搜
搜索结果
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- 描述:
Dr. Leona Gliddings Running, official Andrews University headshot used later in her teaching career at the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary.
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- 创造者:
White, Ellen Gould Harmon, 1827-1915
- 学科:
Smith, Uriah, 1832-1903, Andrews, John Nevins, 1829-1883, and Smith, Harriet Newell Stevens, 1831-1910
- Source:
Center for Adventist Research
-
- Item contents:
- ... this is my body, which is broken for you; this do in remembrance of me. After the same mammer also he took the eup, when he had supped, saying, This cup i8 the New Testament in my blood: this do ye, 28 oft a8 ye drink it, in remembrance of me. For as often as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup, ye do show the Lord's death, till he come.” 1 Cor. xi, 23-26. Would you commemorate the burizl and resurrec- tion of the Saviour? You need not keep the fint day of the week. The Lord ordaited a very different, and far more appropriate memorial. % Enow ye not that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ, were baptized into his death} Therefore we are bur- ied with him by baptism into death; that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. For if we have been planted together in the like- ness of his death, wo shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection.” Rom. vi, 3-5. . “Buried with him in baptism, wherein also ye are risen with him through the faith of the operation of God, who hath raised him from the dead.” Col. ii, 12. It is true that the professed church has changed this ordinance to sprinkling, so that this divine me- morial of our Lord's resurrection is destroyed, And that they may add sin to sin, they lay hold of the Lord's Sabbath, and change it to the first day of the week, thus destroying thesacred memorial of the Crea- tor's rest, that they may have a memorial of Christ's resurrection! “The earth is also defiled under the inhabitants thereof; because they have trans yressed the laws, changed the ordinance, broken the everlast- ing covenant” When will th» professed church cease to pervert the right ways of the Lord? Not until E ee - NT Cow 7 “the inhabitants of the earth are burned, and few men left.” Isa. xxiv, 5, 6. Secoxp Ressox. The disciples meton the day of our Lord's resurrection to commemorate that event, Aid Lo Quvionr sanctioned this meeting by uniting with them, John xa, 10 If every word of this was truth, iL wowd wat Drove that the Sabbath of the Lord has been changeq, But to show the utter absurdity of this inference, list- en toa few facts, The disciples atthat time did notbe- lieve thut their Lord had been raised from the dead ; but were assembled for the purpose of eating a common meal, and to seclude themselves from the Jews. The words of Mark and of John make this clear. “He appeared in another form unto two of them, as they walked, and went into the country. And they went and told it unto the residue: neither believed they them, Afterward he appeared unto the eleven, as they sat at meat, and upbraided them with their unbelief, and hardness of heart, because they believed not them which had seen him after he was risen.” Mark xvi, 12-14. John says: “Then the same day at evening, being the first day of the week, when the doors were shut where the disciples were assembled for fear of the Jews, came Jesus and stood in the midst, and saith unto them, Peace be unto you” John xx, 19. It is a fact, therefore, that the disciples were not commemorating the resurrection of the Saviour; it is equally evident that they had not the slight- est idea of a change of the Sabbath, At the burial of the Saviour, the women who had followed him to the tomb, returned and prey spices and ointments to embalm him; the Sabbath drew on: --------------------------- 22 guarantee that every word therein contained was di- visely inspired. The tradition of the elders comes to us without a particle of such testimony, Wherefore it follows that the man who fears God will not rejoct that which he knows came froin heaven, for the sake of following that which directly contradicts it, and which by that fact is proved to have come from the great enemy of divine truth. But does the Bible contain the least intimation that what was written near the days of the apostles Is any moze sacred than what was written at a later pericd? Paul told the Thessalonian church that “the mystery of miquity,” or Romish apostasy, had already begun to work. 2 Thess, il. If Paul ‘was correet, it follows that it is far from being safe to adopt as sa- cred trnth a doctrine which is not found in the New Testament, merely because it is said to have come from some who lived near the days of the apostles, Satan was then busily engaged in nunsing in the bo- som of the early church, the viper which should ere long infect with deadly poison a great portion of the professed people of God. Did not Paul warn those with whom he parted at Ephesus, that grievous wolves were to enter among them, and that of themselves men were to arise speaking perverse things to draw away disciples after them? When any doctrine is brought to us from those who lived near the days of the apostles, it is then proper for us to inquire wheth- et this comes from those who spoke the sentiments of the holy apostles, or whether it comes from those grievous wolves who were to follow after them, and speak perverse things, Is there no way by which we can determine this question? Certainly there is an infallible test. The 23 New Testament contains the precise language of Jo- sug Christ and the apostles, Now if the fathers speak according to that worl, they speak the pre- cious truths of God. But if they speak that which makes void the word of truth, it is a very strong evi- dence that they belong to that class which Paul no- tified the church, should arise in their very midst, and speak perverse things, to draw away disciples after them, If the Holy Spirit has given us notice that false teachers were to arise in the very days of the apostles, should it not serve a8 a warning to us that things which purport to come from the successors of the apostles, may, for all that, contain the most deadly poison 4. If it were certain that the early fathers, in their zeal to improve upon the New Testament, changed the fourth commandment, it would ouly prove that they were of the number of grievous wolves that were to arise. But it by no means follows that the mys- tery of iniquity was able thus early to change times and laws. The testimony given from Storrs’ Fourth Sermon, evinces clearly that even the fathers them- selves do not now coms to us with their own words. Their testimony has been corrupted, and many shane- less forgeries are palined off astheir genuine testimony. If the reader ever looked into a Romish controver- sial work, Lio will there find the very fathers, who are so much relied upon to prove