3 NEW AND 3 INCUMBENT GC VICE PRESIDENTS ELECTED
Ella Simmons, Artur Stele, Geoffrey Mbwana, Guillermo Biaggi, Abner
De Los Santos and their spouses join Tom Lemon on the stage of the 60th
General Conference Session as they are announced as the the vice
presidents of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. [Photo
©2015 Adventist Review / ANN. Photo by James Bokovoy]
Smaller team has big plans for mission.
July 06, 2015 | San Antonio, Texas,
USA | Sandra Blackmer, Michael Campbell, and Andrew McChesney, Adventist
Review / ANN, with information supplied by Adventist.org
A slimmed-down leadership team of six
general vice presidents has been elected to the General Conference and
charged with helping implement three mission-oriented goals that the
Seventh-day Adventist Church intends to prioritize over the next five
years.
The lineup includes three new
officers—Guillermo E. Biaggi, Thomas L. Lemon, and Abner De Los
Santos—and three reelected officers—Geoffrey G. Mbwana, Ella S. Simmons,
and Artur A. Stele.
“There will be a very strong emphasis
on mission,” General Conference president Ted N. C. Wilson said Monday
as he assured delegates that the smaller team would be able to help
steer the church’s work.
The shuffle is significant, reducing
the number of general vice presidents from nine to six, a level last
seen in the 1990s. A record four general vice presidents announced their
retirement months before the General Conference session.
With the election, two sitting general vice presidents also will leave office, Delbert W. Baker and Pardon K. Mwansa.
Some delegates were surprised by the
announcement of the smaller team, which was made at the General
Conference session on Sunday. Wilson said he had explained to the
Nominating Committee that the General Conference could do with fewer
general vice presidents because their workload had shrunk over the past
five years. He named as examples the General Conference’s transfer of
two institutions—Pacific Press Publishing Association and Oakwood
University—to the North American Division and the closure of Review and
Herald Publishing Assocation’s printing operations last year.
Several delegates still questioned the
decision on Sunday and Monday, with one saying it was odd to reduce
leadership at a time when the Adventist Church is experiencing
unprecedented growth. A vote on the nominations was postponed until
Monday so concerned delegates could speak with the Nominating Committee.
Simmons, the first woman to serve as a
general vice president of the Adventist Church who was first elected in
2005, said change in organizational leadership structure is always a
part of growth.
“We just need the wisdom of God to know what change is for His honor at any given time,” she said in an interview.
The four general vice presidents who
earlier announced their plans to retire are Lowell C. Cooper, Armando
Miranda, Michael L. Ryan, and Benjamin D. Schoun.
The new leadership team will be tasked
with pursuing the Adventist Church’s three goals of emphasizing Christ
and His righteousness; faithfulness; and the involvement of every church
member in evangelism and witness. Wilson identified the three goals as
his top priorities after his reelection last Friday, and the new general
vice presidents spoke eagerly about fulfilling them. “All mission is
eventually local,” said Lemon, former president of the Mid-America Union
Conference in the North American Division.
He said he would like to see the
Adventist Church get to the place where its members are so connected in
their local communities that a community would feel a huge loss if the
church went away.
“I believe we have become rather
inward focused to the point that it wouldn’t matter in a number of
places around the world if our churches burned to the ground,” he told
the Adventist Review. “That is huge.”
He said Adventists have to be more than the hands and feet of Jesus.
“We have to be the boots that get things done in our communities,” he said.
Biaggi, an Argentine national who has
lived the past 15 years in Russia as president of the Euro-Asia Division
from 2010 to 2015 and division treasurer before that, said he longed to
see every church member reach at least one person for Christ per year.
“Then that person would reach another person and fulfill the mission of the church,” he said.
De Los Santos, a Mexican national and
former vice president of the Inter-American Division, underscored the
importance of humility in serving others.
“I think we need to understand the necessity to be humble before God and to stand before people to serve them,” he said.
Bios
Guillermo E. Biaggi served as president to the Euro-Asia Division since 2010, and prior to that served as treasurer of the same from 2000-2010.
Biaggi’s previous church work includes
administration and finance throughout several church organizations
around the world for more than 40 years.
His leadership in the Euro-Asia
Division saw the expansion of evangelism impact in urban centers in
dozens of cities across the territory. In addition, Adventist schools
increased in number under his leadership from 5 to 26, and a theological
seminary in Ukraine was established.
