by January 1, 1989 they also expect to pay the final $125,000 of $1 million they owed to the General Conference just two years ago. The D.A.A. building represented the largest percentage of the debt. The General Conference has graciously matched the Dakota Conference $200,000 for the last two years. They will still be paying off additional debt on the faculty and staff housing, however, amounting to $358,044.12. On top of all this, they raised $93,000 to

Carolyn Lehman and her son, Shaun, man the last station during registration. The Lehman family recently moved from St. Louis to Bismarck where Shaun's father, Dennis, works as the chief technologist at the Q & R Medical Clinic. Last year Shaun attended Sunnydale Academy but the Lehmans decided he should go to D.A.A. this year because the school needs students. "We really want to see this school make it," says Carolyn.

pay off back debts owed to vendors in the Service for Institutions (P.S.I.), has chosen Bismarck-Mandan area, the financial crisis D.A.A. to be part of their AAA Challenge, which precipitated the closing of the school a matching funds program to encourage in the first place. alumni to support their alma mater. Furthermore, Ron Miller reports that Wagner praises P.S.I. and its assistant members have already pledged $115,000 director for education, Luann Wolfe, who for the next four years. Of course, to has advised her on how to go about operate, D.A.A. will take more money and increasing support from alumni as well as that is why Patsy Wagner, a teacher by from the local community. training and experience, is working Wagner is compiling a mission statement overtime to make fund raising systematic for the school and plans to maintain careful for the beleaguered academy. donor records with consistent expressions of Wagner lives with her husband, Wencil, appreciation. In addition, she wants to on a 3,000-acre ranch near Lark, North create a community awareness of D.A.A. Dakota. She told me they've had "a and find ways to market Christian disastrous year." One time they dug a ditch education among the parents of academy- to get some water for their cattle but hit age students. nothing but dust. Tempted to sell their herd, "We would have enough students from they prayed about it and the next morning the Dakotas to fill the academy if we could rain fell. God seemed to be telling them to attract the 65 percent who are going to not be too hasty. public school," she said. "We've had answers to prayer so many Admittedly, it's a formidable challenge. times," she told me with a bright smile. Due to economic factors and lack of Patience and a prayerful attitude are two commitment, a number of Adventist virtues she will need in her role as elementary schools, the feeders of D.A.A., development committee chairperson. She have closed in the last few years, and there will also need professional guidance and is no elementary school at all in Western she's already getting it in a big way. North Dakota now. Conference education The General Conference's Philanthropic director Barry Mahorney, however, does not expect any closures this year, and one Left: Dennis Kaiser, a North Dakota new school building will soon be completed native and a former pastor in the Dakota in Carrington, North Dakota. Conference, is currently serving as the Patsy Wagner is coordinating a special academy's maintenance man. He and his ribbon-cutting ceremony honoring the wife, Cheryl, food service director, kept reopening of D.A.A. during alumni watch over the empty academy last weekend, September 30-October 2. She's winter along with Tom and Ella Mae hoping to get a prominent person from the Thompson. state or city government to officiate, and

October, 1988 OUTLOOK 7 Dakota Adventist Academy is one of the finest educational facilities in the church. Opened in 1977, the four-acre complex under one roof sits on a rise above the Missouri River on the famous Lewis and Clark Trail some 15 miles Northwest of Bismarck, North Dakota's capital. she's trying to persuade the media to cover She came to D.A.A. from Valley Grande Today a great prayer has been answered the event, which will include a 5-kilometer Academy in Texas. I asked her what made and you are part of that prayer," he told the run. her decide to leave a secure position in students. Like Patsy Wagner, Don Shelton, the sunny Texas for an uncertain future on the After the worship service, the students new Dakota Conference president, bleak prairie of North Dakota. and faculty filed out to the front lawn to eat impressed me as someone who is upfront She fingered her keys and smiled. watermelon and participate in the and upbeat about the academy. "I've always wanted to be a dean. Plus, traditional handshake greeting. "There's been so much negativism about when do you get a chance to reopen a Tears mingled with smiles as handshakes D.A.A. around the North American school? It sounded like fun," she replied. and hugs rippled up and down the line. Division. We're hoping to change that," he Staff, students and parents alike had fun The sun was setting golden in the west said. on registration day unpacking boxes and while the moon rose full and clear in the Shelton told me they have finished some filling out forms. That evening Dakota south above the silhouetted tawny buttes, a of the duct work in the heating system Conference Secretary Marvin Lowman beautiful benediction to a most remarkable which will save money in heating costs this spoke for the worship service held in the day. winter by confining heat to independent main chapel. But the students and faculty members areas. Some other parts of the academy "It's been a long time since we've had a didn't seem to notice. As the motto on the building remain unfinished, almost as group of students singing praises to the D.A.A. sign says, they were too busy though the workmen just walked off the Lord. It sounded like angel music . . . "building friendships for eternity." job. The materials are in storage. D.A.A.'s new industrial technology teacher, Bob Leake, plans to have his students work on these areas as a class project which will help them learn as they earn. D.A.A. has a dynamic new staff—young, energetic and enthusiastic. "They don't know the meaning of can't," said Larry Unterseher. "Every one of them is a miracle. I hired some of them over the phone. They said yes without even looking at the school." As an example of their dedication, the staff members themselves have pledged a total of $220 a month to help a worthy student. New emphases at D.A.A. this year include computer technology and spiritual outreach. The school has purchased new IBM compatible computers to help the students prepare for today's computerized workplace. John Solomon, a sophomore taskforce missionary from Weimar College, will lead the students this year in outreach programs ranging from clown ministry to adopt- a-grandparent. "My basic goal is to help the students realize that true education is learning to serve others. I want to involve them in practical activities which will enhance their classroom learning," Solomon said. While touring the four-acre complex D.A.A. "patriarch" Tom Thompson, math teacher, embraces one of his returning with Dennis Kaiser, I met Bonnie Peden, students during the traditional greeting time on registration evening. Looking on is the girls' dean and home economics teacher. new English teacher Kent Boyle, a recent graduate of Southern College. 8 OUTLOOK October, 1988 The Holland, Nebraska Adventist School is no longer makeshift as it was when Trudy Hoffman started it some five years ago. The church recently built a spacious new school building, and this year two enthusiastic graduates from Union College, Jackie Simpson and Carol Cosaert, are teaching nine students. Room exists for several more. If you live in the Lincoln area, have elementary-school-age children, and would like to send them to a small multi-grade school in the country, please contact the school at (402) 792-2571 for information.

She only looked at the ground, shuffling her freshly filled notebook and sharpened First-Day pencils from one hand to the other and said, "I think I feel sick." With that we began our first day of a new school year! In spite of my own feelings of Jitters apprehension (no textbook for almost two weeks), there was a closeness that grew as BY TRUDY HOFFMAN we sat out under the trees and read our Bibles. I discovered that God has an exciting curriculum for our lives if we follow His here was a hint of fall in the late lesson plan. Although it was a somewhat T August morning air. The trees had unconventional start to a new school year, it that worn look of a long, hot Nebraska was a beginning I will always treasure. * summer. I had not slept well the night before as I rarely did in anticipation of the first day of school. Trudy Hoffman I had just decided the week before to accept the offer to start a school for a little stark differences apparent as I thought of country church in Holland, Nebraska, 15 the five little used desks and our only miles southeast of Lincoln. There hadn't textbook "the Bible." been much time for preparing bulletin My feelings of anticipation turned to boards, writing lesson plans and arranging anxiety as I stood by the entrance that led my classroom since we were already to the little makeshift school room in the starting school one week late. I wasn't even basement of the church. The children began sure how to go about teaching all eight to arrive, some happily chatting together grades of twelve students. Previously, my and others quietly amused by their new teaching aids were readily available. This school situation. particular "first day of school" made those Then my eyes met Gina's. The look on her face told me that we shared mutual Trudy Hoffman is the 5th and 6th grade feelings of first-day jitters. In my most teacher at Midland Adventist School, reassuring voice I said, "Good morning, Shawnee, Kansas. Gina, I'm really glad you're here today." October, 1988 OUTLOOK 9 declaring that "Those who represent Sabbath-keepers as going away from Jesus, the only source of justification, and rejecting His atoning blood, and seeking justification by the law, do it either ignorantly or wickedly."9 About a quarter of a century later Ellen White penned the following testimony: Christ perfected a righteous character here upon the earth, not for His own account but for fallen man. His character He offers to man if he will accept it. The sinner through repentance of his sins faith in Christ and obedience to the perfect law of God has the righteousness of Christ imputed in him.• it becomes his righteousness, and his name is recorded in the lamb's book of Unfortunately, by 1888 many Seventh- day Adventist leaders viewed righteousness by faith with apprehension. So much emphasis had been placed upon the preaching of the unique doctrines of the church (the Sabbath, the state of the dead, the "sanctuary question," et cetera), that other basic gospel tenets had been clouded from sight. The mechanics of the doctrinal position had been worked out so perfectly that the heart of the message had not been stressed—Christ. Two examples illustrate this: the law was often presented as a Dr. E. J. Waggoner, a scholarly man with medical training, spoke with a silver measuring stick of good deeds, man's tongue, was gentle and earnest, and his arguments persuasive. The dominant emphasis attainment; and it was not uncommon to of Waggoner's preaching at the 1888 General Conference Session was Christ.

Part 2. The Minneapolis Story: A Brief Review of God's Loving Intention

BY ADRIAN R. M. LAURITZEN

nother issue, a deplorable issue, meetings. In justification by faith, for present the sanctuary in the context of area A involved the human factor—the example, each side would accuse the other measurements, ground plans, clash of personalities. There were deep of either "faith is everything, works are compartments, appointments, and the currents in the church, differences arising nothing," or "faith is partly by man's works, meticulous positioning of furniture. The from deviate viewpoints. These differences and partly by Christ's assisting power." plan of redemption was of glorious design, spawned divisions, but neither side was There were those who were for, there were and it was based upon truth, but at that disposed to consider the other side calmly.? those who were against, and there were point in time it needed an unction from on Items of the agenda crystalized such state of those who were noncomittaL And worse high. And at that point in time, in His affairs when the ten horns, the law in than that, there were many who were tender mercy, God supplied that need. Galatians, and justification by faith became unconscionably rude. In the providence of God, two young moot questions at the Minneapolis In the assemblies they interrupted and taunted, hoping ministers—E. J. Waggoner and A. T. to unsettle the speakers. Far too many of them ridiculed Jones, editors of The Signs of the Times— Dr. Adrian R. M Lauritzen has been a the whole matter, failing to search their Bibles presented the message of righteousness by prayerfully to learn, if possibly—just possibly—they distinguished Adventist musician and might be in error., faith at the historic General Conference of historian for many years. Among his many Satan's target of battle was the complete 1888. The attitude of Ellen White toward posts, he headed the departments of music at dissolution of the Conference. But God had the message was one of gratitude. Union College and Maplewood Academy, a message for Zion. The ineffable truth of We thank the Lord with all the heart that we have and served as the academic dean of that message was simply this: "Man is precious light to present before the people, and we rejoice that we have a message for this time . . . MacPhail College of Music and director of justified . . . by the faith of Jesus Christ." graduate affairs at the University of Waggoner, a scholarly man with medical Minnesota School of Music, both in A Most Precious Message training, spoke with a silver tongue, was Minneapolis. He is currently the historian Righteousness by faith has always been gentle and earnest, and his arguments and director of the Minnesota Heritage of part and parcel of Seventh-day Adventist persuasive. Jones, largely self-taught, was Seventh-day Adventists for the Minnesota belief. As early as 1852 James White gave naturally abrupt with a certain uncouthness, Conference. candid expression to the subject by and spoke with a singularity that was an