the change of the Sabbath, quoted to prove all the heresies of that anti-christian church. It follows, therefore, that one of two things must be true: either the testimony of the early fathers has been shamefully corrupted, or those so-called early fathers were wolves in sheep's clothing, SLR dat nh i --------------------------- Le not believe it had become the Sabbath why should you? And why do you grasp, as evidence that the Sabbath had been changed, asingle instance in which an evening meeting was held on Sunday, while you overlook the fact that it was the cnrtom of this sue Apostle to preach every Sabbath, not enly to the” Juws, but also tothe Gentiles? Acts xiii, 14, 42 44; xvi, 135 xvi, 23 xvid, 4. Paul broke bread on the first day of the week, and then immediately started on his long journey to Je rusalem. So that this, the strongest argument for the first day of the week, furnishes direct proof that Sun- day is not the Sabbath. Sixvn Reasox. Pan! commanded the church at Corinth to take up a public collection on the first day of the week: therefore it follows that this must have been their day of public worship, and consequently is the Christian Sablath, 1 Cor. xvi, 2. We answer, it is a remarkable fact that Paul en- joins exactly the reverse of a public collection. He does not say, Place your alms in the public treasury, on the first day of the week; but he says,“ Upon the first day of the week let every one of you lay by him in store.” J. W. Morton in his # Vindication of the true Sab- bath,” pages 51, 52, snys:— «The Apostle simply orders, that each one of the Corinthian brethren should lay up at home some por- tion of lis weekly gains on the fimt day of the week. The whole question turns upon the meaning of the expression, ‘by him? and 1 marvel greatly how you can imagine, that it means ‘in the collection box of the congregation! Greenfield, in his Lexicon, trane- lates the Greek term, “hy one's self, 4. caf home.’ 13 Two Latin versions, the Vulgate and that of Castel- Yio, render it, ‘apud sg) with one's self, at home. Three French translations, those of Martin, Osterwald, and De Sacer, ‘chez 20k at Lis own house, at home. The German of Luther, * bed sich selbst) by himself, at ome. The Dutch, ‘hy hemselven, same as the Gorman, Tho Italian of Diodati, * appresso di se) in his own presence, ut home. The Spanish of Felipa Heio, ¢ en 8 casa, in his own house. The Portu- cues of Ferreira, © para issn, with himself, The Swedish, ‘nar sig stelf) near himself 1 know not how much this list of authorities might be swelled, {or 1 have not examined one translation that differs from those quoted above.” Phe text, therefore, docs not prove that the Corin- thin church was assembled for publie worship on that day; but, on the contrary, it does prove that each must be at his own home, where he could examine his worldly affair and lay by himeell in efore 0s God had prospered him. If each one should thus from week to week collect of his earnings, when the Apostte should come, their bounty would be ready, and each would be able to present to him what they hal gathered. Bo that if the first-day Sabbath has ao better foundation than the inference drawn from ¢his text, it truly reste upon sliding sand. SevEsTH REAsox. John was in the Spirit on the Lord's day, which was the fist day of the week Rev, 1, 10. - » This is the kind of reasoning which the advoeates of Sunday are invariably obliged to adopt. But we ask, What right have they fo assume the very point which they ought to prove! This text, it is true, furnishes direc, proof that there is a day in the gos- --------------------------- o 4 vance of the first day of the week, which we will kere notice, Firs Reason. Redemptionis grester than crea tion; therefore we onght to keep the day of Christ's resurtection, instead of the ancient Sabbath of the Lord. Where has God said this? BSunday-keepers aro compelled to admit that he never did say it. What right, then, has any man to make such an assertion, and then to base the change of the Sabbath upon it? But suppose redemption is greater than creation, who knows that we vnght to keep the first day of the week on that account? God never required men to keep any day as the memorial of redemption. But if it were duty to observe one day of the week for this reason, mest certainly the crucifixion-day pre- sents the strongest claims, It is not said that wo have redemption through Christ's resnrrection; but it 18 ead that we have redemption through the shed- ding of his blood. “And they sung a néw song, saying, Thou art worthy to take the book, and to open the seals thereof; for thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood, out of every kin- dred, and tongue, and people, and nation.” Hew. v, 9. “In whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sing, according to the riches of his grace,” Eph. i, 7; Col. i, 14; Heb. ix, 12,15. Then redemption is through the death of the Lord Jesus; consequently, the day on which he shed his recious blood to redeem us, and said “ It is finished,” John xix, 30,] is the day that should be kept asthe memorial of redemption, if any should be observed for that purpose. Nor can it be plead that the resurrection-day is the most remarkable day in the history of redempticn, Tt needs but a word to prove that in this respect it is far exceeded by the day of the crucifixion. Which is the most remarkablo event, the act of Jehovah in giving his beloved and only Son to die for a race of rebels, or the act of that Father in raising that belov- ed Son from the dead? There is only one answer that ean be given: it was not remarkable that God should raise his Son from the dead: but the act of the Fath- er in giving his Son to die for sinners, was a spectacle of redeeming love on which the Universe might gaze and adore the wondrous love of God to all eternity. Who can wonder that the sun was veiled jn darkness, andl that all nature trembled at the sight! The eru- cifixion-day, therefore, has far greater claims than the day of the resurrection. God has not enjoined the observance of either; and is it not a fearful act to make void the commandments of God by that wis- dom which is folly in his sight. 