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Showing content with the highest reputation on 06/22/2026 in Posts

  1. This is an email from the website and YT Advent Messenger: German Adventists Approve Full Ecumenical Membership to Protect Adventist Teachers’ Accreditation On June 2, 2026, the Adventist Press Service reported that delegates representing several congregations in Germany voted to apply for full membership in the Council of Christian Churches in Germany (ACK). The ACK is Germany’s principal ecumenical organization and is connected to the broader ecumenical movement through its relationship with the World Council of Churches. [1] The ACK brings together Roman Catholic, Orthodox, Evangelical, and other Christian churches for the purpose of promoting a “common witness and service” in society. [2] For decades, church leaders assured members that Adventist participation in the ecumenical movement was limited to observer status. That is no longer the case. In Germany, Adventists have now voted to seek full membership in an ecumenical organization. Why? Because of concerns that Adventist teachers could lose their accreditation and professional licensing. This is the very definition of a spiritual compromise. Our distinctive witness is being sacrificed on the altar of ecumenism in order to maintain participation within the educational systems of the world. The Adventist Press Service published the following report regarding the decision of the Adventist Church in Germany to pursue full membership in the ecumenical movement: If our church has to fully integrate into Rome’s ecumenical movement so that our teachers don’t lose their teaching licenses, then that is pure discrimination, something that should never exist in a free society. The church’s religious liberty department should immediately sue for discrimination. That is precisely why we have this department to protect our members from being unfairly targeted. The church in Germany should have prayed fervently about this and asked the world church to pray against this unfortunate action against our teachers. But instead, our brothers and sisters in Germany surrendered and joined the Babylonian churches as full members in search of a “common witness,” thus sacrificing the Three Angels’ Messages that call us to come out of Babylon, to keep God’s commandments, and to remain a distinct people. Our churches in Germany are responding to Rome’s call for greater Christian unity, based on Catholic social doctrine, by joining a movement that will contribute to healing the deadly wound described in Revelation 13. The crisis before us should not be over educational accreditation or professional licensing—it is a question of faithfulness to our divine mission. Throughout history, God’s people have been tested on whether they would compromise principle for convenience, acceptance, or worldly advantage. Today, the same test confronts us. Will we remain a distinct movement commissioned to proclaim the everlasting gospel, the Three Angels’ Messages, and the commandments of God, or will we merge into the growing ecumenical consensus seeking a common witness apart from present truth? As the religious world moves steadily toward greater unity, Seventh-day Adventists must resist every pressure to dilute their prophetic identity. Now is the time to stand firmly upon God’s Word, uphold the faith once delivered to the saints, and proclaim with even greater power the message that calls men and women out of Babylon and into obedience to Jesus Christ and all of His commandments. Sources [1] https://www.kirchen-in-hannover.de/kooperationen/acks/ [2] https://www.oikoumene.org/organization/council-of-christian-churches-in-germany [3] https://www.apd.info/news/2026/06/02/adventisten-in-den-k%C3%BCstennahen-bundesl%C3%A4ndern-w%C3%A4hlten-leitungsteam
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  2. Rahab

    3 word devotional

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  3. phkrause

    Alan Greenspan

    Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan dies at 100 https://apnews.com/article/greenspan-federal-reserve-death-25f435cc747df7b76d0ff40844f8933f?
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  4. phkrause

    James Burrows

    Legendary TV sitcom director James Burrows died Friday at age 85. Called the “Steven Spielberg of Sitcoms,” Burrows directed more than 1,000 episodes of “Cheers,” “Friends,” and other hit TV shows. The Los Angeles native began directing episodes of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” in 1974. He then worked on “The Bob Newhart Show,” “Taxi,” and others before cocreating “Cheers” in 1982. Burrows directed nearly 90% of the episodes, including the 1993 series finale, which became the second-most-watched finale in television history after “M*A*S*H.” (Read a case for the show’s enduring legacy.) Burrows went on to direct episodes of “Friends,” “Frasier,” “Will & Grace,” and “The Big Bang Theory,” among others. In all, he directed 75 pilot episodes that became series, winning 11 Emmy Awards. He was renowned for navigating multicamera situational comedies. Explore the enduring popularity of laugh tracks in sitcoms.
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