The History of Adventism in Hispano-America–A Retrospective Look

I was able to learn and gather information about the origins of Hispanic Adventism in the U.S while conducting research for our Interactive Journalism class at Southern Adventist University. The investigation led me to the first major volume ever written on the history of Hispanic Adventism in the North American Division, titled, “The Untold Story: 100 Years of Hispanic Adventism.”

The book was written by Manuel Vazquez in the year 2000 and published by Pacific Press Publications. I also found a study conducted by Juan Carlos Viera for Adventist.org in 2016.

Vazquez writes about the beginnings of the Hispanic church in the United States, stating:

“The Seventh-day Adventist work among the Hispanics in the U. S began in Sanchez, Arizona, in 1899, only 36 years after the Adventist Church was officially organized (1863). A bilingual Mexican Methodist pastor named Marcial Serna eventually became the first Hispanic Adventist pastor, raising up several Adventist congregations in the southwest region of the United States during his ministry” (15).

He also shares an anecdote about sister White, writing: “In 1913, Ellen White told Abel Sanchez, one of the first Hispanic Adventist members in the North American Division: ”It has been shown to me that the Spanish work will be placed at the vanguard and march at the head of the cause of God in the United States.”

This prophecy is literally being fulfilled today. From the 15 original members in the Spanish Church in Sanchez, Arizona, in 1899, the Hispanic membership in the North American Division has mushroomed to nearly 105,000 in 1999!” (15).

At the same time that the Hispanics were organizing in North America the church was fulfilling its commission to spread the Third Angel’s Message, found in Revelation 14.

Even before the launch of Serna’s ministry and White’s vision, Adventists were already evangelizing in Latin America.

Juan Carlos Viera in his study of Seventh-day Adventist education recounts that “Adventists arrived in South America by 1890. The first missionaries Elwin W. Snyder, Albert B. Stauffer, and Clair A. Nowling initiated a literature distribution program and began advocating for the development of the Adventist Gospel. Among the inhabitants an appeal to the Adventist message surfaced all around the continent.” (Seventh-Day Adventist Education.CIRCLE, 2016, circle.adventist.org/services/info/?topic=adventist_ed.)

As Hispanic Adventist converts continued to grow, the evangelistic work expanded to Florida, now the headquarters of the Inter-American Division, a sub-entity of the denomination’s General Conference that oversees the church’s work in Central America and the Caribbean. The division relocated from Havana, Cuba, to Miami, Florida, in April 1945.

Vazquez states: “While the change was aimed to take advantage of better communications and air transportation to all the Inter-American Division countries, it led to the beginnings of the Hispanic work in Florida” (308).

The Hispanic presence in Florida has become more pronounced in recent history. Vazquez shares that “between 1959 and 1962, over 215,000 Cubans fleeing the Castro regime found shelter in the United States. The second wave of immigration, which arrived in 1980 between April and September, brought more than 125,000 Cubans to the States. By the 1980s, 340,000 Cubans were living in South Florida in the Miami area. There were some Adventists among those leaving Cuba who considered the Spanish-speaking congregations in Miami to be a refuge in the new world.” (307).

The U.S Census.gov website shows that by March 1993 the Hispanic population in the U.S was 22.8 million, 8.9 percent of the total population. By 2018, the number, provided by the Pew Research Center, had grown to 60 million, showing the ten top metropolitan areas above the million in such places as Florida, California, Texas, New York and Illinois.

In their make-up, big Hispanic/Latino families can be very dynamic and diverse. These family members include “old country” elderly grandparents who do not speak English and who have not assimilated into the culture of the United States; bilingual, bicultural, educated, and professional middle-aged parents as well as young children who speak only English and are completely assimilated into the new community.

These dynamics and the diversity among the Hispanic diaspora in the United States contribute to the generational divide within the SDA church in North America.

https://www.timetoast.com/timelines/2475479

Age demographics in the NAD from 1980 to 2018

Image credits: BRO.vector/Shutterstock

In the past 15 years, the North American Division (NAD) of Seventh-day Adventists (SDA) has been experiencing a shift in generational demographics. The Baby Boomer generation surpassed senior generations as the NAD’s largest age group in 2013, according to a General Conference (GC) survey reporting age demographics of SDA members in North America.

Members from senior generations — those born before the year 1946 — are declining in numbers due to increasing age. The percentage of members belonging to the Millennial generation is also decreasing in the NAD. Generation X and younger generations — those born after 1994 — fluctuate in membership percentages.

According to Monte Sahlin, vice president for Creative Ministries of the Columbia Union Conference of the SDA denomination, fluctuation could be due to survey method differences between the GC and the NAD. 