Born in Argentina, Biaggi worked 25
years in the South American Division as university vice president of
financial affairs at the River Plate Adventist University, Argentina. He
also served as treasurer of the Austral Union Conference and
secretary-treasurer of the Uruguay Mission, as well as senior accountant
and assistant accountant.
Biaggi, 62, is a certified public
accountant, holds bachelor’s degrees in business and theology, and
completed a master’s degree in administration and a doctorate in
ministry from Andrews University.
He speaks fluent Spanish and English, and understands Portuguese and basic Russian.
Biaggi and his wife, Sybel, have four adult children all working for church organizations. He also has three grandchildren.
Abner De Los Santos served as vice president in charge of member retention in the Inter-American Division since 2010.
Originally from Mexico, De Los Santos
is an ordained minister who began his work as a church pastor in 1986 in
southeast Mexico. He served as conference secretary and later
conference president for 10 years. De Los Santos also worked 10 years as
secretary and later president of the North Mexican Union from 2001 to
2010.
Ordained in 1991, De Los Santos, 52,
earned a master’s in pastoral ministry from Andrews University and
completed a doctorate degree in ministry from the Inter-American
Theological Seminary in 2012.
De Los Santos is married to Leticia. The couple has two adult children.
Thomas L. Lemon began
his career as a pastor in Maryland and later pastured in Texas. In
1996, he accepted a call to serve as assistant to the president of the
Rocky Mountain Conference. He then was ministerial director in Oregon
(2002-2006) and president of the Minnesota Conference (2006-2009) before
accepting the position of president for the Mid-America Union
Conference. Lemon has served as a member of boards of directors for a
number of higher education and health-care institutions, as well as
media and outreach ministries. During his tenure as president of
Mid-America Union, Lemon’s stated areas of focus were evangelism,
education, and health care. Lemon earned his bachelor’s degree in
theology at Southwestern Union College (now Southwestern Adventist
University) in Keene, Texas, and a master of divinity degree from the
Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary at Andrews University in
Berrien Springs, Michigan.
Lemon’s wife, Jan, is a career educator. The couple has two adult children and four grandchildren.
Geoffrey G. Mbwana was
elected as a general vice president for the Seventh-day Adventist
General Conference in 2010. Born on October 20, 1955, in Tanzania,
Mbwana spent time in high school and college working as a literature
evangelist in India and Sweden. Mbwana graduated from Spicer Memorial
College in 1982 with bachelor’s degrees in religion and psychology. He
earned a master’s degree in education from Andrews University in 1984
and completed a master’s in educational psychology at Poona University
in 1986. He is married to Nakku Mbwana, and they have two daughters:
Orupa and Upendo. Mwbana’s previous church work includes serving as
president the North-East Tanzania Conference, the Tanzania Union
Mission, and for the East-Central Africa Division. He speaks three
languages: Kiswahili, English, and Kipare.
Ella Simmons holds
the distinction of being the first woman to serve as a vice president of
the Seventh-day Adventist world church. Simmons was elected at the 2005
General Conference Session, held in Saint Louis, Missouri. An educator
throughout her career, Simmons has served as chair for departments of
education (Kentucky State University), associate dean (University of
Louisville), and professor (Oakwood University, La Sierra University).
She gained administrative experience while serving as academic vice
president of Oakwood University and provost and academic vice president
for La Sierra University. Simmons has been a prominent member of
accreditation and corporate boards within the church and in the
community. She holds a master’s degree from Andrews University and a
doctorate from the University of Louisville.
Simmons and her husband, Nord, a
retired high school teacher, have two adult sons who are also educators:
Darryl and Christopher.
Artur A. Stele was
elected as a general vice president for the Seventh-day Adventist world
church at the 2010 General Conference Session in Atlanta, Georgia. He
was born on January 30, 1961, in Kaskelen, Kazakhstan. He graduated from
Almaty Medical College in Kazakhstan in 1979 with a degree in pharmacy.
In 1986, Stele received a bachelors
degree in theology from Friedensau Adventist University in Germany. That
same year Stele married Galina, the first woman to graduate from
Andrews University with a doctoral degree in ministry. The couple has a
son, Alexander. Stele earned his master’s and doctorate in theology from
Andrews University in 1993 and 1996. Stele’s denominational service
includes time spent as academic dean and president for Zaoksky
Theological Seminary, as well as president of the Euro-Asia Division.
Stele is fluent in Russian, German, and English.
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