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North American Division Executive Committee Votes Strategic Focus, Date for Elections

The Seventh-day Adventist Church in North America moves ahead with “Together in Mission” focus, sets date for quinquennial elections, and refers “A Call to Live in Harmony with God and Others” document back to committee.

G. Alexander Bryant, NAD president, at Feb. 25, 2021 meeting

G. Alexander Bryant, North America Division president, talks about the NAD's quinquennial strategic focus during a presentation at the Feb. 25, 2021, virtual executive committee meeting. Photo by Pieter Damsteegt

On Feb. 25, 2021, the North American Division Executive Committee met to vote on a quinquennial strategic focus and approve an April 29 business meeting to hold NAD vice president, department director and associate director elections. NAD president G. Alexander Bryant chaired the meeting, disseminating the proposed strategic focus. During the virtual Zoom meeting, Kyoshin Ahn, NAD secretary, also presented a statement from a writing committee of executive committee members tasked with its creation, which, according to the document’s preamble, “addresses issues specific to the NAD, and contextualizes the [General Conference’s] ‘One Humanity’ document into the North American setting.”

The executive committee voted approval of both the strategic focus and the April 29 elections. After some discussion, the document, “A Call to Live in Harmony with God and Others,” was referred back to the writing committee.

NAD executive secretary Kyoshin Ahn shares a report during the Feb. 25, 2021 NAD executive committee meeting. Photo by Pieter Damsteegt

North American Division executive secretary Kyoshin Ahn shares a report during the Feb. 25, 2021 NAD executive committee meeting. Photo by Pieter Damsteegt

Near the close of the meeting, Randy Robinson, NAD treasurer, shared an update on the 2021 budget as well as record-breaking 2020 tithe figures.

In referring to the past year and dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic, Robinson said, “There are still many struggling churches, struggling areas in North America. But this [tithe] performance gave the North American Division the ability to use its reserves and send out dollars that were hopefully used as assistance, through our unions and conferences, to our local fields that were suffering.”

Robinson explained that the division allocated $10 million in stimulus money to assist local conferences, churches, and schools. “The generosity of our people across North America, and the benevolence of our Heavenly Father, gave us the ability to do that. And we're just so grateful,” he added.

Randy Robins, NAD treasurer, gives a financial update during the executive committee meeting held on Feb. 25, 2021.

Randy Robins, NAD treasurer, gives a financial update during the executive committee meeting held on Feb. 25, 2021. Photo by Pieter Damsteegt

Before the meeting got underway, a devotional message was shared by John Bradshaw, speaker/director of It Is Written media ministry. Bradshaw talked about the privilege of knowing God, and delighting in our service to Him. “Life will be a life of continual obedience,” said Bradshaw, “and through an appreciation of the character of Christ, through communion with God, sin will become a hateful to us. And when we're there, there's nothing that can stop the river flowing. When God [told] us to go and make disciples of all nations, he was saying ‘Go flow.’

Bradshaw concluded, “We have the Spirit of God filling us and arming us. God's Word is power. There is a world that will be reached. … God has called us, His people, to be that river that flows out of a heaven’s sanctuary, and takes the gospel to the world and brings healing and hope and health and life — let that be our mission. … We're going to see God do things such as we've never seen before.”

Bryant then shared a detailed presentation that was both a devotional thought and outline of the strategic focus that the NAD has been honing since its year-end meeting this past fall. He explained that throughout the intervening months the NAD met several times with union and conference presidents; the NAD leadership team (comprised of vice presidents, directors, and associate directors) and division staff; Adventist Media Ministries directors; executive leaders from the health institutions; higher education leaders; and other division institutions, including Pacific Press Publishing Association, Christian Record Services, and the North American Division Evangelism Institute.

The North American Division's three officers greet executive committee members on Feb. 25, 2021.

The North American Division's three officers greet executive committee members on Feb. 25, 2021. Photo by Pieter Damsteegt

“We've gone through the process of meeting with so many different leaders to get input and suggestions on what strategic focus we can have as we move forward,” Bryant said. “We cannot maximize the potential that we have as a division unless we are all moving in the same direction with the same strategic focus.” He said that, if voted, the division will incorporate the General Conference theme “I Will Go,” with the NAD focus of “Together in Mission” — and with special emphasis on media, multiplying, and mentorship. Moving forward, the division will carefully consider the next steps of shaping this focus into a strategic plan.

[Click here for more details on the NAD's strategic focus.]

“Jesus won the confidence of others by ministering to their needs,” Bryant said. “He won their confidence by mingling with them and after He won their confidence because He showed interest in them, He bade them to follow Him. That is the formula that God has given His church.”

Bryant asked the executive committee these questions: “In the North American Division, we have great diversity, we have a large territory, we have a multiplicity of views, and we have significant resources. How do we leverage them for greater impact on God's kingdom? How do we leverage them so that we, collectively, can do the ministry of Jesus? How do we leverage them so that we are mingling with [people], and ministering to their needs, and showing sympathy for them — and then we win their confidence? What would happen if we did more of these things?”