| A Statement on Peace |
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One of the great political and ethical
issues of our day is the question of war and peace. It is both complicated
and convoluted. Despair hovers around hears and minds, for millions expect
a nuclear holocaust without the basic hope of afterlife or eternal life.
Today there is a new situation,
unparalled in history. Human beings have developed the means of humanity's
own destruction, means that are becoming more and more "effective" and "perfected"although
these are hardly the right words. Since World War II, civilians are no longer
just occasionally or incidentally harmed; they have become the target.
Christians believe that war is the
result of sin. Since the Fall of man, strife has been a perennial fact of
human existence. "Satan delights in war. . . . It is his object to incite
nations to war against one another."The Great Controversy,
p. 589. It is a diversionary tactic to interfere with the gospel task. While
global conflict has been prevented during the past forty years, there have
been perhaps 150 wars between nations and within nations, with millions perishing
in these conflicts.
Today virtually every government
claims it is working for disarmament and peace. Often the known facts appear
to point in a different direction. Nations spend a huge portion of their
financial resources to stockpile nuclear and other war materials, sufficient
to destroy civilization as it is known today. News reports focus on the millions
of men and women and children who suffer and die in wars and civil unrest
and have to live in squalor and poverty. The arms race, with its colossal
wast of human funds and resources, is one of the most obvious obscenities
of our day.
It is therefore right and proper
for Christians to promote peace. The Seventh-day Adventist Church urges every
nation to beat its swords into plowshares" and its "spears into
pruninghooks" (Isa. 2:4). The church's Bible-based Fundamental Belief
No. 7 states that men and women were "created for the glory of God" and
were "called to love Him and one another, and to care for their environment," not
to destroy or hurt one another. Christ Himself said, "Blessed are the
peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God" (Matt. 5:9)
While peace cannot be found in official
church pronouncements, the authentic Christian church is to work for peace
between the first and second advents of Christ. However, hope in the Second
Coming must not live in a social vacuum. The Adventist hope must manifest
and translate itself into deep concern for the well-being of every member
of the human family. True, Christian action today and tomorrow will not of
itself usher in the coming kingdom of peace; God alone brings this kingdom
by the return of His son.
In a world filled with hate and
struggle, a world of ideological strife and of military conflicts, Seventh-day
Adventists desire to be known as peacemakers and work for worldwide justice
and peace under Christ as the head of a new humanity.
This public statement was released
by the General Conference president, Neal C. Wilson, after consultation
with the 16 world vice presidents of the Seventh-day Adventist Church,
on June 27, 1985, at the General Conference session in New Orleans, Louisiana.
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