10 OUTLOOK October, 1988 Christ is the source of unsearchable riches. words she gave clear title to the wide- With a gentle persuasion he held up before ranging purpose and significance of the his hearers the wide range of "from truths enunciated by the young men. Ellen ignorance and sin to righteousness and White, who had always "considered" and redemption," and quoted a text which "lifted up" Jesus, praised God for "a most briefly summed up all that Christ is to precious message." man: "But of Him are ye in Christ Jesus, The Lord in His great mercy sent a most precious who of God is made unto us wisdom, and message to His people through Elders Waggoner and righteousness, and sanctification, and Jones. This message was to bring more prominently redemption." 1 Corinthians 1:30 He then before the world the uplifted Saviour, the sacrifice for the sins of the whole world It presented justification exclaimed, "Sufficient reason this, why the through faith in the Surety; it invited the people to eyes of all men should be fixed upon Him." receive the righteousness of Christ, which is made Waggoner continued by quoting manifest in obedience to all the commandments of God Jeremiah 23:6, " . . . and this is His name Many had lost sight of Jesus. They needed to have their eyes directed to His divine person, His merits, and His whereby He shall be called, THE LORD changeless love for the human family. All power is given OF RIGHTEOUSNESS." He reminded his into His hands, that He may dispense rich gifts to men, hearers that the Lord is to "be lifted up," to imparting the priceless gift of His own righteousness to be recognized as "God with us," for He is the helpless human agent This is the message that God commanded to be given to the world It is the third the "author and finisher of our faith," and angel's message, which is to be proclaimed with a loud He is the power of God, and the wisdom of voice, and attended with the outpouring of His Spirit in a God. To "consider Him" is to understand large measure." this, "for in Him dwelleth all the fulness of The salient features of the statement were the Godhead bodily." While here on earth outstanding: It was "a most precious "His humanity only veiled His divine message;" the object: "to bring more nature," and while He was compassed with prominently before the world the uplifted infirmity, yet He did no sin because of the Saviour;" the scope justification through divine power constantly dwelling within faith in the Surety, an invitation to receive Him. This same power may be the joy of the righteousness of Christ, which then will the Christian (Ephesians 3:19), a provision be manifested in obedience to all the which Waggoner then stated in words commandments of God; the need—to have fraught with inspiration: all eyes directed to Jesus; the resources— Elder A. T. Jones was largely self- Christ can impart rich gifts, for He has all taught. He was naturally abrupt with a All the power which Christ had dwelling in Him by nature, we may have dwelling in us by grace, for He power; the extent—to be given to the certain uncouthness, and spoke with a freely bestows it upon us." world; the identification—the third angel's singularity that was an asset with his And He freely forgives sins, for "when message to be proclaimed with a loud voice audiences. Jones, along with E. J. Christ covers us with the robe of His own and with the attending outpouring of the Waggoner, was serving as an editor of righteousness, He does not furnish a cloak Holy Spirit in large measure. (A free The Signs of the Times when the 1888 for sin, but takes the sin away . . . The rendering from Christ Our Righteousness, General Conference Session convened in forgiveness of sins is a reality . . . tangible, by A.G. Daniells, p. 37.) Minneapolis, Minnesota. that vitally affects the individual. It actually In 1890 Ellen White wrote: clears him from guilt; and if he is cleared Several have written to me, inquiring if the message of asset with his audiences. As A. W. Spalding from guilt, is justified, made righteousness, justification by faith is the third angel's message, and I so aptly described them—"Unlike as garden he has certainly undergone a radical change. have answered "It is the third angel's message inverity."" fruit and apples of the desert were these He is, indeed, another person. For he Years later, Elder A. G. Daniells, two, yet they teamed together in close obtained this righteousness for the remission President of the General Conference from fellowship and cooperation."I2 They were of sins, in Christ. It was obtained only by 1901 to 1922, made an interesting not alone, for Ellen White joined them in putting on Christ . . . 'if any man be in comment on the above statement. proclaiming the supreme glory of Christ in Christ, he is a new creature.' " And all of Justification by faith, it is affirmed is "the third angel's message in verity." The words "in verity" means, righteousness by faith. Through the this is a gift! in fact, in reality, in very truth. That means that the Conference sessions and for several years to Waggoner then made clear that the law message of justification by faith and the third angel's are come, these three gave unstintingly of their is not ignored in this process. The law, he the same in purpose, in scope, and in results." time and effort in presenting the "most said, "is simply a declaration of His (To Be Continued) precious message." character," and, "the righteousness which The dominant emphasis of Waggoner's comes by the faith of Jesus Christ is the References: preaching was centered in Christ. His key same righteousness that is epitomized in the 'Spalding, op. cit., p. 300. text was the exhortation of Hebrews 3:1— law." In another remark he ascribed 'Emmet K. Vande Vere, Rugged Heart, The Story of George I. Butler, p. 93, 94. "Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers of the eternal significance to the law in these 'Seventh-day Adventist Encyclopedia, "Righteousness by heavenly calling, consider the Apostle and words: Faith," p. 1085, Commentary Reference Series, vol. 10. High Priest of our profession, Christ Jesus." In short. it is the measure of the righteousness of God, "Ellen G. White, Testimonies for the Church, vol. 3, p. This invitation to "consider Christ" was who inhabits eternity. " (emphasis supplied) 371. He then summed up the whole redemptive "Ellen G. White, Review and Herald, July 23, 1889, in extended as a continual and intelligent Christ Our Righteousness, Arthur G. Daniells, p. 60, experience of the Christian, for if He is seen process as follows: 1929 ed. as He is, He will transform one into a God is just, and at the same time the Justifier of him "Spalding, op. cit., pp. 289, 290. perfect Christian, "for by beholding we that believeth in Jesus. In Jesus dwells all the fulness of "E. J. Waggoner, Christ and His Righteousness. p. 30, the Godhead He is equal with the Father in every 1902 ed. become changed." With the ministers in attribute. Consequently the redemption that is in Him— "IbicL, p. 51. mind he emphasized the theme of keeping the ability to buy back lost man—is infinite." p. 63. Christ before the people as exemplified in 1 The most concise and understanding '"Ellen G. White, Testimonies to Ministers and Gospel Corinthians 2:2, "I determined not to know assessment of the 1888 message as preached Workers, pp. 91, 92. "Ellen G. White, Review and Herald April I, 1890. anything among you, save Jesus Christ and by Waggoner and Jones came from the pen "Arthur G. Daniells, Christ Our Righteousness, pp. 80, Him crucified," and reminded them that of God's servant. In one hundred sixty-six 81.

October, 1988 OUTLOOK 11 everlasting respect and affection in the making us feel as if we were an important Union hearts of all who knew him. part of an important institution." Jack Kennedy, education writer for the "To say no to Dr. Manley was very Lincoln Journal remembers Dr. Myrl nearly like saying no to God himself," says Remembers Manley as "deeply committed to everything Jim McClelland, college art professor. "He that Union College stood for, yet realistic. reminded us that we should attempt great He had the rare managerial insight to set things for God and that we should expect Myrl Manley the wheels in motion that would carry great things from God." Union into the future." During Manley's Dr. Manley's humility is legendary. BY LINDA DICK administration, enrollment increased by 20 When he called a faculty member on the percent, two major building projects were phone, it was, "This is Brother Manley" or completed, and KUCV, the college radio "This is Myrl." He never cared for status. "T he continent of Union College is station, went from 10 watts to 18,200 watts Says Dr. Lilya Wagner, "He was respected greatly diminished this morning," to widen its listener audience in Lincoln. because he deserved it, not because he said President John Wagner solemnly in demanded it." He never passed a scrap of that August 15 faculty meeting. Wagner paper on the lawn or a weed growing in a had just received word that former sidewalk crack without picking it up to be president Dr. Myrl Manley had died in his deposited in the nearest waste can. sleep. He was 75. Dr. Manley always had time, was always Dr. Manley accepted the call to take the patient; his door was always open. "He helm at Union twice, first as president always expressed appreciation, always took from 1973 to 1980, and then four years time to show personal interest in faculty later as interim president from October and students," Mrs. Rolls recalls. 1984 to June 1985. Both times found the Dr. Manley's wit and homespun wisdom college with critical need for strong, are famous. Dr. Dean Hubbard, former insightful leadership. With characteristic academic dean under Dr. Manley and later courage and compassion, Dr. Manley met president himself, remembers a walk across the challenge, and Union will be forever in the campus in April or May. Dr. Manley his debt. observed several couples out on the lawn Dr. Everett Dick, long-time colleague and remarked, "In the spring, the sap runs." and friend of Dr. Manley's, said of him as Dr. Manley's chapel talk warning students poet Carl Sandburg said of Abraham to vary their "holding patterns" became a Lincoln, "He led with a steel hand in a campus byword. But he laid no blame; he velvet glove." reminded Dr. Hubbard once, "It takes two Dr. Manley came to Union with years of hands to clap." experience in Christian education. He had Always dedicated and loyal, Dr. Manley been a teacher and administrator for more kept the light in his office burning early and than twenty years in India and Burma. He late as he worked long hours. Retirement Dr. Myrl Manley, the late former taught at and was later principal of Vincent from his first term at Union in 1980 had president of Union College, will long be Hill School in Northern India; served as nothing to do with inactivity. He and Beth, remembered for his evenhanded president of Spicer Memorial College near his wife of nearly 54 years, took an SOS leadership and godly life. Photo by Stan Poona, India; and was president of the (Special Overseas Service) call to Trinidad Strange. Burma Union Mission in the difficult where he served as president of the college transition years following World War II. there. Even after his death, Beth Manley Back in the states, Dr. Manley was "Dr. Manley combined the capacity for found on his desk a portfolio of ideas and invited in 1966 to Andrews University to very astute analysis of complex situations projects he was working on for Union develop a new missions orientation with the winning warmth of the human College's fund raising efforts. program. He was later appointed the touch," remembers Dr. Ward Hill, Union's "Dr. Manley practiced what he university's vice president for student Vice President for Academic preached," begins Mrs. Rolls. Then she affairs. Administration. "He favored the most corrects herself, "No, Dr. Manley never Dr. Manley's administrative experience advanced technology and state-of-the-art preached. He showed us how to live." was complemented by his education. He modernization. And yet he wrote notes to The College View Church services on graduated from Emmanuel Missionary himself on the palm of his hand." August 27 were dedicated to Dr. Myrl College (now Andrews University) in Dr. Lilya Wagner, Vice President for Manley. "One of God's gifts to us is a Michigan in 1935. During mission Institutional Advancement under Manley's knowledge of who he is as a person," said furloughs in the States, he continued his administration dedicated her book, Caring Elder Bob Bretsch, opening the service, studies, working first toward his master's is Not a Spectator Sport to Dr. Manley, a "and that knowledge comes to us wrapped degree in educational history at Pacific "remarkable and distinguished up in the essence of the value of human Union College in California (received in administrator who has consistently life. We are here to celebrate human life, 1949), and then his Ph.D. in educational displayed in action the true principles of the life of Myrl Manley and the way he administration, completed at Stanford Christian caring." Dr. Manley "valued allowed God to work through him. We University in 1965. people," she remembers, and "understood have come to celebrate God through But while education and experience were the feelings of faculty and staff and human form, you and me, Dr. Manley, and certainly vital aspects of Dr. Manley's students." every other person who chooses to walk leadership ability, it was his godly life and "He never treated us like boss/ with God." his Christian character that won him employee," says Ruth Rolls, Professor Perhaps Dr. Ward Hill summed it up Emeritus. "We were colleagues. We were best when he said, "Only eternity will see Linda Dick is the college relations equals. He knew how to instill cooperation the full impact of the dedicated and godly director for Union College. and confidence. He had the knack of life of Myrl Manley."

12 OUTLOOK October, 1988

Pacific Press Book Chapter of the Month Red And Black Legalists

BY MORRIS L. VENDEN

Law It is impossible to gain salvation by keeping the law. "He who is trying to reach heaven by his own works in keeping the law is attempting an impossibility." Ibid, Thesis 61 172. "Therefore by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight." Anyone who tries to live the Romans 3:20 Why emphasize the law, then, if keeping Christian life apart from Christ the law cannot save us? Why talk about it is not a Christian. He is a or study it at all? If our efforts to keep the legalist, whether conservative law can actually prevent us from coming to or liberal. Christ for salvation, wouldn't it be better not to hear about the law at all? The law has several important and ome legalists are black legalists, and legitimate functions. The law cannot change Ssome are red legalists! A legalist is one us, but it can show us our need of change. who thinks to earn salvation by keeping Paul describes the law as a schoolmaster to the law, or in any other way, apart from bring us to Christ. See Galatians 3:24, 25. Christ. James calls the law a "looking glass." A black legalist then, is one with a black James 1:23-25. A mirror can show us our suit and black tie, black shoes and black need of cleansing, but it cannot cleanse us. socks! He is the one with the long face. He So it is with the law of God. It shows us is the conservative legalist, who finds his our sinful condition in order to motivate us security in the church standards that he he himself is simply a legalist of a different to go to Christ for cleansing and restoration. upholds. But he is a legalist, for he has no color. For it makes no difference whether The law can diagnose, but it cannot treat or time for personal fellowship and you are liberal or conservative; if you have cure the disease of sin. acquaintance with the Lord Jesus, although no time to spend in personal relationship The law condemns. And when we he may spend a lot of time studying and communion with Christ, you are not a recognize our condemnation, we realize our doctrine and standards and ethics. Christian. need for pardon. The law reveals the curse A red legalist is one who wears jewelry that we are under as lawbreakers, and and goes to the movies and perhaps has a thereby prepares us to accept the good news glass of wine now and then. (The analogy "A legal religion can that Christ has redeemed us from the curse comes from the description in Revelation of the law. See Galatians 3:13. 17 of the woman on the scarlet beast. She never lead souls to And the law is a protector. The law "was arrayed in purple and scarlet color, protects the innocent. It also protects the and decked with gold and precious stones Christ." The Desire of guilty! When we come before the and pearls." Verse 4. This is only an Ages, page 28. judgement bar of God, we can know clearly analogy to make a point; it is not new whether we are at fault. We don't have to prophetic truth on the mysteries of the book worry that God will play favorites or judge of Revelation!) The red legalist, then, is the Sometimes parents ask, "But isn't it according to His temporary whim of fancy. liberal legalist who finds security in the better to be a legalist than to be an open He has stated clearly His requirements, and church standards that he has abandoned. sinner? If we can teach our children to obey thus both innocent and guilty can know The red legalist considers the black legalist the law of God externally, won't that finally where they stand. Those who have accepted to be a legalist, but often fails to realize that lead to the religion of the heart?" the righteousness of Christ in place of their It didn't for the Pharisees! They were the own unrighteousness can stand acquitted, During the remaining months of 1988, hardest of all for Christ to reach when He protected by the law that does not condemn Outlook will feature a chapter from Morris was here on this earth. The converts that them. The guilty will see clearly their own Venden's new book 95 Theses On they brought into the church were not only rejection of God's grace and will know that Righteousness By Faith to help our readers as legalistic as their teachers, but Jesus said they have been fairly tried. as the church celebrates the centennial of in Matthew 23:15 that they were twofold When you look into God's law, do you the 1888 General Conference Session held more the children of hell than the Pharisees find that it condemns you? Then praise the in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Reprinted by themselves. The Desire of Ages, page 28, Lord! The time of probation still lingers. It permission of Pacific Press Publishing states clearly, "A legal religion can never is not too late to allow the law to do its Association. lead souls to Christ." work in bringing you to Christ.

October, 1988 OUTLOOK 13 Outlook On Iowa-Missouri

Iowa Governor Branstad presented her with an Mason City Baptisms Award. Awards While Ethel is going about her duties she finds a way to witness Volunteer for her faith. She often has a Bible study going, and brings contacts BY RUTH JOCHIMS to church. Ethel has been a real blessing to the Spencer area.