1 Cor. J, 19, 20. But if we would commemorate redemption, there is 110 necessity of robbing the Lord's Rest-day of its holiness in order to do it. When truth takes from us our error, it always Las something better to take their place. So the false memorial of redemption being taken out of the way, the Word presents in its stend those which are true. God has provided us with memorials, bearing his own signature; and these we may observe with the blessing of Heaven. Would you commemorate the death of our Lord? You need not keep the day of his crucifixion. The Bible tells you how to do it. “For I have received of the Lord, that which alko I delivered unto you, that the Lord Jesus the same night in which he was betrayed, took bread; and when he had given thanks he brake it, and said, Take eat; --------------------------- SEVENTIL PART OF TIME THEOKY Shown to be False by the Following from J. W. Mortow's Vindication of the True Sabbath. Tue only object, direct or indirect, of this [the fourth] commandment, is ¥ the day.” What are wea commanded to remember? The day.” What are we required to keep holy? “The day.” What did the Lord bless and hallow? “The dag.” In what are wo forbidden to work? In “the day.” Now let us inquire — 1. What day? Not the day of Adam's fal: nor the day Noah went into the ark; nor the day of the overthrow of Sodom ; nor the day of the Exodus; nor the day of the Provocation; nor the day of the removal of the ark; nor the day of Christ's birth: nor the day of his crucifixion; nor the day of his resurrection; nor the day of his ascension; nor the day of judgment. It may be, and certainly is prop- or, that we should remember all these: but we ar not told to do so in this commandment. Neither is it some one day of the week, but no one in particu- lar; for how could we remember “he day,” that is no day in particular i—how could we keep holy “the day” that has not been specified I—and how could we say that God had blessed and hallowed © the day,” that was no one day more than another? What day, then! God says, Remember fhe Sabbath-day, or the day of the Sabbath; Keep holy the day of the Sabbath; The Lord blessed and hallowed the day of the Subbath. He also says, The seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God; iu ¢¢ thou shalt not do any work. This day, therefore, is “the sav- enth day,” or “ the day of the Sabbath.” 2. What Sabbath? Not “a Sabbath,” or any Sabbath that man may invent, or that God may here- after keep; for that would be “some Sabbath” but no one in particular. Not some institution yet un- determined, that God may require man to observe weekly; for the command is not, “ Remember the Sabbath institution,” but, * Remember the day of the Sabbath;” not, © Keep holy the Sabbath institution,” but, Keep holy the day of the Sabbath.” The Lord did not bless and hallow “the Sabbath institution,” but “the day of the Sabbath.” We are not forbid- den to do work in “the Sabbath institution” but in “the seventh day. In fact, the phrase, “the Sab- bath,” in this commandment, means neither more nor less than “the rest” It is uot here the name of any institution at all, though it is often thus used in oth- er parts of the Bible. ~ Hence, this Sabbath is 4 the Sabbath or rest of the Lord thy God.” 3. Which day of the week is “the day of the Sabbath?” No other than that day on which the Lord rested; for the command refers to God's Sab- bath, On which day of the week did he rest? “And lhe rested on the seventh day” Gen. ij, 2. Therefore, “ the day of the Sabbath” is the same day of the week on which God rested from the work of creation; and as he rested on the seventh day of the first week, and on no other, the seventh and no other day of every week must be the only « day of the Sabbath.” Let it be particularly observed, that God does not --------------------------- In substituting the vague and indefinite expres. sion, “one day in seven,” for the definite and unequiv- ocal terms, “ the Sabbath-day,” and “ the seventh day,” you have as truly taken “away from the words of the prophecy of this book,” as if you had blotted the fourth commandment from the Decalogue ; while your leading object has been to make way for the in- troduction of a new command that, for aught the Seriptures teach, it never entered into the heart of the Almighty to put into his law. 2. God never blessed “one day in seven,” with- out blessing a particular day. He either blessed some definite object, or nothing. You may say, in- deed, without falsehood, that God blessed “one day in seven” but if you mean that this act of blessing did not terminate on any particular day, you ought to know, that yon are asserting what is naturally 1m- possible. As well might you say of a band of rob- bers, that they had killed “one man in seven,” while in reality they had killed no man in particular. No, brethren, yourselves know very well, that God had not blessed and sanctified any day but the seventh of the seven, prior to the giving of the written law. You know, that if God blessed any day of the week at all, it waa a definite day, distinet, from all the oth- er days of the week. But this commandment says, that “the Lord blessed the Sabbath-day.” There- fore the Sabbath-day must be a particular day of the week, Therefore “the Sabbath-day” is not “ome day in seven,” or an indefinite seventh part of time. Therefore it is not “one day in seven” that we ar required to remember, and keep holy, and in which we aro forbidden to do any work; but “ the seventh day” of the week, which was then, is now, and will 81 be till the end of time, “the day of the Sabbath” of the Lord our God. 3. No day of the week but the seventh was ever called “the day of the Sabbath,” either by God or man, till lmg since the death of the last inspired writer. Search both Testaments through and through, and you will find no other day called “fhe Sabbath,” or even “« Sabbatl,” except the ceremo- nial Sabbaths, with which, of course, we have noth- ing to do in this controversy. And long after the close of the canon of inspiration, the seventh day, and no other, was still called “the Sabbath” If you can prove that any one man, among the millions of Adam's children, from the beginning of the world till the rise of Antichrist, ever called the first day of the week “the Sabbath you will shed a light upon this controversy, for which a host of able wri- ters have searched in vain. But, farther; the fist day of the week was not observed by any of the children of men, as a Sa?- bath, for hundred years after the birth of Christ. Do you ask proof! I refer you to Theo- dore de Beza, who plainly saya so. If you are not satisfied with the witness, will you have the good- ness to prove the affirmative of the proposition f I infer, therefore, that * the day of the Sabbath” or “the Sabbath-day,” is the proper name of the seventh day of the week, as much so as “the day of Saturn;” and that to attach this Proper name row to some other day of the week, and to affirm that God meant that other day, a8 much as he did the seventh, when he wrote the law on tables of stone, is #8 unreasonable as it is impious. If you say, that when God speaks of % the Sabbath. ...
- 创造者:
Andrews, John Nevins, 1829-1883
- 学科:
Sabbath
- Source:
Center for Adventist Research
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- Part of:
Center for Adventist Research Photograph Collection
- Date:
1880
- 学科:
Prescott, William Warren, 1855-1944, Conradi, Charles Louis Richard, 1854-1939, Seventh-day Adventists -- Michigan, and Seventh-day Adventist Campmeetings
- Source:
Center for Adventist Research
- 描述:
Battle Creek, Michigan camp meeting, 1880s. Written on back:
Holsen, Hertzenberger, Waggoner, Prescott.
