What We Do

We believe that God has not given up on the world and He will one day create a New Earth where love and freedom will be a reality. This vision shapes everything we do today.

Education:

Nurturing Minds for the New Earth

In the New Earth, ignorance will be no more. That’s why today, we operate the world’s largest Protestant school system with over 10,000 educational institutions serving more than 2.3 million students globally. From primary schools in African villages to universities recognized by governments worldwide, we’re not just teaching mathematics and science but nurturing the whole person mentally, physically, socially, and spiritually.

Our educational philosophy reflects our belief in God’s kingdom values. When the Dominican Republic’s Minister of Higher Education commended our university for its “invaluable contribution to educating thousands of professionals,” he recognized more than academic excellence; he acknowledged an education system that transforms communities.

In Rwanda, where the government partnered with us to expand higher education, the Prime Minister praised our “longstanding commitment to education,” noting how faith-based education advances not just knowledge but character. Our students graduate with a vision to serve others, carrying forward the values of the New Earth into their careers and communities.

Every child who learns to read in our schools, every nurse who graduates from our universities, every farmer trained in sustainable agriculture—they’re all part of God’s plan of preparing people for the New Earth. We teach because we believe that in God’s kingdom, every mind will reach its full potential, and we’re starting that transformation today.

Healthcare:

Healing Hands Anticipating Wholeness

Humanitarian Aid:

Love Made Visible

In the New Earth, no one will hunger or thirst, no one will lack shelter or safety. This promise motivates our global humanitarian ministries, through ADRA (Adventist Development and Relief Agency) and locally through ACS (Adventist Community Services). Together, they form a comprehensive network of compassion, anticipating God’s kingdom by meeting human needs with dignity and love.

ADRA, reaching into 120+ countries with United Nations (UN) consultative status, helped 13 million people in 2023 alone. Each food package delivered, each well dug, each shelter built declares: This is what God’s kingdom looks like. UN officials call ADRA a “very trusted partner,” recognizing that our humanitarian work transcends charity, it’s kingdom-building.

While ADRA responds to international crises, like assisting over 1 million displaced families in Ukraine, ACS brings this same compassion to local neighborhoods. Operating community service centers, food pantries, and disaster response units across North America, ACS volunteers ensure that the New Earth’s abundance is shared right in our own communities. When tornadoes strike, when families face unemployment, when seniors need companionship, ACS is there.

This dual approach creates powerful synergy. When hurricanes hit, ACS volunteers provide immediate local relief while ADRA coordinates a larger-scale response. During the pandemic, ACS centers became neighborhood lifelines while ADRA delivered aid globally. Whether a food box is delivered by ACS volunteers to an elderly neighbor or emergency supplies are airlifted by ADRA to earthquake survivors, each act whispers the same promise: You are not forgotten.

The transformation stories are remarkable, like Natalia in Ukraine, whose bombed home was rebuilt by ADRA, or the single mother in Atlanta receiving groceries from ACS while completing job training. Government officials praise our “compassion and professionalism,” while local mayors thank ACS volunteers for being “first responders of hope” in their communities.

Every humanitarian act, local or global, previews the New Earth, where tears will be wiped away and no one will lack any good thing. We’re not just waiting for that day but actively demonstrating God’s abundance every day.

Religious Liberty:

Freedom for the New Earth

The New Earth will be a place of perfect freedom to worship, to believe, to choose. Our century-long advocacy for religious liberty through the Public Affairs and Religious Liberty Department (PARL) and the International Religious Liberty Association (IRLA) anticipates this reality. With special consultative status at the UN, we champion freedom of conscience for all people, regardless of their faith.

When Brazilian athlete Tiago Corte de Alencar won his landmark court case to observe the Sabbath without penalty, it wasn’t just a legal victory, it was a glimpse of God’s kingdom where everyone’s conscience is respected. From filing legal briefs in Supreme Courts to advocating for imprisoned believers of all faiths, we’re building bridges of understanding that reflect the harmony of the New Earth. As one of our leaders noted, “Adventist pioneers saw in religious liberty an incontrovertible value… solidarity with the whole human family.” This isn’t just about protecting our own freedom—it’s about creating a world that mirrors heaven’s perfect liberty.

