- Spotlight
on Bahamas Academy:
- “Our Twin
Assignment”
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Dr. John Carey
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Education Director
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The church of God on
earth has a divine mandate to engage in the work of redemption.
We spare no effort in designing new strategies and programmes
that would make us more effective in leading men and women to
accept Jesus as their Lord and Saviour. Of equal
importance, however, is the role of the church in the education
of our children.
History reminds us that formal education in our region was
introduced by the Christian church and today many of the
churches in our nation are continuing to build on the foundation
laid so many years ago. The Seventh-day Adventist Church is one
of the nation’s pioneers in education.
As a church, we believe that education must begin in the home
where children are taught discipline, and the importance of
work, and where the foundation is laid for formal education.
Adventists have always “embraced the philosophy that education
should be redemptive in nature, for the purpose of restoring
human beings to the image of God, our Creator. Mental, physical,
social, and spiritual health, intellectual growth, and service
to humanity form a core of values that are essential aspects of
the Adventist education philosophy.
In the early 1870s, our world church, headquartered in Maryland,
USA, developed a school system, and established an Education
Department in 1902. Today, we have the largest protestant
educational system, with 7,000 schools, colleges and
universities, 69,000 teachers, and 1, 337,000 students. The
largest Seventh-day Adventist English-speaking university,
Northern Caribbean University, is owned and operated by our
parent organization, West Indies Union Conference of Seventh-day
Adventists, with headquarters in Mandeville, Jamaica.
The Seventh-day Adventist Church was established in the Bahamas
in the late 19th century, and shortly thereafter, became
meaningfully engaged in its twin assignment of leading souls to
Jesus and the education of our children. The fledgling school
began in the Odd Fellows Hall, then moved to Hawkins Hill, and
in 1948 was established as the Bahamas Junior Academy on its
present six-acre Wulff Road site. (More in subsequent issues)
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First Inter-American Teachers Congress Hilton Hotel, Cancún
México May 31 to June 4, 2009



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