12 Oct 2011, Silver Spring, Maryland, United States…Elizabeth Lechleitner/ANN
Top Seventh-day Adventist world church leadership today voted to split the Northeast Brazil Union Mission into two administrative bodies — the Northeast Brazil Union Mission and East Brazil Union Mission.
The move recognizes burgeoning membership and impeccable handling of finances in the region, church leaders said. It comes on the heels of a similar realignment of the church’s administrative structure in Brazil last year.
The former Northeast Brazil Union Mission is home to almost 340,000 Adventists and a growing network of churches and church-run schools. Membership there has more than doubled since the union was established in 1996. As of July this year, the church in the region welcomed more than 20,000 new believers, or about 3,000 ascensions per month.
“This region for us has a strong potential for growth,” said South American Division President Erton Kohler. “The people there are very receptive. We believe that a new union there can give strong support to our church in the region and help fulfill the mission.”
The newly formed Northeast and East Brazil union missions will each begin in 2013 with more than 100 percent of ideal working capital, said world church Undertreasurer Juan Prestol. Neither region is saddled with debt, he added, and both are in “exceptional” financial condition.
The Adventist Church in Brazil has undergone numerous administrative realignments since it was organized in the country in 1895. Church leadership regularly reorganize church administrative structure to accommodate membership growth. Most recently, delegates at last year’s General Conference Session voted to recognize the split of the former North Brazil Union Mission into two entities, creating the Northwest Brazil Union Mission.
“We praise the Lord for the dynamic growth in South America and especially in this region of Brazil,” world church President Ted N. C. Wilson told Annual Council delegates.
Also today, church leaders voted to rename the current East Brazil Union Conference. To avoid confusion with the newly formed East Brazil Union Mission, the region is now called the Southeast Brazil Union Conference.