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French-language Satellite Event Breaks New Ground


From BeckettJ@gc.adventist.org
Date 29 Nov 2000 07:54:39

Adventist News Network
Seventh-day Adventist Church World Headquarters
November 28, 2000
----------------------
French-language Satellite Event Breaks New Ground
Collonges-sous-Saleve, France .... [Fabrice Henriot/Jonathan Gallagher/ANN
Staff]
-------------------------------------------------------
The first-ever Seventh-day Adventist satellite event specifically targeting
an international French-speaking audience is being broadcast live to more
than 20 countries around the world. The 15-night series, which began
November 11, is designed to share Adventist beliefs with a secular audience
and aims to provide "Un Pont Vers La Vie" (A Bridge to Life).

"This is the first time a French-based Adventist program has used satellite
technology to share what we believe, and we are very excited about the
possibilities," says Thierry Lenoir, the series presenter.  Lenoir, who is
also youth and communication leader for the Adventist Church in
French-speaking Switzerland, adds that, "Most of all we want to reach the
more secular-minded people, especially in Europe, who have not heard the
good news."

Some 450 people are attending the nightly programs at the live uplink site
on the grounds of the Adventist Church's university at Collonges, France,
close to the border of Geneva, Switzerland. The program is relayed to more
than 150 downlink sites in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and Switzerland--the
original target audience. But due to massive interest, the satellite
transmissions are now being viewed, with translation as necessary, in
Madagascar, Mauritius, Reunion, Cameroon, Rwanda, Mozambique, Ivory Coast,
South Africa, Romania, Bulgaria, Italy, Germany, Portugal, Argentina,
Guadaloupe, and some French-speaking churches in the eastern United States. 

The series is focused around 15 "perspectives" of Jesus, based on his life
and words. "The person of Jesus explains the truth, not as a doctrinal
series, but as a number of facets on the message of salvation he came to
bring," says Lenoir. "We are also conscious of the culture, language, and
ideas of those we are trying to communicate with--particularly those living
in secular Europe. We are not polemical; rather, we simply want to invite
others to see the Jesus we know and love as Savior."

Program coordinator Fabrice Henriot explains that it was "a very conscious
decision" to make the series contemporary and relevant to European culture. 

"With the development of satellite technology and its availability now in
Europe, the church leadership wanted to take the initiative to produce a
satellite series from a European perspective," says Henriot.     Organizers
say that the program has brought wide positive reaction, especially from
young people. Lenoir's two youthful co-presenters, Annie Stammbach and
Nicolas Walther, add comments on screen received by e-mail and telephone and
contribute to the "modern generation appeal," says Henriot.

With technical direction and production by Jacques and Olivier Ritlewski,
satellite uplinking by Marcelo Vallado of the Adventist Media Center, a team
from the German-based "Stimme der Hoffnung" (Voice of Hope), a Belgian-Swiss
speaker, and a French uplink site, this is truly an international joint
venture, comments local church pastor Henri Van Der Veken.

The program, which finishes on December 1, is an outreach initiative of the
Adventist Church leadership in France, Belgium, Luxembourg and Switzerland,
and the Euro-African region.
----------------------
Contact Information: 
Communication Department
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists
12501 Old Columbia Pike
Silver Spring, MD 20904-6600

Phone: 301-680-6300
e-mail: adventistnews@compuserve.com
web: http://www.adventist.org/


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