.
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- Part of:
Center for Adventist Research Photograph Collection
- Date:
1868
- 学科:
Seventh-day Adventists -- Michigan and Seventh-day Adventist Campmeetings
- Source:
Center for Adventist Research
- 描述:
Book sale tent at the Michigan Conference camp meeting, perhaps in the 1930s.
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- 创造者:
Berdick
- Part of:
Center for Adventist Research Photograph Collection
- Date:
1922
- 学科:
Seventh-day Adventist Education, Andrews University (Berrien Springs, MI), Seventh-day Adventists -- Michigan, and Seventh-day Adventist Campmeetings
- Source:
Center for Adventist Research
- 描述:
West Michigan Conference camp meeting held in Berrien Springs, 1922.
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- Part of:
Center for Adventist Research Photograph Collection
- Date:
1966
- 学科:
Seventh-day Adventists -- California
- Source:
Center for Adventist Research
- 描述:
Ministers of Southeastern California Conference of Seventh-day Adventist enrolled in Religious Liberty Seminar, along with instructors, and guest lectures. Jan 23-28, 1966 in front of Linda Hall, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda California.
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- Part of:
Center for Adventist Research Photograph Collection
- Date:
1905
- 学科:
Seventh-day Adventist Campmeetings and Seventh-day Adventists -- Michigan
- Source:
Center for Adventist Research
- 描述:
East Michigan Conference camp meeting, 1905.
-
- Item contents:
- ... President: Lori Curtis President-elect: Katharine Van Arsdale Past President: Per Lisle Secretary: Heather Rodriguez-James (2017-2019) Interim Treasurer: Lori Curtis ASDAL Action Editor: Neal Smith (2018-2020) David Trim - Chair Ashlee Chism Roy Kline Rowena Moore Reiko Davis Katharine Van Arsdale - President-elect, Chair Ashlee Chism - On-site Coordinator Lori Curtis - ASDAL Interim Treasurer --------------------------- Welcome to the 39th Annual Conference of the Association of Seventh-day Adventist Librarians. | know that we all enjoy the opportunity the ASDAL conferences afford us to come together and interact with colleagues from both near and far. | hope that in addition to catching up with colleagues and friends, we all engage with the program, the presenters, the topic. | hope we all take something away from this conference that will help make us better librarians and archivists, something that will expand our professional horizons while bringing us closer to our ASDAL colleagues. Katharine Van Arsdale, Ashlee Chism, and others have planned a stellar conference for us. It has been exciting watching these younger colleagues take on new roles, reaching for the stars. Our future is in good hands! At the end of this conference, after a week of professional, personal, and spiritual enrichment, while it is always bittersweet to say goodbye, | know that | can with confidence pass on the torch of leadership to Katy and the rest of the incoming ASDAL officers. --------------------------- 1:00-4:00pm 4:00-8:00pm 7:30-92:00am 8:00-8:20am 8:20-8:45am 8:45-9:00am This is a practical, hands-on workshop that demonstrates methods and reasoning behind archival processing. The workshop is hosted by the Archives & Records Management Section. It is free to attend. ASDAL and GC folks will warmly greet you with light refreshments at the registration table in the hotel. This is where you pick up your conference name tag and bag or pay for any extra banquet or tour tickets. Guest speaker: GC Secretary G.T. Ng General Conference hosts and ASDAL executives welcome you to the 39th annual ASDAL Conference. ARS Chair Jim Ford introduces the morning program. --------------------------- 9:00-9:45am 9:45-10:00am 10:00-10:30am 10:30-11:00am 11:00-Noon Benjamin Philip Hoffman was an Adventist missionary to Japan, a professor, a librarian, and an Office of Naval Intelligence agent during World War Il. in this presentation, Walla Walla history professor Dr. Hilary Dickerson discusses how she used archives, special collections, and libraries to trace his life in Japan and the United States. Kenrie Hylton gives a walkthrough of a model workflow for digitizing records, based on ASTR's current digitization work. He will overview the process and steps involved from accepting records to having them ultimately securely stored in digital form. Accreditation is a quality assurance process through which a record-keeping facility of the Seventh-day Adventist Church can demonstrate that it meets the minimum record-keeping standards and guidelines recommended by the Office of Archives, Statistics and Research (ASTR). Director Dr. David Trim explains the accreditation process and why it matters. --------------------------- Noon-1:00pm 1:00-3:30pm 1:00-1:15pm 1:15-2:00pm See orange tabbed pages for Records Management programming offered at this time. Scientific research builds on past work. Scientists should and do reference previous studies in their reports of present research. But do they quote the literature accurately? In general, do cited articles support the propositions for which they are cited? Multiple studies have considered this question of quotation accuracy in medical literature, but quotation accuracy has not been rarely discussed in other disciplines. AdventHealth University librarian Neal Smith will report his initial findings in a study of quotation accuracy for top journals in multidisciplinary sciences (Nature, Science, Nature Communications, Science Advances, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and National Science Review), focusing on amount and nature of any errors. He will also discuss the implications for librarians and begin a conversation about how we can improve our patrons’ use of scientific literature. --------------------------- 2:00-2:45pm 2:45-3:00pm 3:00-3:30pm Numerous studies in large universities have repeatedly found that librarians are rarely students’ first choice of information assistance (Thomas, Tewell, & Wilson 2017; Van Kampen-Breit and Cooke, 2015; Miller & Murillo 2012). In such institutions, structures are not necessarily in place to facilitate librarian-student contact (Miller and Murillo, 2012). Consequently, students are largely unaware of librarians’ expertise to support their academic success and less likely to approach them. (Bickley and Corrall, 2011). Small universities provide greater opportunity for librarian- student contact. This changes the dynamic of interaction. Based on three years of survey data, Burman University librarian Sheila Clark and her co-authors propose the following sequence as a chain of events that shift perception of the librarian and eventually results in greater IL competence and academic success for students: librarian-student interaction influences the perception of librarians as competent, which in turn increases the students’ use of library resources and services. ASDAL President