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Print magazine

Creation Calls for Urgency

By Jim Kincaid, February 03, 2020

After spending nearly 40 years in the rural Arctic, I am more convinced every day that the Bible has it right. Isaiah, Chapter 51, says, “Lift up your eyes to the heavens, and look at the earth beneath; for the heavens vanish like smoke, the earth will wear out like a garment, and they who dwell in it will die in like manner; but my salvation will be forever, and my righteousness will never be dismayed" (ESV).

We are living in a time with unprecedented changes in our world happening on a regular basis. While the debate over climate change and global warming is heated, I'm not writing this article as argument for or against these issues. I simply want to tell you that what I see in the Arctic underscores what I see in Scripture.

The high Arctic is ground zero for observation of these phenomenal events the Bible talks about. Take for example what geologists call a “slump.” There's a well documented slump on the Selawik River in northwest Alaska. This slump did not happen because of heavy rain but instead by the sudden melting of permafrost. A few years after it first appeared, the slump was even more pronounced.

Fly over the Alaska tundra and you'll see another now-common sign of our aging earth: a drained lake. This phenomena can occur overnight as if someone pulled the drain plug.

A more threatening situation is the coastal erosion happening due to the reduction of ice cover during ferocious fall and winter storm surges. A number of coastal villages are threatened with imminent destruction. A good example of this is the village of Kivalina.

This small village is perched on a barrier island between a coastal lagoon and the Arctic Ocean along Alaska's west coast. As their island narrows, the villagers are divided on whether to move to higher ground about 7 miles inland at the possible cost of $250 million or to stick it out on their ancestral lands, come what may.

What does this have to do with us as a church and our mission? Here in Alaska, these signs of our earth growing old add a sense of urgency to what we do and how we live. There are people groups who have yet to hear the preaching of the Three Angels’ Messages. 

At the moment God has put in place a kind of temporary delay “...not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance." (2 Peter 3:9, ESV) Here in the Alaska Conference, we believe it makes very good sense to invest time and resources where the need is great and while the opportunities exist. 

That's why the Alaska Conference has started the Artic Mission Adventure (AMA) initiative. AMA envisions the recruitment of both financial resources and volunteers suited to the task of living and serving in the remote rural high latitudes of the Arctic. AMA, at the same time, is developing a cadre of Alaska Native leaders who are being trained in church administration, preaching, teaching and worship leadership. 

AMA is more than a vision. We have volunteers already making a difference. Take for example Jose and Edna Estrella, AMA volunteers based in Selawik, Alaska, who are making a large difference in this village of nearly 1,000 people. Similiarly, Tony and Airen Sherman have spent more than eight years in the village of Shungnak. After spending the summer and fall doing medical work in Delta Junction, Alaska, they returned in early November for another winter in the far north.

This vital initiative wouldn't happen without crucial partnerhips of finances and physical resources. Adventist World Aviation is collaborating with AMA to provide transportation support to reach these precious villages. 

If you would like find out how you can get involved in an Arctic Mission Adventure, contact Tobin Dodge, AMA director, at the Alaska Conference office.

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The formation of this “slump” on the Selawik River of northwest Alaska was due to the sudden melting of permafrost several years ago.

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After several years, the Selawik River slump is visibly more pronounced in 2019.

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Drained lakes on the Alaska tundra are an increasingly common occurence.

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Coastal erosion is impacting villages across Alaska, similar to what is happening to the village of Kivalina.

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Arctic Mission Adventure volunteers Tony and Airen Sherman have spent more than eight years serving the village of Shungnak.

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Edna and Jose Estrella are Selawik Arctic Mission Adventure volunteers.

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AMA volunteer, Tony Sherman, gives Shungnak kids a ride on his four-wheeler.

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Selawik Arctic Mission Adventure volunteers Edna and Jose Estrella are making a difference in their community.

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Featured in: March/April 2020

Author

Jim Kincaid

Alaska Native ministries director
Section
Alaska Conference
Tags
Mission and Outreach, Arctic Mission Adventure, Creation

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The Gleaner is a gathering place with news and inspiration for Seventh-day Adventist members and friends throughout the northwestern United States. It is an important communication channel for the North Pacific Union Conference — the regional church support headquarters for Adventist ministry throughout Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington. The original printed Gleaner was first published in 1906, and has since expanded to a full magazine with a monthly circulation of more than 40,000. Through its extended online and social media presence, the Gleaner also provides valuable content and connections for interested individuals around the world.

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