Richard Stephenson and Alyssa Truman open the GAiN meetings in Auckland, New Zealand. [Photo: Brendan Tucker]

July 15, 2026 | Auckland, New Zealand | Juliana Muniz, South Pacific Division

Building bridges through collaboration was the challenge issued to Adventist communication leaders during this year’s Global Adventist Innovation Network (GAiN) conference, where almost 600 delegates explored how collaboration can strengthen the Church’s mission in a rapidly evolving digital world.

Held in Auckland (New Zealand) from July 8 to 11, GAiN was one of three events that made up the Digital Strategy for Mission (DSM) Convention, alongside Hope Channel’s Network Leadership Conference (July 2–7) and the Adventist Technology Summit (July 12–13).

Communicators engage in discussion during the Global Adventist Internet Network (GAiN) conference, held July 8–12, 2026. [Photo: Brendan Tucker]

This is the first General Conference (GC) event held in the South Pacific in more than 30 years. ”So it’s very significant,” said South Pacific Division (SPD) communications director Tracey Bridcutt. “And it’s a real blessing to have communications people from all over the world, convening here in New Zealand, in the midst of our Division, to come together and network and learn new tools for mission.”

Throughout the event, presentations emphasized that communication is not an end in itself, but a means of advancing the Church’s mission. “Communication in the Adventist church exists for mission,” said GC president Pastor Erton Köhler. “And we are here exactly discussing how communication can be more efficient in a way that strengthens the mission the Lord entrusted to us.”

Paul Douglas, treasurer of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, challenges communicators to build bridges through mission during the GAiN conference. [Photo: Brendan Tucker]

GC treasurer Paul Douglas developed the event theme, Building Bridges: “A bridge exists to connect. Allows people to reach a destination they would never reach alone. Without bridges, communities remain isolated, separated. The mission of God is to fundamentally be about building bridges,” he said.

For many delegates, the theme extended beyond the presentations, with the opportunity to connect and learn from fellow communicators. Attending GAiN for the first time, Papua New Guinea Union Mission communications director Reeves Papaol said one of the greatest benefits of the event was the opportunity to build relationships with communicators from around the world who could share ideas, experiences and practical solutions.

A few members of the South Pacific Division communication team and the Auckland Media team pose for a photo during the GAiN conference. [Photo: Brendan Tucker]

“It’s divine providence that it’s happened here in our Division,” said Mr Papaol. “For things that we want to do in media we’ve started this year, it gives us confidence that there are other unions and divisions in the Church that have just started out. We can learn from them and we can all move together in doing this work.”