Ruth Jochims, communication secretary, Spencer church. One On Every Door A few months ago the Joplin, Pastor John Wolfe with five of his recently baptized mem- Missouri church started its own bers: Smith Shoars, Timothy Despenas, Erik Arispe, Lori Austin Bible School. It began with four and June Horstman. students who wanted to study the Bible through the mail. Governor Branstad and Then the doctor told the Joplin Ethel Moore. New Members pastor, Elder Ray Kelch, that for Ethel Moore is a senior citizen, his health, he ought to walk each At Joplin, but she has not delegated herself day. Pastor Kelch replied, "Walk- to a rocking chair. In fact, Ethel ing just to be walking had very Carthage hardly knows what it is like to little appeal. I did it for a few days just sit. This spunky lady has and then quit." Then came the Recently five people joined raised ten children and even plan. Why not make the walking the Joplin church and one joined though she could take life easier, pay by using that time to invite the second church in the district, she prefers to remain active. people to sign up for the Bible Carthage. "I hope I die standing on my School? A door hanger was de- Priscilla Chaffin, age 11, the feet," Ethel has stated with a signed, a post office box was daughter of the Joplin church's twinkle in her eyes. rented. Five thousand hangers head deacon, was baptized by Lusia Bent, age 10, daughter of Ethel's love is volunteer work. were ordered and then the work Elder Ray Kelch. Elder Kelch Maria Stephens, a member of the It was in Portland, Oregon where began. had instructed her in a special Carthage church, completed the she first started doing volunteer During the lunch hour, Mon- class at the church school for six baptismal class and was baptized, work in a nursing home. Once a day through Friday, you will find months prior to her baptism. joining the Carthage church. week she would put on a pro- Elder Kelch walking somewhere gram for the patients. When in the city of Joplin, placing the Ethel moved to Spencer, Iowa in opportunity to sign up for a Bible 1974 she started having programs course through the mail on 100 in the nursing homes there. Now doors. the church members help Ethel Does it work? Yes, indeed. So by taking turns having a nursing far 5,000 cards have been placed. home program. Forty-three people are studying While in Spencer, Ethel's vol- either the Basic Bible course or unteer work began to branch out. the Revelation course. One has She joined the hospital auxiliary. been baptized. Two others are She babysits and cares for needy convinced of the Sabbath, and people in her home. She began 5,000 more cards have been "I'wo ladies from Galena, Kan- Pastor Kelch met Dave and working as a volunteer for the ordered. Elder Kelch says, "With sas joined the Joplin church by Margie Smith when he con- Department of Social Services. the help of several of the church profession of faith. Carol Bullard ducted the funeral service for Mr. She does secretarial work, drives members, we want to place one and her mother, Dorothy Raney, Smith's brother-in-law, Mr. people long distances to hospi- of the sign-up cards on every first became interested in the Sharpe, and six months later for tals, delivers commodities to per- door in Joplin. And after that, Adventist church as a result of Mrs. Sharpe, Dave's sister. Then sons unable to pick up their own. Webb City, Carl Junction, Car- watching Three Angels Broad- in January, he visited Dave in the She takes children to school, and terville, who knows when it will casting Network. They were hospital and he and his wife, sews for people. She is now stop?" convinced that what they had Margie, agreed to study the Bible volunteer coordinator in Clay seen was the truth and began to with the pastor. Since Dave had County. attend church services in Joplin. some Adventist background, he In June Ethel received recog- Pastor Kelch guided them through and his wife were very quick nition for her efforts as a volun- a study of the Bible doctrines and learners and within a couple of teer coordinator of transporta- CHANGES LIVES expressed great joy when they weeks began to attend Sabbath tion for medical needs. Governor asked to join the church. services.

14 OUTLOOK October, 1988

Outlook On Iowa-Missouri Tornado At Council Bluffs Elders And Deacons Convention

,,, 1 October 14-16, 1988—Camp Heritage, Climax s Springs, Missouri Guest Instructor: Elder Bill May, Ft. Worth, Texas. Elder May has a wealth of experience as ii pastor, evangelist, author and administrator. Bill May October 21-23, 1988—Oak Park Convention Center, Nevada, Iowa Guest Instructor: Elder John Rhodes, Riv- erside, California. Elder Rhodes has served very This home lost more than its roof. The family living here was on capably as pastor and local/union conference vacation. ministerial director. John Rhodes All afternoon the clouds Harold Burton, lives on 26th and Elders And Deacons chased each other across the sky. I Streets in a second story apart- Make your plans now to be at one of these vitally important Elders The sun was peeking in and out ment. He did not have time to and Deacons conventions. casting long shadows across the seek below ground shelter so he *Fellowship *Inspiration *Instruction *Good Food land. It looked imminent as Joy stood at the door and watched and Melanie came out of the the storm. To the east a double *Role Training *Sharing store. The wind whipped like the story house and a single story hot breath of a dragon. In the home were blown up from the west lightning was throwing inside out. He saw the roofs swords of light into the ground. pulled up into the funnel cloud Sabbath School Celebration Rain clouds turned into billow- and watched them float into the WHAT? A complete Sabbath to talk, plan and pray about Sabbath School. ing, foaming, black whipped next yard. Someone said, "You WHERE? Oak Park Center, Nevada, Iowa. cream. Trained fingers turned on are lucky." Harold laughed and WHEN? 7:00 p.m. Friday, October 28, and all day Sabbath, October 29. the radio. "A tornado was just said, "I live right." Angels were SPEAKER? Elder Maurice Bascom, General Conference. spotted in North Omaha. If you watching over him and 60,000 WORKSHOPS? For each department—cradle roll through adult. are in a car, stop, get out and lie in other Council Bluffs inhabitants. WHO? This is the best part. You are invited. If you have ever worked in a a low ditch . . . I repeat . . . " Pastor Dan McGee helped Sabbath School department, if you are working in a Sabbath School department now, or if you plan to work in a Sabbath School department in the future— Joy ran a couple stop lights direct the members in the clean- COME! If you do not, have not and will not work in a Sabbath School and drove home quickly. She up process. They worked several department, COME ANYWAY! found her husband quietly cook- hundred hours in food distribu- ing supper with the radio not on. tion and clean up. Gertrude Sears "Go downstairs, now!" In less helped on the van as did Melanie Mason City VBS than one minute the storm McGee and Niki Hargens. crashed into the house like a Maynard and Orlee Petersen breaker crashing on a rocky from Sioux City brought their shore. Five minutes later it was Community Services van. Near- over. Twenty homes were de- ly 100 friendship packs, consist- stroyed, 8,000 trees destroyed, ing of soaps, washcloths, tooth- no lives lost. brush and paste, were given One of the church members, away.

June 27 to July 1 was a very Glenda Wojcik and Terry Castle. special week in Mason City as 31 Woodworking techniques were young people and nine adults, led shared by Bob White as part of by Bonnie Wolfe, shared the the craft classes. blessings of Vacation Bible The week was complete with a School. Teens helped with regis- special family program on Friday The remains of the house in the near left were literally blown tration, crafts and babysitting. evening, where each division away. A teenage babysitter and four small children took refuge in Sand candlemaking and sew- shared songs and received prizes a closet. The babysitter actually held on to one child by the feet to ing were just two of the many for perfect attendance. Many keep him from flying away. The closet was eventually blown crafts that enhanced the week's students requested a two-week away, but none of the five were seriously 'hurt. activities in classes taught by Vacation Bible School next year. October, 1988 OUTLOOK 15 Outlook On Kansas-Nebraska

Focus On ident and Jim Brauer, church Tyler Baptized hension the next day, Maurice ministries director for the Kans- immediately signed a confession Women as-Nebraska Conference, in addi- BY PHILIP MARINO and was put in jail to await sen- tion to a number of local minis- tencing. Finding himself in this "The Woman Within," an ters who pastor near Camp predicament, he turned back to eight-week course emphasizing Arrowhead. the Bible and to God. He de- and building up the self-esteem of Music was provided by the clared, "I knew He (the Lord) women, has been presented at Gospel Road Quartet, Living was the only one who could help the Alliance Church for the Water Singers and Masters Four me." He prayed often through community. Quartet. tears that he would not be sent to Conducted by Gloria Atteber- During Sabbath the overflow prison, although he knew it was ry, some 31 women attended, 26 attendance forced church service what he deserved. of whom are non-Seventh-day outdoors where Duerksen spoke He told the public defender his surrounded by the beauties of story and he was then introduced Adventists. Maurice Tyler "Our purpose is to help wo- God's nature at the camp. to a wonderful Christian lady men believe in themselves. When "We were elated with the Maurice Tyler, who was bap- who sought an alternative dispo- this happens their self-esteem will attendance during the weekend tized last May, came to know sition for him. Instead of going to increase," Gloria says. "When celebration," Wolzen says. "This Christ while living at a Christian prison, the special disposition women like themselves, that in proves there is a sincere interest halfway house in 1975. At the would permit him to be confined turn will help them relate better in Camp Arrowhead." urging of a Christian Public de- to a halfway house. If this was to their husbands." fender, he had been confined to approved by the judge, he would John Treolo, communication the halfway house after commit- be the first black in California to director, Kansas-Nebraska Con- ting armed robbery following his enter such a program, thus open- Spiritual ference. mother's suicide. ing the door for others. Celebration Maurice Tyler was always the After a year of waiting and Arkansas City black sheep of his family. At the believing that he would not go to At Camp age of nine, he began using drugs prison, the judge agreed and he Honors 45th after finding pot in his mother's was given a five-year suspended Arrowhead drawer and watching her smoke sentence and ordered to live nine Year it. He was used to seeing his months at the Melody Land BY JOHN TREOLO mother, a nurse, use medicine Christian House. BY JEAN DICKERSON and was shocked to discover his As a result of his sentence, sev- The Arkansas City, Kansas mother using pot. At that time he eral hardened criminals wanted church observed the 45th anni- says, " . . My mom and I were to know more about God and versary of its organization with as far apart as two people could they began asking for Bibles and Pastor David Troyer conducting be.,, other materials. the services. At the age of sixteen, Maurice Unfortunately, after leaving On May 23, 1943, a small was sent to live with his father, the program, he went back to group of believers became or- but he used drugs even more than using drugs and drinking. In the ganized as a church. Today, the his mother. It was only after fall of 1987, he received a copy of congregation is meeting in a Maurice and his mom both magazine and the church they built in February, accepted Christ that they devel- book Youth Aflame and he was Richard Duerksen inspires 1970. oped the closest ties in their convicted that he had not given those in attendance during the Charter members of the Ar- family. his life completely to the Lord Spiritual Celebration Weekend kansas City church, Reba Living- When his mother found out and that for the sake of his family, at Camp Arrowhead. ston and Charles Barr, below, her husband wanted a divorce, it he needed to come back to Him. An inspired crowd estimated still attend this church and helped was more than she could bear. He quit smoking and using at 350 convened during Sabbath celebrate the church's 45th an- After saying, "If we can't live drugs, and began studying the cervices at Camp Arrowhead niversary. together as a family, I have Bible and the book called Youth during a recent Spiritual Celebra- nothing more to live for." She Aflame. He still drank occasion- tion weekend. took an overdose of sleeping pills ally at this time, but he also began Coordinated by the Camp and died the next morning. attending Sabbath School and Arrowhead Committee chaired Maurice, hurt, confused, and Church at Capitol View Church by Tracy Wolzen, the spiritual angry at God, went back to using in Lincoln as well as the Tuesday emphasis is part of a concerted drugs, drinking, and associating night Bible study. A three-month effort by a group of laymen in with the old crowd. Maurice was study with Pastor Vargas led to Nebraska to keep Camp Arrow- given a gun and forced to rob the his baptism. head alive and vibrant with bank after boasting, while he was activities. drunk, that he could rob a bank if Philip Marino, communication Speakers and special guests he had a gun. While on the way secretary, Capitol View church. during the three-day retreat in- to his last robbery, he heard a cluded Richard Duerksen, vice voice say, "Three strikes and president for enrollment services you're out." Unable to detect the at Pacific Union College; Ward Jean Dickersen, communica- source of the voice, he went on rZi [IWg Hill, academic dean at Union tion secretary, Arkansas City with the crime and returned to CHANGES LIVE S College; Gordon L. Retzer, pres- church. his apartment. After his appre- 16 OUTLOOK October, 1988 ii Ld'Jw44. "1 4 At Union Coll good things

Good things like lasting friendship.

Good things like eternal life d a compas- sionate Saviour. ;e we're celebrating the I around us.

Good things ike goals attain- ed and dreams come true.

Good things that make life complete! Come, Join the Celebration!

When you visit, we provide you and your parents complimentary meal tickets and housing accommodations for two nights. While you're here, visit with our teachers, administrators, and students. Make appointments to discuss financial possibilities and job opportunities. Take a campus tour, and let us show you the good things all around us. Celebrate with us!

To schedule your campus visit, Call Enrollment Services TOLL FREE 1-800-228-4600 In Nebraska, call collect: 402-488-2331, ext. 2504.