Lori Curtis leads the first business session of the 39th annual ASDAL conference. --------------------------- 1:00-2:30pm 2:30-2:45pm 2:45-3:30pm 3:30pm ARMS Workshop, Round Il: "What do | do with this box of stuff?" Takoma Fark Room This is a practical, hands-on workshop that demonstrates methods and reasoning behind archival processing. The workshop is hosted by the Archives & Records Management Section chair, Ashlee Chism. It is free to attend. BREAK Laserfiche demonstration Takoma Park Room Kenrie Hylton, Digital Records Manager for ASTR, gives an overview of the Laserfiche platform and a demonstration of the core features as it relates to electronic records management. End of concurrent programming Return to General Conference meeting room 21-13-14 --------------------------- MONDAY - PIII), TUESDAY 3:30-4:15pm 4:15-5:00pm 5:00-7:00pm 7:00-10:00pm TUESDAY Retention Schedules Goneral Conference meeting room 211314 Local ARMA (Association of Records Managers and Administrators) International member Deborah Armentrout shares perspectives on creating and following retention schedules. The Path to Becoming a Records Manager ASTR's Assistant Director, Roy Kline, talks about his journey from a business background to records management. He shares how he learned on the job and what surprising skills have proved useful. DINNER On yous own -restaurants are available near the Courtyard Marriott SDAPI Meeting Courtyard Marriott Meeting Room The meeting will be chaired by Jim Ford. June 25, 2019 8:00-8:30am 8:30-8:45am 8:45-9:00am Worship General Conference meeting room 21-13-14 Guest speaker: Dr. David Trim Announcements Archives & Records Management Section Section Chair Ashlee Chism introduces this year's ARMS programming. --------------------------- 9:00-92:30am 9:30-10:00am 10:00-10:15am 10:15-10:30am 10:30-11:30am 11:30-Noon Noon-1:00pm 1:00-1:15pm Accession records play an invaluable role in tracking ownership and giving context to archival records. But what about library donations? And why do we need any records at all? Katharine Van Arsdale proposes some answers based on experiences in the Pacific Union College archives. Dr. Eric Anderson is both a historian and the director of Pacific Union College's Walter C. Utt Center for Adventist Research. How does he reconcile those two roles and get his hands dirty in the archives on a daily basis? Find out here. Kenrie Hylton facilitates a round table discussion of Records Managers problem-solving and brainstorming, with input from librarians, archivists, historians, and others. --------------------------- 1:15-2:00pm 2:00-2:45pm The Judith Thomas Library recently established the African Adventist Heritage Museum to help future generations understand and appreciate their church history and culture, and take pride in the achievements of their forbearers. The museum aims to document, educate, inspire, and motivate its audience. Adventist University of Africa librarian Norah Mauti tells the story of starting the museum. She shares the aims behind its mission and expresses hopes for the museum's future. Through a survey of existing literature, interviews with museum founders, and reference to church writings, Mauti's presentation shows the value of collecting and preserving the past history of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Africa. At Andrews University, Marianne Kordas wears many hats--music librarian, archivist, scholar. This presentation explores a multi-year project that allowed Kordas to engage all of her skills. Towards the end of her life, twentieth-century American composer, pianist, and pedagogue Dr. Blythe Owen gifted two sets of materials fo Andrews University. Now housed in the Center for Adventist Research, over the years Collection 186 has grown to include many letters, books, musical scores, and musical manuscripts of various provenances related to Owen and her work. --------------------------- 2:00-2:45pm 2:45-3:00pm 3:00-4:00pm 4:00-5:00pm 5:00-7:00pm 7:00-10:00pm (continued) This presentation examines the history of the collection and its processing, the significance of Owen's life and documentary legacy, and some of the unorthodox processing choices made to better facilitate research in the collection (as well as some of the archivist's initial mistakes). Far from being a static collection of musty papers, Collection 186 has proven a rich locus for learning about the dynamic interaction between being both the librarian/archivist processing a collection, and the scholar conducting musicological research in it. The Adventist Digital Library team has spent the last eighteen months working on critical platform enhancements. Eric Koester's presentation features a demonstration of new functionality and a discussion of potential future enhancements. Please bring your questions, comments, and ideas to share. The meeting will be chaired by Paulette Johnson. --------------------------- WEDNESDAY 8:00am 9:00-Noon Noon-1:00pm 1:00-4:00pm 4:00-4:30pm 4:30-6:00pm 6:00-7:30pm June 26, 2019 Bus departs the hotel Courtyard Marrictt parking lot Tour of the Library of Congress Capitol Hill This tour goes behind-the-scenes in the Library of Congress Jefferson Building and includes a visit to the LOC digitization center. LUNCH LOC Cafeteria or NMA museum cafeteria Explore the National Mall and Smithsonians National Mall Enjoy three hours of free time to visit the historic sites and museums along the National Mall at your leisure. Return to the bus Location to he announced The bus departs for Union Station at 4:30. Dinner at Union Station 50 Massachusetts Ave NE, Waoshingron, DC 26002 Grab dinner at historic Union Station. The bus departs for Maryland at 6:00; please board before 6:00. Bus returns to the hotel Pe. ; . : s Courtyard Marrictr parking fot The bus arrives back at the hotel around 7:30. --------------------------- 8:15-8:45am 8:45-9:00am 9:00-9:45am 9:45-10:00am Guest speaker: Rowena Moore Shane MacDonald is Special Collections Archivist at the American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives (ACUA), in northwest Washington, D.C. In his keynote address to ASDAL, MacDonald will speak to the conference theme of "Librarians Outside Libraries." The Catholic University of America Archives faces many challenges in balancing its limited resources with its vast array of patrons - from campus administrators and students to visiting researchers and religious orders. With backgrounds in history, education, and marketing, the staff began to experiment both in and outside the reading room with how to proactively use their collections and skills as teaching tools. Bringing a pedagogical approach to reference, outreach, and administrative operations, MacDonald found new ways to engage and learn from stakeholders and patrons, while also incorporating his professional experiences from outside the archives. During the break, enjoy a slideshow looking back on a decade of D. Glenn Hilts scholarship