Over the past week I have had occasion to talk with various people from the GC and from the NAD. It is encouraging to hear their tone. It does not represent the rage and fear we are seeing expressed and reflected on them. They appear to be reasonable, sincere people who are trying to work out a solution that keeps the church intact, strengthens it, and promotes participation and growth at all levels. I have not heard even one of them express a desire for retribution, but reconciliation and understanding. I strongly support them in that goal.
NAD (North American Division of Seventh-day Adventists) is in favor of women's ordination.
Even a large percentage of people in the General Conference Office are in favor of women's ordination.
If this were only an issue for the churches in the "western world" to decide it would have been passed.
What took place in the Columbia Union is only one piece of a much larger puzzle that has been taking shape in America.
The union and local conference decisions to take up the ordination of qualified candidates to the pastoral ministry, regardless whether they be male or female, has been a response to the rescinding of the November 2011 North American Division's (NAD) decision to allow ordained/commissioned ministers to become conference presidents as a result of legal counsel indicating that the NAD could not make such a decision since they have no separate constituency. Thus the word "commissioned" was erased.
This does show me the movement wants more than recognition as qualified pastors, they want to get into leadership roles.
Actually the movement goes back to the Utrecht General Conference where women's ordination was voted down. Immediately after (in 1996) at least three women were ordained in the Loma Linda area.
March 8, 2012, the Mid-America Union Conference was the first to formally vote support for the ordination of eligible candidates to the pastoral ministry, regardless of gender.
On April 5, President Lemon found it necessary to clarify that the Mid-America Union had not voted to actually ordain women, but that the vote reflects the union’s commitment to work in harmony with the North American Division of the General Conference, and the Union still remains committed to moving forward on this issue.
The Pacific Union Conference (PUC) in its March 2012 meeting voted to table the motion to approve immediately the ordination of ministers without regard to gender until a later meeting. But is still fully committed to move in that direction and set up an ordination study committee to lay out the steps necessary to make gender-neutral ordination a reality.
Southeastern California Conference (SECC), urged by the One in Christ campaign, issued ordained minister credentials to all its eligible non-intern pastors, regardless of gender.
In May of this year, the Southern California Conference (SCC) “voted to support ordination of women"
The Columbia Union Conference voted to go ahead with women ordination in a constituency meeting in July
Other unions voted lesser decisions on the issue -- mainly to "study"
But NAD is moving pretty much as a whole toward women ordination. Just that some divisions are more willing to abide to "due process" and are willing to wait for that to take place, while others have given up hope that "due process", since it involves so many delegates from third world countries, will ever get them what they want.
You will also see (if you've watched the video of the Columbia Constituency meeting) that the president of NAD did not repeat president Wilson's call to desist and abide in compliance to GC process. He only prayed for the Holy Spirit to fill the meeting.
I'm not even sure the officers in the GC are against women's ordination.
Their call is that due process be followed and the church move in unity.
This is what's happening in America.
Whether a person likes it or not is another matter, but it is happening.
If a split were to take place it may split off the third world countries from the American and western Europen countries. Something the third world countries can't really afford to do.
I doubt that over half the membership in North america would vote against women ordination, and that's what it would take to halt the movement (at least for a little while)