UNION COLLEGE Outlook On Kansas-Nebraska Members Added At Kingman

BY BONNIE KREHBIEL

LEs Conduct Summer Rally Chuck Eidemiller was baptized into the Kingman Company Literature evangelists serving Kansas-Nebraska Conference recently. He studied with Mikel Moore. His wife, Nancy, a church convened at Broken Arrow Ranch for a four-day retreat of inspi- member, encouraged him. Pastor David Troyer baptized him. ration and fellowship during the annual summer rally. Esther Fulton, raised by Adventist grandparents, was baptized Special speaker during the retreat was Mikel Moore, who will as a young girl. When she learned Kingman had a Company she be attending the seminary at Andrews University this fall. Moore attended and was accepted into fellowship on profession of faith. emphasized the Saviour's love and how He guides each literature evangelist as they share their love for Jesus with non-Adventists Bonnie Krehbiel, communication secretary, Kingman Company. whom they contact. Lynn Westbrook, publishing director, indicates the purpose of Columbus, Fremont Highlights the summer rally is to provide a time when literature evangelists and their families can draw closer to each other and learn addi- BY CANDY MCMANUS tional skills to carry on their work. Conference Members Return to Lander BY GLORIA GREIG PIERCE

Recently added to the Columbus church membership by baptism were Michelle Woehren and Anthony Weiland. In Fremont, four from the same family were baptized, including Thomas, Timothy, Heather and Angela Jacobson. On the same date 31 years ago their mother, Juanita, was baptized in the same Fremont church. Vacation Bible School was held at the Columbus church with 35 in attendance. There were Bible stories, songs, skits and crafts. Pony rides were a special highlight for the children. The group who met in Lander, Wyoming for reunion. Norman Candy McManus, communication secretary, Columbus church. K. Harvey is pictured in the rear; Gloria Pierce is third from left in front row. S. O. S. A group of 52 met for a reunion dating back to the organization of the Adventist Church at 2nd and Eugene in Lander, Wyoming. Please Remember Your Academies October 29! Norman K. Harvey, treasurer of the Conference, presented the This is the date for the annual appeal to help keep our academies Sabbath sermon. Harvey and Ed Shafer of Louisville, Kentucky, were strong and vibrant. able to visit with families brought into the truth during their evangelis- tic meetings in Lander. Needed for Enterprise Academy $90,000 Gloria Greig Pierce served as Sabbath School superintendent. The program was built upon memories of the past and the influence the Needed For Platte Valley Academy $55,000 church had on the group as they grew. The church was built of logs brought down from the mountains in Thank you for remembering Adventist Education. 1940. There was an abundance of talent present and the music under the direction of Darrell Leach was a delight to everyone. October, 1988 OUTLOOK 21 Outlook On Minnesota

Capitol City skills they learned during these two weeks in a special VBS gra- Women's Retreat Coming Reaches Out duation program which they presented for their parents. June Strong, popular and dude practical advice on self- With Day The Day Camp was just one respected Adventist author, will esteem, prayer, Christian growth part of the St. Paul Project which be the speaker for a women's and joyful servanthood. In Camp is a strategy to "plant" a church retreat which will be held addition to June Strong's pres- in the Capitol City Adventist November 18-20 at Breezy entations, there will be a choice BY BARBARA HUFF School. There will be a more Point Resort which is located of brief seminars on topics For nine weeks this past sum- comprehensive report of the full near Brainerd in central Minne- which will appeal to women of mer, a team of six Union College program next month. sota. The purpose of the retreat various age groups. students, under the direction of is to provide a time of nurturing Although there is a contact Mark Barnett and Elder Paul and to unite women spiritually person in each church who has Larsen, demonstrated to the and emotionally. The cost of the applications and information, neighborhood around the Capitol weekend is one package price more information can be ob- City Adventist School that the and is dependent on the type of tained by calling Darlene or Adventist Church cared about accommodations requested. Nancy at the Conference Of- the community's children. A Day Mrs. Strong's topics will in- fice, (612) 424-8923. Camp was conducted in the school each weekday from 9:00 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and there were Student and insights beyond her age of about 40 kids who attended each twelve years. day. The energetic program of Counselor Byard Parks Witnesses "Our school enrollment is very singing, stories, crafts and games plans a game with two boys. small compared to the other ele- cost each child only $5.00 per Through Essay mentary and parochial schools in week. Besides circularizing the the area," observes Mindy's community with a brochure BY MARILYNE SAYLER teacher, Duane Madden, "yet our about the Day Camp and other students have done an outstand- seminars which were conducted ing job—much better than could in the evenings at the school, two be statistically hoped for. This of the students went door to door trend increases our confidence in and invited the children to attend our Adventist values and educa- the Day Camp. Mark Barnett, a tional system. And it gives us recent Union College graduate another opportunity to praise our and director of the program, per- Master Teacher for giving us the sonally picked up about 15 chil- foundation for true education, a dren every day. theme which Mindy's essay clear- The counselors loved their During one of the nine weeks, ly reflected—love." students! Besides the fun and a Vacation Bible School was held joy which was evident each for the Day Campers. Preceding Marilyne Sayler, communica- day, visitors noted the high Mindy Simpson the VBS there were two weeks tion secretary, Thief River Falls level of spirituality which was when special classes were taught For the third year in a row the church. manifest at the Day Camp. in place of the crafts. These in- SDA Elementary School in Thief cluded classes in computer, rem- River Falls has received city- Marriage edial reading, choir, piano, na- wide recognition because of the ture, drama and conversational excellence of one of its students. Encounter Spanish. The students used the Mindy Simpson, the sixth-grade daughter of Charles and Jolayne Instrumental Simpson of Plummer, was award- ed second place in an essay con- In Baptism test conducted by the Northland Retired Educators Association. "I've waited 18 years for this," Open to all sixth graders in the said Jan Loberg on the day of her Thief River Falls School District, husband, Larry's, baptism in Rice the contest theme was "Older Lake at Northstar Camp. Attend- Americans." According to The ing a Marriage Encounter week- Thief River Falls Times, "Judg- end a few years ago was a pivotal ing was based on a feeling of point for Larry's decision to strong relationship between the attend church with his wife. The writer and his or her subject; orig- Lobergs have been Brainerd inality, organization and cohe- Pathfinder leaders and "their The Day Camp staff: Byard Parks, Derrick Skinner, Mark sion; sixth-grade level work; kids" formed an honor guard to Barnett, Heather Sullivan, Sheri Creelman and Tim Kaldahl. Dave grammar and spelling." Mindy's the lake and sang, "I Have De- Melton is not pictured. winning entry entitled, "My cided to Follow Jesus" as Larry Grandmother," reflected all of walked to the water and was bap- Barbara Huff correspondent, Minnesota Conference. those elements plus sensitivity tized by Elder Bill Cook. 22 OUTLOOK October, 1988 Outlook On Minnesota

Granddaughter Adventist home in Herman, Correspondence Course Leads Minnesota. Her grandparents Of SDA came to Minnesota from Sweden To Baptism in 1820 and were among the first Pioneers Seventh-day Adventists in Min- BY BETTY KNUDSON nesota. Returns To After her marriage, Mrs. Raasch drifted from the Advent- Church ist Church and was an active member of the Lutheran church Membership for over fifty years. A few months ago, she became convicted of returning to the Adventist Church and requested the local pastor, Don Thompson, to visit her. A series of Bible studies was con- ducted and a baptism date set. Because of an illness which re- Elder Robert McPherson and Camille McNeilus with Zola sulted in hospitalization, Mrs. Bakken, center. Raasch was unable to be bap- tized so became a member by The Dodge Center church Bible study guides offered by the profession of faith. praised the Lord when Zola Association. She then began stu- Bakken was baptized recently. dies with Elder Robert McPher- Zola was introduced to Bible son and studied the Bible with Religious Liberty Rally study through a mass mailing by him for 8 months. She asked for Mrs. Grace Raacch of Fergus Maplewood Academy the American Bible Association baptism into the Dodge Center Falls was recently accepted by October 29, 1988 in the Kenyon area. This corres- church family. profession of faith into the Fergus pondence course is headed by Falls church. Mrs. Raasch, who (Details on Page 31) laymen Linden and Camille Betty Knudson, communica- is 81 years old, grew up in an McNeilus. Zola studied the many tion secretary, Dodge Center. Outlook On Dakota

New Pastors Elder Don Shelton and the pas- Watford City-Williston district. the Georgia-Cumberland Con- tor, John Martin in front of the Elder Don Shelton is Dakota ference to pastor a church on a Join Dakota same baptismal pool where they Conference president. stipend basis. Later, other church- had committed their lives to Daryl and Diane Crane have es were added to his responsibili- Staff Christ 14 months earlier. also recently joined the Dakota ties. When called by the Dakota Charles, who already held a Conference pastoral staff from Conference, Daryl was pastoring B.S. degree in Electronic Engi- the Georgia-Cumberland Con- in New England, Georgia. He has neering, has completed the Mas- ference. While working for Mc- taken classwork at Atlantic Un- ter of Divinity degree from Kee Baking Company in Col- ion College, Columbia Union Andrews University Theological legedale, Tennessee, Daryl be- College, Southern College and Seminary. His wife is currently came interested in lay witnessing. Home Study International. pursuing a degree in psychology For three years he was busily The Cranes have three chil- and social work at the University involved in holding weekend re- dren: Patrick, 9; Misty, 7; Tif- of North Dakota (Williston). vival meetings. fany, 3. The Cranes will be lo- Charles will pastor the Ray- In 1984, Daryl was invited by cated in the Hurley-Mitchell- Yankton district in South Dakota.

Charles and Joann O'Hare HARVEST Charles and Joann O'Hare were baptized in July 1980. They were total strangers to each other when they began attending Elder Don Shelton's Revelation Lec- tures in Pueblo, Colorado. When the meetings closed they had both been baptized and a friend- ship had formed. That friendship grew and on October 11 they were married by The Crane family: Patrick, Tiffany, Diane, Daryl and Misty. 90 October, 1988 OUTLOOK 23 Outlook On Dakota

Baptisms religious conviction even before Dickinson they started attending church. BY BERNEICE LUNDAY They feel church is important for Bismarck their marriage, and they plan to continue to have a Bible study group with friends in their home. Janaye Opp, daughter of Fon- da and Darold Opp, was baptized at the same time as the Zeebs. She studied church doctrines at a bap- tismal class conducted by Elder Kurtz at Brentwood School. "I like the church because it's like one big family," the fifth- grader smiled, adding that Elder Kurtz was the greatest spiritual Dallas and Becky Zeeb with Neil Johnson, center, is welcomed into the fellowship of the influence to her and that her Pastor Kurtz. Dickinson, North Dakota church by Jim Hornung, left, and Pas- teacher, Kelly Stolz, was "really tor Richard Todden. Johnson was baptized by Todden as a result "I strayed from church for nice and encouraging" and that of studies with Dan Gabbert, a local literature evangelist, and a quite a few years, and I just she wants to be like her teacher. Revelation Seminar conducted by Hornung. needed to come back," Dallas Janaye said she likes everything Zeeb said in regard to his recent about the church. Edgeley re-baptism at Bismarck. Zeeb, co-owner of Metro-Area Ambulance, Inc., said his life wasn't going the right direction and when he met Becky (now his wife), they influenced each other positively in the spiritual realm and started to attend church. "The pastor helped us a lot and went through Bible studies with us throughout the winter," Zeeb said of Elder Marlyn Kurtz who performed the couple's baptism. "Why I left the church? No Janaye Opp real reason as far as the church is concerned," Zeeb said. "I got Janaye has already become an into the wrong environment and active part of the church family. Eight young people were baptized at the Edgeley Seventh-day went with the crowd, but I knew She volunteers her services in the Adventist Church. Pictured are, back row from left: Brett Toay, something was missing. It was kindergarten department, telling John Teske, Ryan Reinke, David Carlson and Pastor Wellman. always in the back of my mind, nature stories and supervising Front row from left: Brandon Toay, Jana Toay, Kendall Merkle and finally I went for help." children before Sabbath School and Dusty Carlson. Zeeb said he feels much better starts. She and her sister, Julie, about himself now and feels at also sing duets in German and peace. Becky, an employee at English at church functions. First Southwest Bank in Mandan The Spirit of VBS and formerly a Methodist, said Berneice Lunday, communica- she felt Dallas had a deep-down tion secretary, Bismarck church. Northern Lights Camp

Left to right: Melissa Brotten, Bobbi Brotten, Heidi Brotten, Marianne Hieb and Rose Theison, foreground, in the Vacation Four young people were recently baptized in Lake Metigoshe at Bible School spirit at Bismarck. The Vacation Bible School held at Northern Lights Camp. Elder Leonard Devnich, left, with Tami Bismarck was one of many that were conducted throughout the Bixley, Kari Nerpel, Jennifer Nerpel, and Preston Nerpel. conference. 24 OUTLOOK October, 1988 Outlook On Hospitals

Shawnee In the office of Pastoral Care attention, thus many new pro- visitors now find the Hospitality grams are being launched: Mission Listens Corner, especially helpful for vis- 1. Volunteer Chaplain's Pro- iting clergy. An urn of hot water gram. Former cancer patient Sue To Spiritual and packets or herbal teas and Lute wanted to share her faith MEMORIAL HOSPITAL hot chocolate make a good drink with others on the oncology unit BOULDER Needs available and telephone and note so Chaplain Mayer is beginning a pad allow for quick business training session for volunteer needs. A listing of all the patients chaplains. by religion is available, and cler- 2. An Annual Symposium by Memorial Joins gy members visiting the hospital best-selling author and Christian are also given special preference psychiatrist M. Scott Peck for RehabAmerica in parking. "We get more thank- local clergy, social workers and Memorial Hospital, Boulder yous from the upgraded parking health care professionals. The has recently joined RehabAmer- than anything else," says Cathell. symposium was designed to en- ica, a subsidary corporation of Patients at SMMC will soon courage dialogue on the "whole- the Adventist Health System/ be receiving the Pastoral Care ness" approach to health care. United States. Packet which will include a book- "When you minister to hospital Landon Kite, newly elected let called Healing Words offering staff," notes Chaplain Mayer, president of RehabAmerica, said, daily devotionals, Scripture read- "the patient will then be minis- "By combining the resources and ings, prayers, poetry and mes- tered to." expertise of member facilities, Chaplain Dick Cathell sages from SMMC president, 3. The chaplain's office con- RehabAmerica will strengthen Jim Boyle and from Chaplain ducts crisis counseling for em- the thrust of its mission and Q. Where can you get hot tea Cathell. ployees going through the grief of insure continuity of care for acute and roses, a huggable stuffed Traditionally, patients receive losing a loved one or through rehabilitation, sub-acute rehabili- bear, a kind word, a copy of daily visits from one of the staff divorce. Stuffed bears are given tation, long-term care, transit- Signs of the Times, and find chaplains. But the Pastoral Care to people to hug during times of ional living facilities, and home yourself on a prayer list? office is expanding the way it deep emotional pain. "Children health care." A. The Chaplain's office at speaks to people about Christ. and adults seem to find the teddy Jim Culpepper, President of Shawnee Mission Medical Cen- Mary Brady is the chaplain for bears a comfort," says Cathell. Memorial Hospital, Boulder said, ter. creative ministry. She supports 4. Each department receives "Memorial has earned a reputa- In the past year the office of the four regular chaplains by special remembrance in prayer tion regionally for its quality Pastoral Care (the Chaplain's providing the legwork and crea- on a rotating schedule. Each area rehabilitation care. We feel that office) has seen an almost com- tive skill in bringing support is remembered about every four RehabAmerica will unify and plete turnover in staff. Many new materials to each chaplain's min- months. strengthen our services." projects are on board these days. istry. She is graphically redesign- Shawnee Mission Medical Memorial has served Boulder Dick Cathell, head Chaplain, ing the way Pastoral Care com- Center employs some 1,900 local County in rehabilitation since came to Shawnee Mission Medi- municates. "We want to develop residents. "Our hospital is not 1895 with 52 programs making cal Center last August. His philo- a Pastoral Care symbol—one only known for premier medical it Colorado's most complete sophy of listening for needs has that goes with the hospital logo of care, but as the Christian hospital rehabilitation center. energized the department and the the helping hands, tying in its in Kansas City. A lot of em- hospital. theme and image," says Chaplain ployees come here because we Christian The straight rows of pews in Cathell. are a Christian hospital," says the chapel have been replaced The white dove, the olive Cathell. Literature In with comfortable, individual branch, and helping hands are Programs being planned for seats arranged in a semi-circle. symbols of the hospital's Chris- next year are: an evening bene- Demand The small pulpit has been moved tian ministry. One more should diction over the PA system; a aside and a single chair occupies be added because of the staff's dial-a-prayer service; a prayer As part of the spiritual minis- the speaker's position up front. driving philosophy: the listening box in the intensive care and sur- try emphasis of Memorial Hos- Now in the daily eight o'clock ear. gical areas; expansion to include pital, Boulder, health related worship service the speaker sits, Chaplain Eldon Smith grows the Child Care Center with cha- pamphlets and Adventist maga- communicating at eye-level with an acre of roses in forty different plains telling Bible stories several zines are placed in patients' the staff members who come to sizes and colors. He leaves a rose times each week. rooms. Annually, 8,000 pieces hear the Word. A new banner with each patient he visits. The Pastoral Care office at of literature are distributed and has been hung behind the speak- Chaplain Doug Casebolt spe- SMMC will continue to listen for often supplies run short before er on a wall that had previously cializes in addictions recovery the spiritual needs of patients, new monthly periodicals come been blank, polished walnut. The and grief recovery, and Juanita employees and of local residents, in. These printed materials re- banner pictures a white dove car- Mayer works in the oncology to share Christ with joy and flect the basic belief that an indi- rying an olive branch in its (cancer) unit and in Special enthusiasm. vidual's physical, emotional and mouth. It reads, "Take Courage Additions Maternity Center. spiritual health contribute to his and Hope in the Lord." Mary Brady is developing mate- overall well-being. Through its "The dove symbolizes the rials for these ministries. literature ministry, Memorial `Spirit of Caring' here at Shaw- When Cathell carnet° Shaw- ki Adventist Hospital, Boulder is doing its nee Mission Medical Center from O Health System nee Mission," says Chaplain best to make available to the Eastern and Cathell. "The olive branch rep- Porter Memorial Hospital, spir- Middle America community all aspects of good resents new life." itual needs quickly came to his health. October, 1988 OUTLOOK 25 Outlook On Central States