recipients. --------------------------- 10:00-10:30am 10:30-11:00am 11:00-11:30am As part of the incoming generation of new information professionals, Adaliz Cruz addresses the issue of succession in the field of Adventist librarianship. Cruz describes the personal journey that led her to choose librarianship as a career, and she offers suggestions on how to find, engage, and support future prospective Library and Information professionals. Allison Fox reflects on what she has learned while managing students. She ponders why library school does little to prepare librarians to train workers or wrangle schedules. Talking points also include the art of diplomacy (i.e., when to comfort and when to kick it up a notch) and dealing with payroll. Neal Smith presents a case study of his experience becoming an embedded librarian in the Center for Population Health Research at AdventHealth University. Neal tells how he developed the relationship with the center, what roles he has played, and the lessons he has learned. He also shares his plans for the Center's future and with other groups on the AdventHealth University campus. --------------------------- 11:30-Noon Noon-1:00pm 1:00-1:30pm The Weimar Institute Library exists to support the mission of the Institute: to develop leaders in comprehensive health evangelism. Toward this end the Library provides resources for research, assistance with research, and a space for quiet study and reflection. Joel Lutes will report on his work in the Weimar Institute Library, touching on the role the library played in Weimar's recent accreditation through the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) Senior College and University Commission. Within the North American Division more than half of PreK-12 schools will have no more than three teachers on their staff. Teacher training includes how to teach Physical Education, Music, and Art, but despite evidence supporting the importance of libraries to student outcomes, no courses covering library or school media center skills are offered. Christy Scott's presentation presents supporting evidence for library training for Education students. She shares ways that building liaison relationships with Education Faculty at Walla Walla University has opened opportunities within existing coursework, and she suggests possibilities for future research. --------------------------- THURSDAY Or), continued 1:45-2:45pm 2:45-3:15pm 3:15-3:30pm 3:30-4:15pm 4:15-5:15pm 6:00-9:00pm Break Out Sessions Meeting locations will be announced. Choose from the following: Archives & Special Collections; Directors; Reference and Public Services; Technical Services. Break Out Sessions Report General Conference Meeting Koom 2) 13.14 Panel Discussion: “What Makes a Librarian Adventist?” Facilitator: Sabrina Riley - The Family Archivist, VA Panel Members: Johanna Bjork - Lewis-Clark State College, ID Dustin Kelley - North Park University, IL Joel Lutes - Information Services Consultant, CA Kendra Perry - Hagerstown Community College, MD ASDAL Business Session ll Banquet Pant oT Lf . Ta 4 ; Ceneral Centerence Cofeteria --------------------------- Talea Anderson's poster presents outcomes from the Affordable Learning Project—an effort funded by a Student Success Seed Grant at Washington State University (WSU) that aimed to increase use of low- to zero-cost course materials in university courses. As part of the project, five WSU faculty members received funds to revise their courses in summer 2017 to include low-cost resources for instruction in fall 2017. All five opted to adopt or create open educational resources (OER), or educational materials that are openly licensed and freely available to students. Following instruction in the fall, project leads documented cost savings for students and learning outcomes in the affected courses, including grades and rates of withdrawal. The poster will present these outcomes as a means of assessing the effectiveness of directing university funding toward creation and adaption of OER. Talea Anderson currently works as a Scholarly Communication Librarian at Washington State University (WSU). In this capacity, she pursues a variety of projects that endeavor to increase access to university research. These include managing the university's institutional repository, coordinating a small-grants project to increase use of open educational resources (OER), and encouraging faculty and students to use tools such as ORCID identifiers. --------------------------- Shane MacDonald serves as the Special Collections Archivist at the American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives (ACUA). He attended Oberlin College and Catholic University, where he earned a BA in History and Politics and a MA in History, respectively. He is currently a doctoral candidate in History at Catholic University. He began his archival career volunteering at the Stuhr Museum of the Prairie Pioneer archives in Grand Island, Nebraska, and later, the American Red Cross National headquarters archives in Washington, D.C. He has been with the ACUA since 2012, serving first as a student employee and then staff member. Eric Anderson holds a Ph.D. in history from the University of Chicago. In addition to 30 years of teaching at PUC and nine years of administration at Southwestern Adventist University, he has been a Fulbright lecturer in Greece and a program officer at the National Endowment for the Humanities. He has written on a variety of historical topics, including Reconstruction in North Carolina, philanthropic support of black education, and Progressive Era vice reform. His most recent publication is a chapter in the Oxford University Press study of Ellen Harmon White: American Prophet. He and his wife, Loretta, currently reside in Angwin, California. --------------------------- Deborah Armentrout, a Certified Records Manager (CRM), has been working in records and information management for over 25 years. Deborah is a founding member of the CRM /Federal Specialist sub- Committee which developed the qualifications, test standards, and outreach for this additional CRM designation. As a member of ARMA International for over 20 years, she has served on the ARMA Metro Maryland Board as President, Vice President, Education Director, Institute of Certified Records Managers (ICRM) Liaison, Newsletter Editor and is currently Communications Director. Employed with the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), she is Director of Corporate Records Management and serves as the Agency Records Officer. When not consumed with records and information management, she relaxes with arts and crafts, gardens (weeds), and occasionally rides her Harley-Davidson motorcycle. Ashlee Chism earned a BA in English from Southern Adventist University and a Master of Science in Information, specializing in Archives and Records Management, from the University of Michigan. Previously, she was a student librarian