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New Voices to Headline at February Adventist Forum Conference in Florida

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A discussion of culture and identities — in and out of Adventism — will be the focus of the Adventist Forum Conference February 21-23 in Orlando, Florida. Headlining the event will be a new generation of Adventist scholars and musicians, plus well-known experts who have pioneered work on Adventist identity: Gerald Winslow, Edwin Hernández, Vanessa Corredera, Miguel Mendez, Nick Zork, and Aimee Leukert.

Leukert is one of the new voices in Adventism who is making a name for herself with her research on Adventist education. The assistant director for the Center for Research on K-12 Adventist Education at La Sierra University, she recently finished a research study on Adventist culture and school choice. Adventist culture was the issue she examined — not doctrine, not general religiosity, but culture. 

“I feel like the identity of American Adventist church members has really evolved over the last few decades and that the culture is shifting — which has a significant effect, of course, on a myriad of things — only one of which is school choice,” Leukert says.

Winslow, director of the Center for Christian Bioethics at Loma Linda University, will open the conference Friday night, February 21. On General Conference committees, in health care institutions, and academic discussions, Winslow has helped Adventists develop a principled approach to issues such as abortion and personhood. He has been a bridge between administrators and academics, between clinicians and patients. No one knows the ins and outs of Adventist bioethical discussions better than Gerald Winslow.

Renowned musician Nicholas Zork will lead worship music for the conference. At the Church of the Advent Hope In New York City, Zork is the minister of worship and the arts. A songwriter, music director, and teacher, he also has an MA and PhD in Theology from Fuller Theological Seminary. Zork directs the Andrews University Music and Worship Conference that he helped to start in 2004. Now an annual event, it regularly features nationally noted Christian music artists and presenters. He is also editor of Best Practices for Adventist Worship, an email newsletter published by the North American Division of the church.

Shakespearean scholar Vanessa Corredera, associate professor of English, will address the topic of otherness, drawing on her research that explores the intersection and representation of gender and class in contemporary Shakespearean adaptations and appropriations. She is currently working on a book project examining various adaptations and appropriations of Shakespeare’s Othello.

Edwin Hernández, president of AdventHealth University and the author of a book about the history of Hispanic Adventism, will discuss where identity takes us. Hernández holds a PhD in the sociology of religion from the University of Chicago. He began his career as a Chaplain at Hialeah Hospital in Miami, Florida. He then joined the sociology faculty at Andrews University. He later served as Vice President of academic affairs at Antillean Adventist University in Puerto Rico, Program Officer for The Pew Charitable Trusts, and founding Director of the Center for the Study of Latino Religion at the University of Notre Dame. Prior to joining AdventHealth University, he was a Senior Program Officer with the Doug & Maria DeVos Foundation where he led a successful multi-million-dollar urban education philanthropic initiative and community engagement strategy in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Miguel Mendez, associate pastor for spiritual development at Loma Linda University Church, will preach the Sabbath morning sermon at the conference. A native of Southern California, Mendez’s Cuban American mother and Mexican father were committed to providing an Adventist education for their son. That included attending Montemorelas Academy in Mexico to enlarge his worldview. A graduate of La Sierra University, he has pastored in Southeastern California Conference for 10 years, and is currently pursuing postgraduate students in addition to his pastoral work at Loma Linda University Church where he is known for his outstanding preaching.

The conference will be held on the campus of AdventHealth University. Registration is now open and the $150 early bird rate for the conference is available until January 30.

 

Click here to Register Now!

 

Bonnie Dwyer is editor of Spectrum.

Image credit: SpectrumMagazine.org

 

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