Sharon Church Adora Marie Greene for being played several duo-piano con- News From selected as one of the Outstand- certs in Florida, Kentucky, Mis- Congratulates ing Young Women of America souri, New York and Nebraska. Shiloh for 1987. Ms. Greene joins ranks Locally, Ms. Greene is the minis- Musician of young women from across the ter of Music at Sharon Seventh- BY ROBERTA WILLIAMS nation honored for their business day Adventist Church, Metro- Philip Clark of the Shiloh BY GORDON B. SIMS, SR. and civic contributions. Her par- politan Missionary Baptist church in Leavenworth, present- ents are Mr. and Mrs. R. Greene. Church and Friends of Christ ed a piano recital including Beet- The purpose of this award Evangelical Church, all in hoven's fourth piano sonata, program is to recognize the many Omaha. Appearances with the Grieg's "Nocturne", "I Love young women like Ms. Greene Omaha Symphony String En- Thee," "Wedding Day at Trold- who give their time, talents and semble is also one of her many haugen," and Addinsell's "War- unselfish service to enrich the accomplishments. She is pres- saw Concerto." quality of American life. Ms. ently a vocal music teacher with Clark has music degrees from Greene was selected by the Board the Omaha Public School Sys- Doane College, Crete, Nebraska, of Advisors from thousands of tem. and DePauw University, Green- nominations submitted by re- Although her selection for the castle, Indiana. He also studied at spected business and civic leaders award was given for the year Indiana University and the Uni- throughout the country. 1987, Ms. Greene was notified in versity of Southern Mississippi. Ms. Greene is a 1979 graduate April of 1988 of her selection. He has composed vocal and of Oakwood College, with a On behalf of the pastor and instrumental music, sacred and Ms. Adorn Marie Greene, Bachelor of Arts degree in music. members of Sharon Seventh-day secular, in a serious contempor- selected as one of the Outstand- Some of Ms. Greene's accomp- Adventist Church, we extend ary style. ing Young Women of America lishments are: she serves as guest sincere congratulations to you, A free-will offering was ac- for 1987. piano artist for churches and Adora, and to your family on cepted for the Home and School schools throughout the country your outstanding achievements. fund to help Shiloh students The members of Sharon (Los Angeles, New York and attend Adventist schools. Seventh-day Adventist Church Kansas City). She also played for Gordon B. Sims, Sr., commun- in Omaha, Nebraska would like the National Convention of ication secretary, Omaha Sharon Roberta Williams, communi- to extend congratulations to Ms. Christians and Jews in 1986, and Church. cation secretary, Shiloh church. Outlook On Rocky Mountain

55th Wedding Tucker on the Quiet Hour, and Seminar Held In Gillette later with Elder R. H. Nightingale Anniversary on the Builders of Faith in Port- BY MARCIE MADDOX land, Oregon. He was ordained in BY R.A. McCUMBER Portland on June 2, 1945. Except for seven years as field director for the Christian Record, the last 17 years of ministry were with the Boulder Memorial Hos- pital as chaplain and director of Community Relations. Since re- tirement, Elder Bringle serves as a volunteer at Porter Memorial Hospital.

R.A. McCumber, conference communication director. Elder and Mrs. Alten A. Brin- gle celebrated their 55th wedding As a result of a Revelation Seminar held in Gillette, Wyoming, Campion Academy anniversary at their home in Pastor David Maddox had the privilege of baptizing three teen- Denver, Colorado. They were Alumni Weekend agers: Mike, Patrick and Nichole Belless. Following continued Bible studies in the home, two young couples, Tom and Sheryl married in the bride's home in October 14-15, 1988 Colman, South Dakota, August Kremer; Noland and Denise Peacock, were also baptized. The 8, 1933. If you have moved within church family warmly welcomes these new members. Alten and Grace have given 42 the last few years, please send During the seminar which was conducted by Pastor Maddox, years in denominational work, your new address to Jeanne two church ladies provided a special program for the children of first in teaching school, then mis- Chambers, 3213 Overlook those attending. Certificates were awarded to the seminar partici- sion service in Portugal and An- Lane, Loveland, CO 80537. pants and the children at a candlelight banquet. It was a pleasant gola Portuguese West Africa. For We want to keep you up- evening of food and fellowship for everyone. some years Elder Bringle was the dated as plans progress. gospel singer with Elder J. L. Marcie Maddox, pastor's wife, Gillette church. 26 OUTLOOK October, 1988 Outlook On Rocky Mountain

Craig Church building crew of both men and Seventeen Baptized ladies. Those not involved with Has New the actual work of building were active in various fund raising Building projects to meet the expenses of building. As a result of the blessing of In 1964 it was time to remodel God upon a series of meetings the building which for some held during the summer of 1926 presently unknown reason had in Craig, Colorado, twenty-four not been dedicated until 1947. persons associated themselves Pastor Ted Wick and his wife Pat together as the charter members led out in this project which was, of the Craig Seventh-day Ad- after several good pep talks, ventist Church. The meetings wholeheartedly supported by the These seventeen persons are the first baptismal group as the were conducted by Elder J. L. entire membership. A new fur- result of the Evangelistic meetings conducted by Ted Struntz in Tucker who later became well nace was installed, the rostrum Canon City, Colorado. The church members strongly supported known as the founder of the remodeled and the sanctuary was the nightly meetings and the Lord blessed with a bountiful harvest. Quiet Hour. refurbished. Additional new members have already set baptismal dates. On November 9, 1926 a In the 1980's discussion building committee was elected, turned to a failing foundation lots were purchased and plans wall, lack of a fellowship hall, laid to build a new church build- and possible solutions. In 1987 Mechalkes brate their 50th wedding anni- ing. Construction began in the Pastor Helmut Kramer began versary. They were married summer of 1927 with Elder discussions with the Latter-day Celebrate August 23, 1938 in Loveland Tucker driving the first nail. Not Saints which led to the purchase Park, Colorado. They have two to be outdone, a young school of their "old" building for BY LEI BRADLEY children, Don, who lives in teacher, Adeline Short Eberle $45,000. Brighton and Valora McDaniel drove in the second nail. J. E. As the purchase was being of Berrien Springs, Michigan. Johnson, an Adventist carpenter finalized, Pastor Lloyd and Dora They have six grandchildren and and building inspector for the Hallock arrived to serve the con- two great-grandchildren. city of Craig was the head car- gregation. The church members penter. A. A. Short organized the again joined together and remo- Lei Bradley, communication deled their "new" church build- secretary, Brighton church. ing into a suitable place of wor- ship with plenty of room for future expansion. The church on Taylor Street was sold to the Cornerstone Florence and Joe D. Mechalke. Christian Center in April, 1988. • There will always be fond mem- Florence and Joe D. Mechal- ories there, but now the congre- ke, members of the Brighton, gation is looking toward the Colorado church were recently INTRODUCES JESUS memories that they will make in honored with a reception to cele- The "old" Seventh-day their new building. With God's Adventist church building on blessing they will go forward. Taylor Street in Craig, Colo- Rocky Mountain Adventist Book Center rado. This building was com- History of Craig church writ- pleted in 1927. ten by Adeline Eberle Fall Book Sale Schedule - 1988

Glacier View October 1 Laramie October 2 12:30 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. Cheyenne October 2 4:30 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Canon City October 3 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Colorado Springs October 4 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. Yuma October 22 Sundown Holyoke October 23 10:30 a.m. - 12:00 noon Sterling October 23 2:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Pueblo November 12 Sundown Arkansas Valley November 13 11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Lamar November 13 4:30 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Campion December 3 Sundown - 8:00 p.m. Fort Collins December 4 11:00 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Boulder December 10 Sundown Longmont December 11 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 noon The new church building in Craig was purchased in 1987 and Greeley December 11 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. provides plenty of room for future expansion. October, 1988 OUTLOOK 27 Outlook On Union College

Union Loses books. He graduated in 1920 with highest honors and took a Two Emeriti position as Dean of Men at Cana- Enrollment Up By More Than Fifty! dian Junior College for one year. Faculty Besides his degree from Clin- Students have returned to Union College for another ton, Dr. Reinmuth earned a Bach- school year—fifty more students than last year, accord- BY LINDA DICK AND elor of Philosophy degree in Ger- ing to Registrar LeVeme Bissell. By September 1, a VAL WOOLFORD man and Greek and a master's total of 640 students had completed registration, com- The Union College family was degree (1932) in German and lin- pared with only 591 in September 1987. And late saddened by the deaths of two guistics from the University of registrants were still coming in. former teachers in August, 1988. Chicago; he received his Ph.D. in Germanic philology (1937) from The college based the 1988-89 budget on a predicted Northwestern University. drop in enrollment to 580 students. So far, actual Dr. Reinmuth began his 48- enrollment for the school year tops the projected head- year college teaching career the following year at the Clinton count by more than sixty students! Theological Seminary. He later taught in the language depart- ment of Broadview College in Chicago and Walla Walla Col- director, remembers Miss Hall ter, received her Doctorate of lege in Washington before com- telling students, "Now look here, Education in Administration, ing to Union College in 1937. Dr. I know you can do it." She Curriculum, and Instruction Reinmuth taught in the language expected a lot from her students, from the University of Nebras- department for more than 32 but was willing to go the second ka on August 20, 1988. Her years and served as department mile to help them. dissertation and research in- chairmen for most of those years. A world traveler herself, Miss volved special help for dyslexic Dr. Reinmuth and his wife, Hall was especially interested in students. Dr. Harry G. Reinmuth Maree, traveled extensively on the foreign students and tried her the European continent. He spent best to make them feel at home. Dr. Harry G. Reinmuth, long- New Faculty several summers aiding his broth- During her years at Union, she time chairman of the department er, an Ancient Greek scholar, in helped with the International of modern languages, died Aug- the excavations at Corinth. He Club, the Foreign Missions Band, ust 19. He had suffered a stroke was also a musician, enjoying the and the Hanging of the Golden three months before. piano, organ and violin. Cords. A few days before his stroke, She was also active in her Dr. Reinmuth told his son, Dr. church and community, spend- Caryle Reinmuth, "I do not have ing many hours making quilts for much time left and if it were pos- the Good Neighbor Center. sible to miss anything when I die, When Miss Hall and Dr. other than my family, surely it Reinmuth retired, she in 1968 would be my students and my and he in 1969, both were desig- music." nated Professors Emeriti in rec- Pearl Hall was born Novem- ognition of their long years of ber 4, 1904 in Graysville, Ten- dedicated service to the college. Ric and Cindy Spaulding nessee. At age 16 she taught her with Kevin, 3 months, and Brit- first classroom, an elementary Linda Dick, Office of Institu- tany, age 2. (Photo by Bruce school in Tennessee. She then tional Advancement; Val Wool- Forbes.) went back to college, graduating ford, student writer. from Emmanuel Missionary Col- The Union College gymnas- Miss Pearl Hall (Photo by lege (now Andrews University) tics team has two new coaches Bruce Forbes) in 1929 with a Bachelor of Arts UTLC Director this year—Ric and Cindy Spauld- Miss Pearl Hall, former assis- in Modern Languages and min- ing. Both are Andrews graduates, tant professor of modern lan- ors in education and religion. She and Ric recently completed a guages, was hit by a car on 48th earned her master's in romance master's degree in the administra- Street near the college August 29. languages from the University of tion of physical education at the She died later that day of internal Michigan in 1935. University of Missouri. injuries. Miss Hall spent several years For the past five years, Ric has Harry Reinmuth was born at Southern Junior College (now been teaching P.E. and coaching September 14, 1896 in St. Louis, Southern College), first teaching the gymnastics team at Sunny- Missouri, to parents who immi- in the Preparatory School and dale Academy. He was also regis- grated from Bavaria and Switzer- later as Dean of Women at the trar and vice principal there for land. He had one brother and college. In 1938 she came to two of those years. seven sisters. Harry worked his Union College. At Union, besides his coaching way through college at the Clin- She taught French and Span- duties, Ric serves as Assistant ton Theological Seminary by ish at Union for thirty years. Joan Stoner, Director of Un- Chaplain with Freshmen getting doing farm work and selling Chloe Foutz, college library ion's Teaching Learning Cen- his special attention.