at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. She has written several articles and is a member of the Society of American Archivists and ARMA International. --------------------------- Sheila is the Librarian at Burman University, a post she has held for ten years. Previously she was the Access Librarian at Walla Walla University and then the assistant librarian at Burman. Working in a small institution, she has the opportunity fill a variety of roles in addition to administration. She has been a teacher of information literacy throughout her career and this is her research interest. My life can basically be summed up in three small phrases: books, sheet music, and a cup of coffee. A future music reference librarian from Puerto Rico, | love libraries, museums, and coffee shop hopping (local of course). My curls are my crowning glory. | currently live in Boston where | go to Simmons University in pursuit of my MS degree in Library and Information Science. | also work at the reference desk at Beatley Library, Simmons University. | aspire to work as a reference librarian in a Music Library and (someday) work myself into becoming Library Director. --------------------------- Dr. Hilary Dickerson studied U.S. History at Washington State University, earning her PhD in 2011. She currently teaches at Walla Walla University, but has also worked at Pacific Union College, where she chaired the History Department. Her areas of research interest include: cultural exchanges between Japan and the U.S. from the 1920s-1950s, particularly focused on the lives on Nobuo Tatsuguchi and B.P. Hoffman; Twentieth Century American History; Japan, particularly from the Meiji-Era to the American Occupation; America during World War Il and the Cold War; and US foreign policy. Her hobbies are plentiful, but she particularly enjoys family, travel, literature, camping, and cooking. | was born in Angwin, CA and stayed there most of my life, attending all the Pacific Union College schools, until | finally left to attend graduate school at San Diego State University and Simmons College. After finishing two Master's degrees, | worked at the University of Redlands as a Reference Librarian. | came back to NorCal and held a variety of jobs including project archivist, high school librarian, museum assistant, and adjunct professor of English. In 2017 | began my current position as Access Services Librarian at PUC, where | supervise somewhere between 8 and 10 student workers at the circulation desk and teach library instruction, amongst “other duties as assigned.” My hobbies include writing, saying | read but actually watching too much television, and ballroom dancing. --------------------------- Kenrie Hylton began his career at his Alma Mater, Northern Caribbean University (NCU) in Jamaica, where he earned a BSc in Information Science. Here he served in a number of information technology based roles including being the Chair for the Computer & Information Sciences Department. He earned an M.Sc. degree in Applied Computer Science from Columbus State University, and a PhD in Information Systems from Nova Southeastern University. He joined the Office of Archives, Statistics, and Research in 2015 as the Digital Records Manager. Roy Kline has an undergraduate degree in business administration and a graduate degree in hospital management. Having worked within private sector healthcare administration for 25 years, he accepted a call to the mission field of the Southern Asia SDA and served six years as CEO of Scheer Memorial Hospital, Kathmandu and Aizawl Adventist Hospital, Mizoram, India. He is a member of the American College of Healthcare Executives, ASDAL, Society of American Archivists, and ARMA International. --------------------------- Eric Koester is the Digital Systems Manager of the Adventist Digital Library and holds a BA degree from Southern Adventist University. He has over fifteen years’ experience in software design and development with specialized experience in the print and digital publishing industry. He recently served for seven years as a bi-vocational pastor in Canada before returning to Berrien Springs, Michigan, to take up his role with the Adventist Digital Library. He has a lifelong passion for church history, especially the spread of the Advent movement in Europe and America prior to 1844. Marianne Kordas currently serves as the Director of the Music Materials Center for the James White Library at Andrews University in Berrien Springs, MI. She holds an undergraduate degree in music with an emphasis in violin performance and minors in French, German, and English studies. Her graduate studies in musicology and music librarianship were undertaken at the University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee. During this time, she also took course work in archival studies, performing a summer internship for the Ward Irish Music Archives and going on a multi-week study tour to Edinburgh, Scotland. Marianne is passionate about student mentorship as well as embedded librarianship. A strong believer in the French concept of la bonne vie, Marianne likes to garden, cook, hike, read, draw whimsical sketches, and have a good laugh with friends. --------------------------- Norah Mauti is a Librarian at Adventist University of Africa in Nairobi, Kenya. She has worked in both public and academic libraries since 1987. She joined Judith Thomas Library at Adventist University of Africa in 2011. She holds a Master of Science in Library and Information Science and a Degree in Library and Information Science from Moi University in Kenya. Her research interests are: library management, information literacy skills, library information resources marketing, outcome assessment of library services and digital libraries. Her hobbies are reading, traveling, and cooking. Sabrina Riley has a BA in history from Andrews University and a Master of Information and Library Studies from the University of Michigan. During a nearly twenty-year career as a librarian, she honed her research skills and practiced historical and genealogical research. She is particularly interested in family narratives and the important role these stories play in transmitting family values, building self-esteem, and strengthening family bonds. Her areas of expertise include families and topics related to Nebraska, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and the Seventh-day Adventist Church. --------------------------- Christy Scott is the Education Services librarian at Peterson Memorial Library where she coordinates information literacy in general studies and senior research classes. She holds a Master's degree in Information Science and Learning Technologies from the University of Missouri and a B.S. in Elementary Education from Union College. Her professional interests include technology in libraries, children’s literature and services, and media and information literacy. During her time at Walla Walla University