From October 6 to 13, 2021, around 340 General Conference Executive Committee (GCEXCOM) members met for a week of presentations and to discuss and vote on reports and initiatives of the world church and its departments. The meetings, known as the Annual Council of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, are different this year, mainly because of the pandemic-related travel restrictions and other logistical challenges.
The meetings took place in a hybrid format, with only some GCEXCOM members attending in person at the Adventist Church headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland, United States. Most of the members attended the sessions and discussed and voted on issues via Zoom.
Zoom coordinators help to ensure everyone can see and participate at the 2021 Annual Council. [Photo: Brent Hardinge, Adventist Exchange Media (CC BY 4.0)]
“Our technical team has done a tremendous work,” GC president Ted N. C. Wilson told leaders and other church members following the public proceedings. “This has only been possible thanks to the strong support of our technical team.”
Wilson specifically mentioned what he called “an amazing array of screens,” which allows the chair of a particular session to see the faces of the hundreds of members connecting through Zoom simultaneously. “It helps us to feel that we are part of the same family,” he said.
Interpreters provide services in four languages during the 2021 Annual Council. [Photo: Brent Hardinge, Adventist Exchange Media]
Scores of people worked behind the scenes to make the meetings a success, leaders said. They set up equipment and cables and made many technical adjustments to ensure every member was able to participate in the meetings.
For the chair to be able to engage with the digital audience, monitors are provided to see virtual attendees on Zoom during the 2021 Annual Council. [Photo: Brent Hardinge, Adventist Exchange Media]
In the hall of the GC building outside the main auditorium, Millie Castillo coordinated five virtual Zoom rooms or stations — one for each language included. “These stations facilitate and help members and special guests to access and follow the proceedings in the language of their choice,” she said.
The monitors in front of the chair’s table show the five Zoom language meetings. [Photo: Brent Hardinge, Adventist Exchange Media]
She explained that when members raise their hands to comment, they are added to a queue on a screen available to the chair of a particular session. Once the chair acknowledges the member, he or she can start talking while all of the others are muted. Everyone else, be it at the GC headquarters or around the world, can hear the member speak, either in English or in any of the other four languages.
Robert Baker, the Zoom Master Control, monitors the connections and ensures those needing to speak from a Zoom meeting are able to be seen and heard during the 2021 Annual Council. [Photo: Brent Hardinge, Adventist Exchange Media]
Leaders believe this hybrid format could serve as a model for other church meetings in the future. “By now, it is clear that it works,” they said. “We thank God and our technical support team for it.”