28 OUTLOOK October, 1988 A Broader Outlook

Of Trusts And mind and financial security by on. Now the obvious answer to Faith And demonstrating to us that we need Paul's questions is no. Paul could Treasures to take appropriate action to be have just as well asked are all Works sure we do not end up in like gifted in giving Bible studies? are BY GEORGE WOODRUFF circumstances. all gifted in going door to door or Groucho Marx provided preaching? Again, the obvious America many laughs during his George Woodruff trust servi- answer is no. Some of us cannot long career. With his brothers he ces director, Mid-America Union. perform these functions simply filled the early screens with hilar- because we were not blessed with ious antics. Many feel that he was that gift. However, Paul does one of their favorite comedians. Soul Winning state at the beginning of that His name became synonymous same chapter that all of us are with laughter. BY KEN BUSHNELL blessed with some gift of the In later life, his years were any- I am sure that when some Holy Spirit. If it is not giving thing but funny. They were filled church members see the title of Bible studies, then it is surely to with hatred, bitterness and law- this article they are filled with be something else. All of us have suits among his friends and heirs. mixed emotions. One of the emo- at least one gift, if not more. As he grew older, and no longer tions might be that of guilt. The The reason for the distribution able to care for himself, Erin reason for this emotion when it of gifts is so we can all work Fleming stepped in to fill the comes to soul winning might together as a team (Paul uses the The ABC has reduced the need. Son Arthur objected when well be that the person realizes body to illustrate this point) to lift price of this timely book until she began to assume responsibil- that he/she has done little or up Jesus Christ that others can be December 31,1988 to US$5.95. ity for his legal affairs. He felt she nothing at all to help someone drawn to him in soul winning. was taking advantage of Grou- accept Jesus Christ as Lord and Now, the big question is, what The E. G. White Estate and cho's affections to feather her Saviour. By the way, this article gift has the Holy Spirit given you, the North American Division own nest. His great fear was that is not intended to send this kind and are you using it? publishing houses are selecting his father's estate would be of person on another guilt-trip. Your challenge is to pray that one book each year to receive a squandered and nothing would On the other hand, another emo- God will show you your gift, and special emphasis and price. These be left to care for him, or to pass tion created from reading or that you will not rest satisfied books will comprise the Heritage on to the heirs. hearing the phrase "soul win- until you are working with others Series. So, Arthur asked the Santa ning" could be that of anxiety. in soul winning. The premier book in the new Monica Superior Court to de- This emotion might come about Heritage Series is Faith and clare Groucho to be incapable of because a person may truly want Ken Bushnell, church minis- Works, a natural for the 1888 caring for his own affairs, and to be active in witnessing, but tries director, Mid-America centennial anniversary. "The that he be placed as his father's either finds it difficult to take the Union. thrust of this book is to show that conservator. This ended Grou- step, or having taken the first step saving faith will always manifest cho's personal rights. No longer (which could be, having gone Health Lectures itself in works or actions," says could he decide his own affairs. door-to-door with a survey, or Inspirational Talks Arnold V. Wallenkampf. Arthur now made all his deci- having encountered someone Cooking Classes sions and signed his checks and with a discussion about Chris- NEWSTART Honwstyle Kits Halloween— legal papers. tianity) finds him/herself too Choose from a variety Losing control over one's nervous to think straight, and to of video 3: audio tapes, An Opportunity property and affairs is the great- say the right thing at the right cookbooks, & bakery items est fear older people face. If you time in the right place. A third Call Toll Free To Witness have a concern that you might be emotion may be frustration. placed under a conservatorship, Frustration could be a combina- 1(800)525-9191 The special Halloween issue of you may want to consider a plan tion of the above emotions with a for your free products guide The Winner, our drug-preven- to avoid these unhappy circum- feeling of incompetence thrown a division of tion magazine for children, is stances. in. This person simply says to WEIMAR INSTITUTE chock full of teasers and treats in P.O. Box 486, Weimar, CA 95736 Talk to your attorney or your him/herself, "I just can't do it." the form of stories, games and conference Director of Trust Most of us think of soul win- puzzles. When parents return the Services about your concerns. ning as an individual effort. I am subscription coupon from your They can show you some of the not sure that this is a correct con- The Winner will arrive Students who look gift copy, cept. I believe soul winning is a ways that you can protect your forward each month to help their kids say assets and make conservatorship team effort. Let me explain what to a life of serving the Lord No to drugs. highly unlikely. They can offer I mean by "team effort." When in health, pastoral, or To receive your supply of The plans that will assure that you the Apostle Paul was discussing educational ministries must Winner in time for Halloween will be cared for in the way you the gifts of the Holy Spirit, found Call Toll Free distribution, your order and pre- wish, and that your assets will be in 1 Corinthians, chapter 12, he 1(800) 525-9191 payment must reach Narcotics used as you direct. ended his discussion by asking, for free information Education no later than October All of us laughed a lot at "Are all apostles? are all pro- material on 19. Call toll free 1 (800) 548- Groucho's many jokes and antics. phets? are all teachers? are all Weimar College 8700 with your credit card or He probably contributed to our workers of miracles?" (verse 28). purchase order number. Or mail mental well being. Hopefully, his He continues by asking the same a division of your check to Narcotics Educa- \/WEIMAR INSTITUTE unhappy conservatorship might question about such gifts as heal- P.O. Box 486, Weimar, CA 95736 tion, Inc., 6830 Laurel Street, also contribute to our peace of ing, speaking in tongues, and so NW, Washington, DC 20012. October, 1988 OUTLOOK 29 A Broader Outlook

Live together harmoniously in heaven? No problem. Live together with "the saints here below-? Not necessarily.

This issue of the Outlook has a chapter from 95 Theses on Righteousness by Faith by . Each of the 95 chapters explores a vital tenet of righteousness by faith as researched by Elder Venden from the Bible. This riveting hardback book is a must for your library if you want We don't always act as if we're part of the to know, from a single source, how the Bible stands on family of God. Len McMillan has come up with an Christ's righteousness and righteousness by faith. invaluable guide on how you can live with and Available now at the Adventist Book Center for just US minister to the depressed, critical, burned-out, or $14.95. unloved member in your church. Looseleaf study guide, three-hole punched, US $6.95. 01988 Pacific Press Publishing Association 2446 Complete set just US $19.95. US$6.95 at your Adventist Book Center

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30 OUTLOOK October, 1988 A Broader Outlook

Loma Linda HIGH BLOOD Religious Liberty Rally PRESSURE? Foods Improves OVER WEIGHT? Maplewood Academy DIABETES? Production Hutchinson, Minnesota HIGH CHOLESTEROL? October 29, 1988 HEART PROBLEMS? With the expansion of its fac- 2:30 p.m. tory in Riverside, California al- let the health most complete, Loma Linda Freedom in the Adventist —Roland Hegstad, Editor of Liberty professionals Foods, Inc., plans soon to have Churches in Russia Magazine. at the all of its employees working un- NEWSTART® der one roof. Infant formula pro- Religious Freedom in —Neville 0. Matthews, SDA Lifestyle Program Vietnam and Burma Representative at the United Nations. duction has moved in from help you Mount Vernon, Ohio, to the Religious Liberty Issues —Gordon 0. Engen, Director of Riverside factory, which produ- in the North American Public Affairs and Religious Call Toll Free ces meat analogs. Division Liberty, General Conference. 1 (800) 525-9191 The company has enlarged its for a free information Riverside plant, leased additional Religious Liberty Issues —Gary M. Ross, Associate Director, packet warehouse space, and made a in United States Congress General Conference PARL, Congressional Liaison a division of major investment in new equip- WEIMAR INSTITUTE P.O.Bax4116, WCIMIL CA 26736 ment during the past three years Religious Liberty Issues —Mitchell Tyner, Associate Director, in preparation for the Mount in the Courts General Conference, PARL, Legal Vernon closing. Counsel. "We are using company prof- Notices its to finance a good portion of Constitutional Convention —Vernon Alger, Lake Union Director of Religious Liberty. the approximately $5 million our GREATER BOSTON ACADEMY Alumni Homecoming Weekend, Oct. 14- consolidation is going to cost us," —Darrel J. Huenergardt, Mid-America Religious Liberty Affairs 15. Guest Speakers: Dr. John Grayson, says Alejo Pizarro, Loma Linda in Mid-America Union Director of Religious Liberty. '60, and Headmaster Emeritus Richard J. Foods president. "We're extreme- Hammond. Come renew friendships and ly happy that we've had to bor- enjoy autumn in New England. o a ...... s.,A, row only a small percentage of STATEMENT OF OWNEl3SHIRJ MMV161,NT AND CIRCULATION PRESCHOOL AND EARLY CHILD- HOOD TEACHERS attending the our total investment." I A. TITLE OF PUBLICATION IS. PUBLICATION NO. 2. DATE Of FILING NAEYC conference in Anaheim are in- Pizarro lists reduced operating OUTLOOK 0 8 8 7 9 7 7 x September 6, 1988 3 FREOVENCY OF ISSUE SA. NO OF ISSUES PuBLISH ED 311. ANNLJAL SUBSCRIPTION vited to an evening of fellowship at the costs and improved quality as the ANNUALLY PRICE Monthly 12 $8.00 Garden Grove SDA church Friday, Nov. reasons for operating only one 4. COMPLETE MAILING ADDRESS Of KNOWN OFFICE OF PUBLICATION arr.,. Or, County. Pore and us..Cocle., (Nor pn.r4.1 11 at 6:00 p.m. Supper will be served fol- factory in Riverside. P.O. Box 6128, 8550 Pioneers Blvd., Lincoln, NE 68506 lowed by a worship and fellowship service. S. COMPLETE MAILING ADDRESS OF THE HEADQUARTERS OF GENERAL BUSINESS OF 'ICES OF THE PUBLISHER ,Nan prier., "Although our infant formula For information and reservations contact: Same as 94 Marilyn Beach, Southeastern California has followed market prices," he 6. FULL NAMES AND COMPLETE MAILING ADDRESS OF PUBLISHER. EDITOR, AND AGING EDITOR rTib tie US NOT e4 1 PUBLISHER ,P4.0.• dtwl Ow it Mosby .4,1...1 Conference, P.O. Box 8050, Riverside, CA 92515 or call (714) 358-5800 ext. 315. says, "during the past three years Mid—America Union Conference of Seventh—day Adventists, Box 6128, Lincoln, NE 68506 EDITOR 'Ake. and Com...re .14441.4v our meat analog prices have in- AM.. OAK PARK ACADEMY ALUMNI creased only five percent, in spite James L. Ply, Bt 1, Box 181, Holland, NE 68372 REUNION, Oct. 7-8, 1988 on the campus, MANAGING EDITOR 'lac 4wI o...... 4440.42 Nevada, IA. Fri. night speaker, William I. of inflation and rising costs of Shirley B. Engel. P.O. Box 6128. Lincoln. NE 68506 raw materials. We believe that Rankin; Sabbath, Franklin Hudgins. Honor classes, ten-year, 1908-1978; 50-year class, our meat analog line is a service 1938 and 25-year class, 1963. to the Seventh-day Adventist FULL NAME COMPLETE MAILING •DDRESS SUNNYDALE ACADEMY HOME- Church, and we want to keep our COMING Oct. 14-15. Honor classes are prices as low as possible." '49, '58, '63, '68, and '78. Information will be mailed to all alumni this month. If we One major investment is a ZOLV217.1,21Z1WITZIIVT11°,7In2.1,E111::....1.=';'."711.T'n"°"""` ' ""E"T '''" "" ' T°T.' do not have your address, please contact Dasi aseptic processing line, FULL NAME COMPLETE MAILING ADDRESS Pat Anderson, SDA, Rt. 2, Box 144, Cen- which Pizarro describes as "to- tralia, MO 65240. (514) 682-2164. tally computerized and state-of- CAMPION ACADEMY ALUMNI P. FOR COMPLETION BY NONPROFIT ORGANIEATIONS AUTHORISED TO MAIL AT SPECIAL RATES awNon 423.12 DWI aid yl the-art for producing sterilized WEEKEND—Oct. 21-22, 1988. If you products." Some of the infant al have moved within the past few years, 0 =MI P2T0556e fr1" 0 0 XIC`All,T,T 2,1!,'2 frt:;'"= ":::7=""*""'" ' formula's natural flavor is lost in .. please send your new address to Jeanne IaraFfteiE I A." lart YEAPLUFEDAVRE TTV3 the current production process, "TE',1;:f,1,,:!..:.::,..47'°" Chambers, 3213 Overlook Lane, Love- A. TOTAL NO. COPIES FN.. Nem Rem/ 28,800 29,000 land, CO 80537. We want to keep you but when the new aseptic line 6 PAID AND/OR RECIU EST F CIRCULATION updated as plans progress. See you there! I SRN Inteu., [Hem end cerrren. we, redeN end taunter* None None

goes into operation, Pizarro pre- 7 haw 3/10.ren.co ,,,,,,, „...,,,, 27,715 28.146 ATTENTION SINGLES: Weekend dicts improved flavor. C TOTAL PAID AND/OR REOUESTLO CIRCLILAT iON at Broken Arrow Ranch, Olsburg, KS, ..I of.. ..., lois, 27,715 28,146 The aseptic line will enable D. FREE DISTR I SUTION SY MAIL, CARRIER OR OTHER MEANS Oct. 21-23. Speaker: Dr. Ward Hill, SAMPLES, COMPLIMENTARY, AND OTHER FREE COPIES Loma Linda Foods to produce 350 350 Union College, "Keeping Faith Alive." E. TOTAL DISTRIBUTION (Sem of C NM 0./ 28.065 28,496 Charges: $32 for Adventist Singles mem- new drinks, too, such as fruit jui- F. COPIES MOT DISTRISUTED I, 011re• um, lel orm, unmcounted, tRo.led MIN ese" 735 504 bers, $35 for non-members. $2 discount if

ces. Pizarro says the 82-year-old 2. Return Iran, News Awntt paid registration received by Oct. 16. $15 for Sabbath only. Children under 4, free; company is "actively working on O. TOTAL Mono of B. , I ... 2-0.. ni ,Ow env. al tow. 41 28.800 29,000 4-8, half price. Send your paid registration the expansion of current product , byt.t,ty Mat thy ttytyytyy,t my,. by > SIGNATp ..AlZIT DIVIR- • .11.1•4.5 MANAGER. On OWNER to Fred Thomas, 3840 South 46th, Lin- lines and the introduction of new me above are correct and complete . .q/------ coln, NE 68506. Or call (402) 483-1080 PI Form 3526, Ix, 12, ISer inMMmon on reverse) products." or 488-0981. October, 1988 OUTLOOK 31 A Broader Outlook