These results differ from the NAD’s 1980, 1989 and 1996 demographics. During that time period, members from the Greatest Generation, also known as the World War II generation, started declining in membership percentage, and the Silent Generation, the generation between the Greatest Generation and the Baby Boomers, fluctuated in percentage. However, the combined percentage of the World War II and the Silent generations was still greater than the Baby Boomers’ increasing numbers. Along with the Baby Boomers, Gen Xers increased in percentage each year. Data was not gathered for Millennials and younger generations during that time, as most members from those generations were not born yet.

I created a timeline of the NAD’s generational demographics from 1980 to 2018. The 2008 and 2018 NAD survey percentages and the 2013 GC survey percentages were provided in a presentation by Sahlin to our Interactive Journalism class. The 1980, 1989 and 1996 percentages were obtained from Sahlin’s 1998 report, “Trends, Attitudes and Opinions in the Seventh-day Adventist Church in North America.”

Click the image below to view full details of the timeline. The timeline is interactive, so make sure to click each tab for more information.

A Brief Glimpse of Prophecy

By Sam Oliveira

Let’s take a quick look at some events that occurred throughout history that have led the Seventh-day Adventist denomination to where it is today. You will see on the timeline different events outlined throughout Adventist history showing how prophecy was very prevalent and at the forefront. To create this timeline of events, I researched different publications. Most of the information was found in the book Seeking a Sanctuary

The first event is dating back to 1844. On October 22 of that year, followers of William  Miller, founder of the  Advent movement,  were certain that Jesus was coming back that day. But when Christ didn’t show up, it led to what is known as The Great Disappointment.

In 1851, J.N. Andrews, a Adventist minister, wrote an article for the Adventist Review suggesting that America was not divinely favored, but rather the second, or two-horned beast that had risen from earth. Only three years later, J.N. Loughborough, an Adventist minister, in an article about the two-horned beast, referred to the earlier Sunday mail campaign as an example of the ease with which America could be coerced into enacting the Sunday law, which is a law that Adventist believe will be enacted shortly before Jesus’ Second Coming.

The Sunday law, as described by Adventist theologians, is meant to have all organized religions worship on Sunday, which goes against  the Fourth Commandment requiring the  observance of the seventh-day Sabbath as outlined in Exodus 20:8-12. 

Then, in 1888, a book titled, The Great Controversy, was published. Written by Ellen G. White the denomination’s beloved prophetess and one of its co-founders, the book laid out end-time events in the context of the war between God and Satan. 

All of the events that happened after the publishing of White’s book really caused Adventists to look at prophecy and eschatology a bit differently. They suddenly became very intrigued about political occurrences and natural disasters. A lot of what White mentioned in the book was occurring before their eyes. One of the major events that White writes about in the book correlated was the 9/11 terrorist attack on U.S. soil. 

Malcolm Bull and Keith Lockhard make it clear in Seeking a Sanctuary that the wave of eschatology still takes Adventists by storm. However, the focus on prophecy does not seem to be as prevalent among younger Adventists as it among older ones.

So, what changed? Did we suddenly get tired of reading about it? Or did we dive in too deep and create a big stir only to be disappointed when some aspects of prophecy didn’t seem to materialize? 

Next blog post, I will interview a fellow Millennial on his perspective of growing up with prophecy. We will uncover together how his upbringing was and how it may or may not have changed his views today.

Historical Timeline with Prophecy in the SDA Church.

A Millennial’s Perspective

Photo courtesy of Jonathan Shephard

By Sam Oliveira

When it comes to prophesy, some might think of the mysterious beastly creatures mentioned in Revelations with many eyes. We might also envision the in-depth end times depictions we have been taught since childhood. 

This week, I had the privilege of interviewing my boyfriend Jonathan Shephard on how he grew up in the Adventist church and what prophecy meant to him then and now. 

 “My situation is a bit unique because my dad, who doesn’t like having silence in the house, would have the late C.D. Brooks pastor [playing] in the background…and that’s really where I started listening to some sermons because he did a lot of [them] about end-time events,” stated Jonathan. 

Throughout his childhood, he was surrounded by this constant end time knowledge that he had no idea what it meant. 

“I started actually listening when I was about 5 or 6 years old, but I started interpreting, and finally getting it in my head around [when] I was 14 years old,” he continued.

Having to constantly listen to end-time sermons from such a young age instilled immediate fear into him. He felt that he wasn’t doing enough, and if it wasn’t doing enough, was he really going to be saved?

It’s interesting how when I think about the end times, my childhood also had fear instilled into the way I dealt with prophecy. I felt that if I didn’t do exactly what my parents said about Jesus or anything else regarding religion. And then I’d automatically be persecuted and not go to Heaven. I find it quite intriguing how Jonathan’s childhood experience and mine are not very far off from each other. 