Media and Communication:

Proclaiming Hope to Every Nation

The New Earth’s reality must be announced to every corner of our world. That’s why our media ministries like Hope Channel television broadcasting in 70+ languages, Adventist World Radio reaching into closed countries, and countless digital platforms, work tirelessly to share God’s love with millions who might never enter a church.

The power of media to transform lives is undeniable. When Adventist World Radio broadcasts reached communist rebels in the Philippines, over 2,000 fighters laid down their weapons and gave their hearts to Christ through baptism, ending a 50-year conflict that politics couldn’t solve. Government officials called it “the amazing work of the Holy Spirit through Adventist World Radio.”

Our media doesn’t just preach; it teaches, heals, and transforms. During COVID-19, our “Unlocking Bible Prophecies” YouTube series drew millions of viewers seeking hope. Our radio programs have prevented suicides, brought peace to war zones, and connected isolated believers. Each broadcast is an invitation: The God who promises a New Earth is already transforming lives today.

From professional television studios to volunteer-run podcasts, our communication network ensures that no one is beyond the reach of God’s love. We broadcast because we believe everyone deserves to hear about the joy that will one day soon be our constant reality.

Community Outreach:

Being the Sermon

Digital Innovation:

Kingdom Technology

In the New Earth, distance won’t separate us from God or each other. Our digital innovations anticipate this connected future. When a YouTube evangelistic series reaches viewers in closed countries, when online health seminars prevent suicides, when digital platforms connect isolated believers—technology becomes a tool for kingdom building.

We’re pioneering virtual reality experiences that help people understand Bible truths, developing apps that make spiritual resources accessible globally, and creating online communities where faith flourishes. Our digital evangelism doesn’t replace human connection; it extends it, ensuring that geographic, political, or social barriers can’t stop God’s love from reaching seeking hearts.

The transformation is remarkable—entire underground churches formed through online ministries, refugees finding hope through digital broadcasts, young people discovering purpose through social media outreach. Each click, share, and download potentially connects someone to the reality of God’s coming kingdom.

Living the Future Today

The scope of our work may span continents, but at its heart lies a simple truth: We believe that God has not given up on the world. Each school we build anticipates a New Earth where ignorance is eliminated. Every patient healed is a preview of a kingdom free from sickness. Each person we feed, disaster survivor we aid, and freedom we protect points to God’s promise of complete restoration.

Our collaborations with governments, UN agencies, and communities globally demonstrate that this vision resonates beyond denominational boundaries. When government leaders commend our education system, UN officials praise our humanitarian efforts, and communities thank us for crime reduction, they are acknowledging glimpses of God’s kingdom breaking through.

Yet, we strive for more than mere glimpses. With schools and hospitals on every continent and humanitarian agencies prepared to act at any moment, we are constructing an infrastructure of hope. Each institution, program, and act of service conveys the message: The God who promises to make all things new is already at work and will one day bring this good work to completion.

The invitation is personal and profound. We invite you to dream and serve alongside us. Whether you’re a student learning to serve, a healthcare worker bringing healing, a volunteer feeding the hungry, or someone seeking hope, you are a vital part of God’s plan for restoration. Together, we are not just envisioning the New Earth; we are actively demonstrating its reality through love in action.

In a world marked by despair, division, and decay, the Seventh-day Adventist Church stands as a living testimony to the assurance of God’s promises. We serve, heal, teach, feed, protect, and proclaim—not to earn God’s favor, but because we have already received it and wish for everyone to experience the joy that will soon be our constant reality.

This is more than what we do; it reflects who we are. We are a people living between the “already” and the “not yet,” bringing heaven’s values into earthly neighborhoods. While we cannot establish God’s Kingdom on Earth through our efforts alone—this will come when Jesus returns—we are a movement that believes so profoundly in God’s coming reign that we anticipate it here and now, one act of love at a time.

Until that day when God makes all things new, we will continue to look forward to His kingdom in every corner of this old world, proving through each action that God has not given up on humanity. Neither have we.