Notices Continued 2 great-great-grandchildren; a foster daugh- WADDELL, Carolyn E., b. Feb. 27, WANTED: Married man between 30 ter, Margaret Hall; 10 stepchildren and 1888 in Floyd County; d. May 10, 1988 in and 50 years old for year-round farm A reunion for Student Missionaries & several step-grandchildren. She was prede- Charles City, IA. She was a faithful work. Must be experienced with all types Sponsors of the FRANCIS SERPI MIS- ceased by 2 husbands, Elmer Birth and member of the Charles City church. of farm equipment, including combines. SION in Nicaragua, will be held at South- Lloyd Moxley. Equipment to be serviced includes 6 pivot ern College, Oct. 28, 1988 in conjunction irrigation systems with diesel engines. HIEB, Sam, b. Oct. 15, 1903, near with the annual Alumni Homecoming. Housing is furnished. After the first year if Cleveland, ND; d. Aug. I, 1988, James- Classifieds Please write or call for more information. the man is self-motivated and capable, he town, ND. Survivors: wife Frieda (Fuhr- John Durichek, Southern College, Col- Employment could be in charge of the operation with man); sons, Russell, Ralph, Dr. Robert and legedale, TN 37315. (615) 238-2860 or wages and a share of the profits, making it Joseph; brother, Theodore; and 11 grand- FLORIDA HOSPITAL in Orlando, (615) 236-4148. an extra well paid job. There will be some children. FL needs Medical Professionals to staff share of profits plus going wages the first 1,071-bed hospital. RN-Critical Care, HUFFER, Ruby, b. Aug. 24, 1909, year. Write Don Lair, Rt. 1, Stapleton, NE A definite statement of the 27 fun- Medical, Surgical, OR, ER, Psychiatry, Verdi, KS; d. Feb. 25, 1988, Denver, CO. 69163. damental beliefs of Seventh-day Ad- Orthopedic and Head Injury. (Part or full- Worked at Porter Memorial Hospital 35 ventists will be released in the Spanish time employees can get a B.S. degree in NURSING DEPT. CHAIRMAN. years. Two husbands, William Foy and language by Pacific Press Publishing Nursing in NLN accredited school on Flor- Pacific Union College seeking creative per- Earl Huffer preceded her in death. Survi- Association Sept. 1. Published in Eng- ida Hospital campus). Physical and Occu- son with strong leadership ability to chair vors: daughter, Betty (Mrs. Ben) Barton; 3 lish earlier this year under the title, pational Therapy, Ultrasound and Radia- Department of Nursing serving over 200 grandchildren and 6 great-grandchildren; 2 "Seventh-day Adventist Believe .. ." tion Therapy Techs. Contact Employment, undergraduates. Strong spiritual commit- sisters: Fern Harpster and Lucille Philips. the book presents Biblical explana- in Florida (407) 897-1998 or outside of ment, earned doctorate in nursing or related tions of Adventist doctrine under 27 KAISER, Rachel Hanhardt, b. May 9, Florida (800) 327-1914. Florida Hospital, field, successful administrative experience headings. The official North Ameri- 1900 near Shaffer, KS; d. Mar 2. 1988, 601 E. Rollins, Orlando, FL 32803. desired. Contact Dr. Charles Bell, Aca- can Division of Creencias de los Greeley, CO. Survivors: son, Kenneth; demic Vice President, Pacific Union Col- RN's TIRED OF THE COLD? The Adventistas del Septimo Dia will be daughter, Wanda Dick; 4 grandchildren lege, Angwin, CA 94508, (707) 965-6234. best opportunities under the sun can be available at ABC's throughout North and 6 great-grandchildren; sister, Palma found in Punta Gorda, FL near Ft. Myers' MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR: America early in September. Price for Lohrey and brother, Reuben Hanhardt. gold coast. Medical Center Hospital, 208- 103-bed hospital. Applicant should pos- the special Spanish edition is $5.95. LORENZ, Fred, b. July 5, 1895, Platte- bed Sunbelt hospital has immediate open- sess supervisory skills, hospital mainte- ville, CO; d. Aug. 4, 1988, Greeley, CO. ings in ICU, Telemetry, Med/Surg, OR, nance experience to include HVAC, build- Survivors: daughter, Nancy Edmiston; ER, and Chemical Dependency. Ask about ing construction, and knowledge of com- son, Fredrick L. Lorenz; 5 grandsons; 4 our employment options and moving puter system management and bio-med. great-grandchildren; 2 daughters, Eileen Obituaries. allowance. Contact: Human Resources Send resume to Park Ridge Hospital, Terry and Velma, and a granddaughter, Dr. Lyn- Director, P.O. Box 1309, Punta Gorda, FL Mann, P.O. Box 1569, Fletcher, NC 28732 BEASLEY, Pauline Schweiger; b. Aug. netta Jean Dupper, preceded him in death. 33951 or call (813) 637-2552. or call (704) 684-8501, ext. 103. 6, 1898, Douglas County, CO; d. Aug. 13, LYON, Willis Harold, b. July 3, 1898, 1988, Aurora, CO. Survivors: 1 son, FOOD AND NUTRITION EM- POSITION AVAILABLE: RADIO- Clinton, IA; d. Feb. 29, 1988, Auburndale, Howard E. Beasley; 3 daughters, Shirley PLOYMENT NETWORK. A referral GRAPHY CLINICAL COORDINA- FL. Taught in IA and GA, then specialized G. Johnson, Betty J. Graham and Martha service to assist those seeking jobs/reloca- TOR/INSTRUCTOR. Loma Linda in Temperance Work in Iowa and South J. Parrish; 4 grandchildren and 5 great- tion; dietitians, diet techs, food service University, Allied Health/Radiologic Dakota. Survivors: wife, Eleanor; 2 sons, grandchildren. directors/managers, supervisors, cooks Technology, needs qualified radiograph- Ronald and Melvin; 11 grandchildren and and bakers in health care and education. er/instructor. Background: ARRT, bac- BOGGESS, Lucille G. B., b. Sept. 22, 10 great-grandchildren. Service of SDA Dietetic Association and 1909, Hoxie, KS; d. July 22, 1988, Den- calaureate degree, 2 plus years clinical PAYTE, James C., b. Jan. 8, 1932, Adventist Health System. No fees are ver, CO. expertise, teaching experience preferred. Marianne, AR; d. July 28, 1988, Pagosa required. (800) 825-0251, ext. 8070. Position open Sept., 1988. EEO but pref- DAVIS, Matilda (Mrs. Irvin), b. Feb. 1, Springs, CO. Survivors; 2 daughters, erence to SDAs. Contact Arthur Kroetz, 1909 near Odessa, Russia; d. Aug. 4, 1988, NURSE EDUCATOR Medical Center Karen and Heide Payte; 3 sisters and 6 Program Director, (714) 824-4931. Hospital. Be a part of a progressive nursing St. Francis, KS. Survivors: husband, Irvin; brothers. son, Robert Yost; sisters, Caroline Deyle team assuming the responsibility for orien- NURSES: If you like skiing in the PETERSEN, Carrie E., b. Dec. 3, and Mary Reeder; 2 grandchildren and 4 tation and inservice of nurses in a 200-bed Rockies, this job is for you. Minutes from 1900, Underwood, IA; d. July 31, 1988, great-grandchildren. SDA hospital located on beautiful south- Glenwood Springs, Aspen and Snowmass. Papillion, NE. Survivors: daughter, Jerine west Florida's nmst 25 miles north of Ft. Small new nursing home in Carbondale, ELDRIGE, Lucie Elizabeth Nelson, b. L. Deemer; sons, Maynard, Ivan and Deal Myers. Excellent salary and moving allow- CO needs RN's and LPN's. Local church Feb. 2, 1904, New York City, NY; d. Aug. Petersen; sister, Florence Thompson; 9 ance provided. Call or write: Human Re- in Glenwood Springs nerds missionary 6, 1988, Boulder, CO. Survivors: hus- grandchildren, 7 great-grandchildren and sources Director, P.O. Box 1309, Punta minded young people to help swell its band, Charley O.; son, Charley 0. Jr.; 2 stepgrandchildren. Gorda, FL 33950 or call (813) 637-2552. membership. Call: (615) 472-7881, or daughter, Charleen E. Prentice; 7 grand- PETERSON, Mabel, b. June 27,1910, write: Heritage Enterprises, Inc., P.O. Box children and 10 great-grandchildren. BIOMEDICAL ENGINEER: Duties 3598, Cleveland, TN 37320. Fargo, ND; d. June 1, 1988. Married to to include technical support for PC Novel EMBLETON, Robert H., b. Aug. 17, Amos Peterson, 1937. Survivors: 2 sons, Network with knowledge of Word Perfect. NEEDED-LIVE-IN BABYSITTER/ 1902, Rockvale, CO; d. July 15, 1988, Donald and Roger; 4 grandchildren and 3 Metafile, and Lotus 123. Full time position HOUSEKEEPER. Two-doctor family in Denver, CO. great-grandchildren. Mon.-Fri. with rotating weekend call. Send rural Kentucky needs a woman interested FLEMMER, Erwin J., b. Apr. 25, RAUSENBERGER, Henry G., b. July resume to Terry Mann, Park Ridge Hospi- in working as live-in babysitter and house- 1929, Napolean, ND; d. July 6, 1988, Lin- 21, 1892, Rosehill Township, MN; d. Aug. tal, P.O. Box 1569, Fletcher, NC 28732 or keeper. Three children ages 5 yrs., 2 yrs., & coln, NE. Survivors: Esther A. Hemmer, 6, 1988, Windom, MN. Predeceased by call (704) 684-8501, ext. 103. 4 months. Please call (606) 549-2930 daughters, Jacqueline (Mrs. Dennis) Dun- wife, Lydia. Survivors: 2 daughters, Mar- between 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and ask for COLLEGE TEACHERS. Canadian kin, Janice (Mrs. Perry) Rasmussen, Arlene lyse Mischke and Marilyn Christensen; 7 Union College invites applications from Mary or call (606) 549-2357 after 5:00 and Ardyce Hemmer; sister, Ruby Holtz; grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren; persons interested in teaching in the fol- p.m. and ask for Dr. Miller. You may also father, John C. Hemmer; 5 grandchildren. 2 brothers and 2 sisters. lowing areas: Mathematics, Philosophy write to: Dr. Miller/Babysitter, 408 Syc- GILBERT, Myrtle J., b. May 1, 1909, REINMUTH, Harry G., b. Sept. 14, and Psychology. In each case the applicant amore St., Williamsburg, KY 40769. Denver, CO; d. July 20, 1988, Denver, 1896, St. Louis, MO; d. Aug. 19, 1988, must be an SDA in regular standing, have RANGER NEEDED AT BEAUTI- CO. Lincoln, NE. College teacher 48 years- Ph.D. degree, have teaching experience FUL CAMP HERITAGE, located on the HENDRICKSON, Richard (Dick), b. 32 years at Union College and chairman of and be willing to be involved in research. Lake of the Ozarks. Modern 3-bdrm. brick Dec. 7, 1916, Ypsilanti, ND; d. July 22, the Modern Language Dept. Survivors: Send resume to: The Vice President for home. All utilities furnished, plus stipend. 1988, Bismarck, ND. Survivors: wife, son, Dr. C. G. Reinmuth; sisters, Minnie Academic Administration, Canadian Un- Contact Iowa-Missouri Conference Youth Ellen; daughter, Mrs. Jean (Colleen) De- Mohr and Esther Reinmuth; 3 grandchil- ion College, Box 430, College Heights, Dept. (515) 223-1197. dren and 3 great-grandchildren. Alberta TOC OZO. Lille; son, Rick; sisters Lila Herr and Ethel NURSING INSTRUCTOR for Ma- Thum and 4 grandchildren. SHARP, Virginia Alice Fenton, b. June ATLANTIC UNION COLLEGE is ternal/Child and Pediatric beginning Jan. HENSEL, Mary, b. Sept. 27, 1893, 4, 1928, Indianapolis, IN; d. June 14, seeking a chair (Ph.D. required) for the 1989, due to increased enrollment. Mas- Cassville, MO; d. July 16, 1988, West- 1988, Ukiah, CA. Survivors: Pastor Nor- English Dept. beginning fall, 1989. If ter's degree in Maternal/Child or Pediatric brook, MN. Survivors: husband, Otto; 2 man Sharp; daughter and son-in-law, interested please send resume to Sakae nursing required. Doctorate, teaching sons, Glenn Birth and Gean; 2 daughters, Sharon and Tom Sorrels; brother and Kubo, Vice President for Academic Af- experience preferred. Address vitae: Katie Darlene Snider and Pamela Miller; 13 sister-in-law, Jean and Fred Fenton; fairs, Atlantic Union College, South Lan- Lamb, Southern College, Collegedale, TN grandchildren, 23 great-grandchildren and mother, Eugenia E. Fenton. caster, MA 01561. 37315-0370 or call (615) 238-2942.