she has been involved in collection management, reference services, interlibrary loan, and information literacy and currently serves as a liaison to several departments, including Education. Neal Smith is the Scholarly Communications and Digital Services Librarian at AdventHealth University. He specializes in copyright education and electronic systems. He builds and maintains digital research platforms for the R.A. Williams Library, supports faculty scholarship, and answers research and reference questions. Prior to joining the faculty at AHU, Neal worked as an intern at the U.S. Copyright Office and a legal reference librarian at the Western New England University School of Law. Neal has an MS in Library and Information Science from Simmons College and a JD from the University of New Hampshire School of Law, where he served as notes editor for IDEA: The Intellectual Property Law Review. Neal's current research interests include copyright in academic and medical settings, plagiarism, and information ethics. --------------------------- David Trim was born in Bombay, India, to missionary parents and spent his childhood in Sydney, Australia. Educated in Australia and England, he earned a BA in history from Newbold College and PhD in history from King's College in London. Trim was on the faculty of Newbold College for a decade, and held the Walter C. Utt Chair in History at Pacific Union College. He has also held visiting fellowships at the Huntington Library, the Folger Shakespeare Library, the UC Berkeley, and the University of Reading in the United Kingdom. In 2003 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. A prolific author, Trim has edited or co-edited ten books, and his other publications include over 150 articles and chapters in scholarly journals, popular magazines, and books. He has served as Director of the Office of Archives, Statistics, and Research since 2010. Katharine Van Arsdale is the Archivist and Special Collections Librarian for the Pacific Union College Library and the Walter C. Utt Center for Adventist History. In addition to her library and archives work, Katharine occasionally teaches in the PUC History Department. Before coming to PUC in 2015, she worked for 3 years as a research librarian in Washington, DC. With an MA in History and an MSLS in Library Science from the Catholic University of America, Katharine especially enjoys researching local history and bringing it to life. She is a member of the Society of American Archivists, Society of California Archivists, and, of course ASDAL. This year she has the honor of being ASDAL's President-elect. --------------------------- Executive Committee President: Lori Curtis President-elect: Katy Van Arsdale Past President: Per Lisle Secretary: Heather Rodriguez-James (2017-2019) Interim Treasurer: Lori Curtis ASDAL Action Editor: Neal Smith (2018-2020) asdaleasdal.org Coordinators Membership Coordinator: Adorée Hatton (2018-2020) Publicity Coordinator: Allison Fox (2018-2020) School Library Section Coordinator: Petra Duersch Web Site Coordinator: Gerald Rezes (2018-2020) Adventist Library Information Cooperative (ALICE) Council Volunteer Staff: ALICE Chair: Paulette McLean Johnson, Oakwood University College (Alabama, USA) (2018-2019) ALICE Project Manager: Carolyn Gaskell, Walla Walla University (Washington, USA) (2018-2020) ALICE Treasurer: Lawrence Onsager, Andrews University (Michigan, USA) (2018-2020) ALICE Secretary: Per Lisle, Newbold College of Higher Education (United Kingdom) (2018-2021) --------------------------- Members: Adventist International Institute of Advanced Studies (Philippines) - Megumi Flores Adventist University of Health Sciences (Florida, USA) - Deanna Flores Andrews University (Michigan, USA) - Lawrence Onsager Asia-Pacific International University (Thailand) - Damian Gingijil Burman University (Canada) - Sheila Clark Friedensau Adventist University (Germany) - Raul Cervantes Helderberg College (South Africa) - Gail Geduld La Sierra University (California, USA) - Jeffery de Vries Loma Linda University (California, USA) - Shan Tamares Newbold College of Higher Education (United Kingdom) - Per Lisle Oakwood University (Alabama, USA) - Paulette McLean Johnson Pacific Union College (California, USA) - Patrick Benner Southern Adventist University (Tennessee, USA) - Deyse Bravo-Rivera Southwestern Adventist University (Texas, USA) - Cristina Thomsen Union College (Nebraska, USA) - Melissa Hortemiller Walla Walla University (Washington, USA) - Carolyn Gaskell Washington Adventist University (Maryland, USA) - Don Essex Weimar Institute (California, USA) - Maryann Krueger Adventist Resources Working Committee Jim Ford (2017-2020), Chair Adorée Hatton (2016-2019) Alan Hecht (2017-2020) Michelle Rojas (2018-2021) Katharine Van Arsdale (2016-2019) --------------------------- Archives and Records Management Section Steering Committee Ashlee Chism (2016-2019), Chair Adorée Hatton (2018-2021) Alan Hecht (2017-2020) Roy Kline (2017-2020) Katharine Van Arsdale (2016-2019) Conference Planning Committee - Ex officio or appointed at site library Katharine Van Arsdale - (President-elect), Chair Ashlee Chism - On-site Coordinator Lori Curtis (ASDAL Interim Treasurer) Constitution and Bylaws Committee Darel Bennedbaek (2016-2019), Chair Don Essex (2016-2019) Donald Martin (2017-2020) Lori Curtis [ASDAL President (ex officio)] Lori Curtis [ASDAL Interim Treasurer (ex officio)] Nominating Committee Per Lisle [ASDAL Past President, ex officio) Shelia Clark (2018-2019) Jeffery de Vries (2018-2019) Deanna Flores (2018-2019) Cristina Thomsen (2018-2019) Scholarship and Awards Committee Heather Rodriguez-James (2016-2019), Chair Deyse Bravo (2018-2021) Lori Curtis [ASDAL President, ex officio] Lori Curtis [ASDAL Interim Treasurer (ex officio)] --------------------------- SDA Classification Advisory Committee Lori Curtis (2016-2019), Chair Adorée Hatton (2018-2021) Genevieve Singh (2018-2021) Felipe Tan [Editor, ex officio] Seventh-day Adventist Periodical Index Advisory Committee Lawrence Onsager [Library Director of Host Institution, ex officio], Chair Paulette McLean Johnson (2014-2019) Shelia Clark (2016-2021) Carolyn Gaskell (2017-2022) Jim Ford (2016-2021) [ADL Liasion], Secretary Shan Tamares [Loma Linda University Library Director, ex officio] Lori Curtis [ASDAL President, ex officio] Site Planning Committee Paulette McLean Johnson (2016-2019) Norah Mauti (2018-2021) Chapters African Chapter General Coordinator: Clara Okoro (2017-2018) Inter-American Chapter General Coordinator: Keisha Brown-Dixon Other chapters currently inactive. See www.ASDAL.org for more information and listings of inactive or unfilled positions. --------------------------- NOTES --------------------------- NOTES --------------------------- NOTES --------------------------- NOTES --------------------------- Association of Seventh-day Adventist Librarians Association of Seventh-day Adventist Librarians ...