Seventh-day Adventist Worship

Seventh-day Adventist Worship

This article describes worship practice in the Seventh-day Adventist Church.

The Seventh-day Sabbath is seen as an important aspect of worship.

One Adventist author wrote, "Worship involves an attitude of mind and heart which enables man to love God with all his being."


Seventh-day Adventism
Background
  • Christianity
  • Protestantism
  • Anabaptist
  • Restorationism
  • Wesleyan/Arminian
  • Pietism
  • Millerites
  • Great Disappointment
Theology
  • 28 Fundamental Beliefs
  • Pillars
  • Sabbath
  • Second Advent
  • Baptism by Immersion
  • Conditional Immortality
  • Historicism
  • Premillennialism
  • Investigative judgment
  • Remnant
  • Three Angels' Messages
  • End times
Organization
  • General Conference

Divisions

  • East-Central Africa
  • Euro-Africa
  • Euro-Asia
  • Inter-American
  • North American
  • Northern Asia-Pacific
  • Southern Africa-Indian Ocean
  • South American
  • South Pacific
  • Southern Asia
  • Southern Asia-Pacific
  • Trans-European
  • West-Central Africa
Literature
  • Adventist Review
  • El Centinela
  • Signs of the Times
  • List of Ellen White writings
  • List of Seventh-day Adventist periodicals
  • Adventist Archives
Service
  • Adventist Education
    • Secondary Schools
    • Higher Education
  • Hospitals
  • Humanitarianism
People
  • Ellen G. White
  • James White
  • Joseph Bates
  • J. N. Andrews
  • Uriah Smith
  • J. H. Kellogg
  • F. D. Nichol
  • M. L. Andreasen
  • George Vandeman
  • H. M. S. Richards
  • Edward Heppenstall
  • Morris Venden
  • Samuele Bacchiocchi
  • George Knight
  • List of Seventh-day Adventists
Other Adventists
Seventh-day Adventist portal

Read more about Seventh-day Adventist Worship:  Worship Service, See Also, References

Famous quotes containing the word worship:

    It is not enough for us to prostrate ourselves under the tree which is Creation, and to contemplate its tremendous branches filled with stars. We have a duty to perform, to work upon the human soul, to defend the mystery against the miracle, to worship the incomprehensible while rejecting the absurd; to accept, in the inexplicable, only what is necessary; to dispel the superstitions that surround religion—to rid God of His Maggots.
    Victor Hugo (1802–1885)