32 OUTLOOK October, 1988 Classified Advertisements

Advertisements are not solicited but are published as an accommodation. They HAWAIIAN CONDOMINIUM DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION MUST be sent to the local conference for approval before being published in the FOR RENT. Overlooking ocean, island SERVICES Mid-America Adventist OUTLOOK. Ads appearing in the OUTLOOK are printed of Maui. One/two bdrm. units, fully fur- For church, school and medical facilities. without endorsement or recommendation of the Mid-America Union Conference nished. Pools, tennis, golf, sandy beach. For information call or write to: and The Mid-America Adventist OUTLOOK does not accept responsibility for Write or call Nazario-Crandall Condo, Design Build Group, Inc., P.O. Box 6169 categorical or typographical errors. The advertising rate for these columns is $12.00 724 E. Chapel St., Santa Maria, CA Lincoln, NE 68506. (402) 489-6900. for each insertion up to 40 words, plus 30 cents for each additional word, for ads 93454; (805) 925-8336 or 925-0812. LONG DISTANCE SAVINGS! Low- originating in the Mid-America Union. The rate for ads coming from outside this er rates "dial one" service. No cost to join. territory is $20.00 for 40 words or less, plus 75 cents for each additional word. STAN AND EMMA'S AFFORDA- BLE HAWAII: Hotels, condos, or guest Fund raising program for non-profit Payment must accompany advertisement. Rates for display advertising are available rooms, one island or more. Economical organizations, schools. Big savings for resi- upon request. package prices include airfares, accommo- dential, commercial. Large earning poten- dations, transfers or rental cars. Seven- tial. Four years in business. Morningstar HOME HEALTH AGENCY DIREC- NOW ACCEPTING APPLICA- night Waikiki Budget Package including Institute, Box 5612, Takoma Park, MD TOR: Director for medicare certified/ TIONS, good health gives you the advan- airfare, from $644 per person, double. Free 20912. (301) 891-3753. private-duty Home Health agency needed. tage you need to meet life's daily chal- information, P.O. Box 808, Kaneohe, HI HEALTHFOODS EXPRESS: Com- Licensed R.N. with home-health and mar- lenges. Countryside Lifestyle Village joins 96744, (808) 239-9940. plete selection of your favorite health foods keting experience desired. Rural setting in Eden Valley Lifestyle Center in offering from Loma Linda, Worthington, Cedar beautiful central Wisconsin. Contact Larry short and long-term living to assist you to COME TO BEAUTIFUL SOUTH- Lake and Millstone delivered to your door. Brooks, President, Health Care at Home, achieve optimum health and independ- WEST OREGON where the winters are Fresh selection of nuts and dried fruit. 9047-2 U.S. 31, Berrien Springs, MI ence. Call or write for free brochure and mild. Furnished accommodations availa- Bonus discount program; freshness guaran- 49103. (616) 471-7071. information. 6263 North County Road 29, ble by week or month. Three meals daily tee; bi-monthly sale; case purchases not Loveland, CO 80537. I (800) 637- including vegetarian. Excellent rates. SDA required. Send to: Healthfonds Express, RADIOLOGY DIAGNOSTIC SU- WELL. managers. Close to friendly SDA church. PERVISOR for a busy 383-bed hospital For more information call collect (503) Box 8357, Fresno, CA 93747 (209) located in Kansas City suburbs. Candidate NEW STORY CASSETTES! Surprise 839-4266 or write: Forest Glen Senior 252-8321. your children with VOYAGER, the will be an RRT with supervisory and Residence, Box 726, Canyonville, OR SDA SINGLES. Brighten your life by incredible adventure appearing in Guide. related Radiology experience. Excellent 97417. finding new friends in the largest Adventist Relive the great controversy through salary and benefits. Call collect (913) 676- worldwide correspondence club! Enjoy VOYAGER'S exciting stories of discovery CHRISTIAN FUNDRAISING PRO- 2020 or send resume to Shawnee Mission large monthly magazines with photos, de- and decision. Bible scenes spring to life JECT: Sell 1989 America's Beautiful Medical Center, 9100 W. 74th St., Shaw- scription, special features and educational answering questions today's children ask Scripture Calendars. Calendars feature dif- nee Mission, KS 66201. tours. Send stamped #10 envelope: Box about God. $16.95 (4 tapes) Christian ferent photograph and scripture each 5612, Takoma Park, MD 20912. (301) HAYS NURSING CENTER in San Communications, Rt. 5, Box 179D, month. Groups earn 50% commission. 891-3753. Marcos, TX will soon open a 120-bed Hagerstown, MD 21740. Custom imprinting available. Free details facility. Immediate position available for or send $2.00 for sample. Enduring Books, Real Estate RN as Director of Nurses with long-term MOVING? We can help! Call the pro- 116 S. Walker, Rolla, MO 65401, (314) care experience. Must be self directed and fessionals at Montana Conference Trans- 364-5787. PRICE REDUCED: On this new motivated. For information call (800) portation. We will move your household spacious energy-efficient, maintenance- SINGLES! 782-7653 ext. 154, collect at (512) goods anywhere in the U.S. or Canada. Now you can meet other free, 3-brdm., 2-bath home. Offering many 396-1353. Prompt, courteous service at a discounted single Adventists throughout the U.S. If extras. Nestled on 40 rolling acres. Located price. For a free estimate and information 18-85 and looking for friendship, mail just 6 miles from Sunnydale Academy, 10 FRESHMAN ENGLISH DIREC- concerning your move, call I (800) 525- stamped, large self-addressed envelope: miles to Adventist hospital, 20 miles to TOR needed at Loma Linda University, 1177. (Owned and operated by the Mon- Discover, 38 N. Park Ave., Apopka, FL major university. Quick possession. Bob beginning Fall 1988. PhD preferred. Send tana Conference). 32703. and Lisa Shireman, (314) 641-5215. resume and list of 3 references. Contact Dr. Robert Dunn, English chairman, at (714) ADVENTURES IN VEGETARIAN 785-2241, mornings. CUISINE cookbooks are recently re- leased. 350+ pages. Cookbook features Sunset Calendar Miscellaneous over 1000 recipes to include 275 vegetar- ian entrees, sections on natural sugar des- Oct. 7 Oct. 14 Oct. 21 Oct. 28 Nov. 4 LOSE WEIGHT PERMANENTLY! serts and natural sugar beverages. A great Reduce cholesterol, diabetes. Wildwood's Denver, CO 6:33 6:24 6:13 6:03 4:55 gift idea. $12.00 per book. Send to: SDA economical medically supervised live-in Grand June., CO 6:48 6:37 6:28 6:18 5:10 Elementary School, 305 N. 39th St., Rapid programs can transform the way you look, Pueblo, CO 6:32 6:22 6:12 6:04 4:56 City, SD 57702 or call (605) 348-7406 or 6:39 4:57 feel and function. Jacuzzi, sauna, treat- Cedar Rapids, IA 6:27 6:16 6:06 (605) 342-6674. 4:54 ments, vegetarian cooking classes, educa- Davenport, IA 6:34 6:23 6:12 6:03 tional lectures, guided hikes on mountain ENJOY SUNNY ARIZONA. For Des Moines, IA 6:47 6:35 6:25 6:15 5:06 trails. Spiritual environment. 1 (800) 634- Rent: Furnished 35-ft. travel trailer set up Sioux City, IA 6:57 6:46 6:35 6:25 5:15 WELL. Wildwood Lifestyle Center and on our acre, rural lot in the Verde Valley. Dodge City, KS 7:14 7:04 6:55 6:46 5:38 6:20 4:43 Hospital, Dept. U, Wildwood, GA 30757. Write Bob & Donna Blake, 6300 Queens Goodland, KS 6:10 6:00 5:51 Dr. #12, Lincoln, NE 68516, or call (402) Topeka, KS 6:56 6:46 6:36 6:27 5:19 FREE INFORMATION: Prepare 421-2750. Wichita, KS 7:04 6:54 6:45 6:36 5:28 yourself for a challenging career where job Duluth, MN 6:37 6:24 6:11 6:00 4:49 opportunities are plentiful. Andrews Uni- SOMETHING BETTER FOR HAL- Internl. Falls, MN 6:41 6:27 6:14 6:01 4:50 versity & Oakwood College offer quality LOWEEN. Impress your trick-or-treaters Minneapolis, MN 6:43 6:31 6:19 6:08 4:58 degree programs in dietetics and food ser- and their parents. Give The Winner Hal- Rochester, MN 6:40 6:28 6:17 6:06 4:56 vice careers for students entering college loween issue-a fun, safe and sugar-free Columbia, MO 6:43 6:33 6:23 6:14 5:06 and adults seeking a career change. Call 1 gift that helps kids choose drug-free living. Kansas City, MO 6:52 6:42 6:32 6:23 5:15 (800) 253-3000. Only 25 cents each. Order toll free, 1 (800) Springfield, MO 6:48 6:38 6:29 6:21 5:13 548-8700 before October 19. St. Louis, MO 6:35 6:24 6:15 6:06 4:58 FRESH BARHI DATES from Cali- Grand Island, NE 7:06 6:55 6:44 6:35 5:26 fornia. We ship 12 lbs. for $26 via UPS BAHAMAS CRUISE & DISNEY- Lincoln, NE 7:00 6:49 6:38 6:28 5:20 beginning Nov. I. ($27 east of Mississippi: WORLD! Join Adventist group for a 7- North Platte, NE 7:15 7:04 6:54 6:44 5:35 $24 to Western states) Send check with day sunbreak departing Jan. 30, 1989. Omaha, NE 6:56 6:45 6:34 6:24 4:55 order to Cloverdale SDA School, 1085 S. From $760 plus tax less group and senior Scottsbluff, NE 6:27 6:15 6:04 5:54 4:24 Cloverdale Blvd., Cloverdale, CA 95425. citizen discounts if you book by Nov. 15. Bismarck, ND 7:12 6:59 6:46 6:34 5:23 Continental U.S. only. Mert Allen Mt. Tabor Cruise & Travel, 6838 S.E. Belmont St., Portland, OR Fargo, ND 6:56 6:43 6:30 6:18 5:07 BAND AND ORCHESTRAL IN- 97215 or call collect (503) 252-9653. Williston, ND 7:22 7:08 6:55 6:43 5:02 STRUMENTS: Substantial discounts- Pierre, SD 7:12 6:59 6:48 6:37 5:27 many at half price. Extended payment FOR RENT: Condo at Winter Park, Rapid City, SD 6:23 6:11 5:59 5:48 4:39 plans and rentals available. For informa- CO with free shuttle to and from the Sioux Falls, SD 6:58 6:46 6:34 6:24 5:14 tion call toll free 1 (800) 346-4448 or slopes. Sleeps 8, fully equipped kitchen. Casper, WY 6:37 6:25 6:14 6:04 4:55 write: Hamel Music Enterprises, 8703 N. Hot tubs and swimming pool available. Cheyenne, WY 6:32 6:21 6:10 6:00 4:52 Bluff View, Berrien Springs, MI 49103. $100/night. (402) 423-0523. Sheridan, WY 6:38 6:25 6:14 6:03 4:53

October, 1988 OUTLOOK 33 At last, a book that reveals the basis for each SDA doctrine.

Responding to a strangely empty spot on Adventist bookshelves, the GC Ministerial Association has published a Biblical, Christ-centered explanation for all 27 fundamental beliefs of Sev- enth-day Adventists. A total of 230 pastors, evangelists, administrators, and scholars from the world field added their insight to the project. They plumbed the depths of Adventist doctrine and demonstrated its relevance to modern man. They wrote simply and clearly with an intel- lectual integrity that confirms faith. At last, we have a representative and authoritative work on what we believe and why we believe it. US$4.95, Cdn$6.70. A 400-page hardcover book usually costs $15 to $20. But because we share a need to rediscover the reason for our faith, the price has been subsidized. Call your Adventist Book Center to order.

Selected as the Sabbath school lesson help for third and fourth quarter 1988.

34 OUTLOOK October, 1988 We've topped ourselves by making an without MSG, preservatives, pepper, or any even better topping! Gravy Quik, the two animal fats. Taste the difference. Chicken minute meal topper, has five improved fla- Style, Onion, Mushroom, Brown, and vors. The superior taste Country Gravy. has been done GRAVY QUIK BROWN GAM, MIX

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LOMA LINDA FOODS® 11503 Pierce Street, Riverside, CA 92515 • (800) 442-4917 (CALIF. ONLY) • (800) 932-5525 `Pass men0'0dentleSaviour.„' "Pass menot,0GentleSaviour" Instead, sheheardDelDelkersinging about—I wasexperiencingGod.I'veneverbeen hangover. Shereachedoverandturnedonthe radio expectingtohearrockmusic. talked aboutGod'splanformylife.Iknewhad the same. heart," sheremembersEverythingwithinme reached outtotheSaviourvoicewassinging going toyourchurch.Youwillhavecome Desperately searchingthephonebookIfound the nameofSeventh-dayAdventistchurch. to takeimmediateaction!" experiences goingtodifferentchurches.I'mnot your church." morning. Iblurtedout: Faye MillsansweredthephonethatSunday no longerliveinasinfulenvironment. me! Carol melted."Listeningtothatsongbrokemy Carol awakenedveryalert—despite "I gotoutofbedandquicklypacked.Icould "When thesongwasover,H.M.S.Richards "I'm lookingforGod,andI'vehadsomebad "If youcanshowmethere'saGod,I'lljoin H. M.S.Richards,Jr. DIRECTOR -SPEAKER OCTOBER 8,1988 Box 55,LosAngeles, California90053 Please plantobegenerouswithyourLord. Carol wasbaptizedintotheMemphisFirstSeventh-day AdventistChurchinthe Spring of1974attheage24.Thereshemetherfuture husband,Don,and like Carol—whowillhearaboutJesusbecauseofyourgift onVoiceofProphecyDay. today theyhavetwobeautifuldaughters. Remember Voice ofProphecyDay! been therewhenshecasuallyflippedthatradiodial. And therearemillionsofotherconfused,longing,yearning, lonelypeople—just . a Her lifecouldhavetakenamuchdifferentturniftheVoice ofProphecyhadnot drug . and theSeventh-dayAdventistChurchanecho and forthefirsttimeinmylife,Ifoundthem answers. Wednesdaynight,Carolwenttoprayer of whatmyinnervoicehadbeenleadingmeto the facesofpeoplelookedlikelitup— meeting withFaye. for solong." "When IwalkedintothatAdventistchurch, Carol wasfullofquestions.Faye 0 * His richpresencewillfillyourlife! TheVoice of Prophecy I CAROL

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