“After you start gaining a relationship with Christ, it’s like, ‘Oh, yeah, I’m just a pilgrim here. I’m just passing. The fear factor gets removed when you realize that the hardest part has already been done for you,” Jonathan stated. “And I think it’s always been interesting to me [how] we’re in a rush to teach people the end times, but we’re not in a rush to teach them about God? How are you going to enjoy heaven if you don’t even know who is in heaven?”

Patrick Scriven – A different perspective

Hi! My name is Patrick and I am a senior journalism and political science major.

Both of my grandfathers have a rather significant background in ministry and Christian education. From youth pastoring to higher education, they both made consequential contributions to the Seventh-day Adventist church.

Their involvement with the church trickled down to their children. My parents attended SDA academic institutions, participated in worship services, attended church regularly, and generally knew all the intricacies of Adventism any “normal” Adventist would. Mom and Dad got married shortly after graduating college, moved into a small suburban home just outside D.C., then had my twin sister and me at the age of 26, exemplifying what seems to be the “Adventist way.” 

In the summer of 2007, however, things changed. My parents made the bold decision to embark on a two-year family journey to France. That two-year journey ended up being a 13-year sojourn that impacted my life in numerous ways.

Perhaps the most significant effect my French upbringing had on me was how I viewed religion. Although I was raised Adventist, I attended a very secular high school in a famously secular country. The only taste of Adventism I got after moving abroad was semi-frequent Friday night worship with my family, which caused me to reconsider my identity and attitudes towards religion as a whole. I developed a different perspective than that of my grandparents’ generation.

For years, I assumed the religious differences I shared with the older generation was solely due to where I was raised. This is certainly true, to an extent. But after thinking about it more carefully, I began to wonder if the reason for these differences extended beyond the place I grew up. Is it possible that different attitudes towards religion is more of a generational issue than a geographic one? For example, there are several areas — many, even — in which my views align perfectly with those of my grandparents. I also have met several friends in college who have similar opinions of Adventism as I do. Yet, those very friends were raised in a strict SDA household and attended strict SDA boarding academies. 

What is so interesting to me is that the various perspectives I have experienced are only one piece of a much larger puzzle. Attitudes towards politics, science, and artistic expression within the SDA church have been shifting in recent years. Hot-button issues like LGBTQ+ rights, climate change, and even music are increasingly polarizing topics that pit boomers against Gen X in the church, and I want to know why. Why does there seem to be a generational divide? What are its causes? And what does it mean?

How Adventists and Race Intersected in 2020

By Zach Roberts

In September of 2020, an Adventist church in Wisconsin made headlines. Not for a sign on the wall written in blood like in Daniel, but a sign on the lawn of the church written in black and red block letters. “Black Lives Matter,” it read.

The words were accompanied by a Scripture reference, Jeremiah 22:3 that says, “This is what the Lord says: Do what is just and right. Rescue from the hand of the oppressor the one who has been robbed. Do no wrong or violence to the foreigner, the fatherless or the widow, and do not shed innocent blood in this place.” 

Naturally, this church and its sign made heads turn, both on the road and across the Internet. The Seventh-day Adventist church is among the fastest growing denominations with 21.4 million members worldwide, and many members expressed strong views about the church sign.

 According to an article written for the NAD (North American Division of Adventists), Stephen Hall, the pastor of the church, received lots of differing opinions, especially concern and disagreement.  Hall believes “Black Lives Matter” to be a biblical truth. Both things, posting Black Lives Matter and then calling it a biblical truth have heavy ramifications.

Black Lives Matter seems to be quite a divisive topic these days. People in secular society are extremely divided over this issue, and those within the church are no different. 

It’s my goal, through research, interviews and other methods, to find out just how big the chasm is on racial issues in the church. I’ll also be looking at the history of the church and its dealings with racial issues and racial justice. 

How did  church members react to the Martin Luther King, Jr.-led Civil Rights movement? What about segregation? Slavery? The list goes on, and I’m planning to answer all those questions and more.

That Which is Hidden

By Josue Vega

Memory lane can be a rough road. 

I was reminded of this truth this week as I prepped for one of the most sobering interviews of my life. My friend and I are going to revisit a dark time in his life. A time when he says someone violated him physically, emotionally, and spiritually. A time when his suffering was silenced in the name of Jesus.

My heart aches at the thought of bringing back these painful times. As I seek to talk about the generational divide and how each generation handles taboo topics, the line is becoming increasingly more clear to me, even without any quantitative research.

Simply put, here I am, a member of the younger generation, seeking to shed light on some issues that the older generation tried to bury.

This is not a general condemnation of the older generation’s way of thinking. It is an observation of how taboo topics are generally handled between the two generations. Generations is also a broad term because not everyone in the older generations thinks that way.  

So, what are some of the issues that need addressing?

Let’s take a deep breath. The waters may get murky from here on out.