Best Friends

June 8, 2022
Today, June 8, is celebrated as National Best Friends Day in the United States. On this day, you can express your love for your biggest support system, your best friend. When you hear the words “best friend” who comes to your mind? Is it an old classmate, a family member, a colleague, or a neighbor?
His name was Tyler. It was my first day of kindergarten although it was already a month into the school year. I was in a new school in a new country without any friends. Before the teacher asked all of us to line up for recess, she asked for a volunteer to be my friend at recess. Tyler’s hand shot up and he stood next to me in line and introduced me to our other classmates. Over the rest of the week, Tyler took it upon himself to be my friend during all the recesses, lunch breaks, and classes. Over the years I’ve lost touch with him, but he remains my favorite best friend because he just wanted to be my friend.
After I began working in Bangalore, I picked up another group of friends who continue to be my core support after fourteen years. When I moved away from Bangalore, we thought that would be the last that we would see each other, but even across the distance, we keep in touch; celebrating each other’s successes and sharing in each other’s struggles. A few months ago, when I was sick with a high fever, and all the other things that goes with that, this group of friends took turns staying on a group call with me for over sixteen hours. Sometimes they talked to me, sometimes they talked to each other, but they wanted me to know that they were there with me even if I couldn’t see them or touch them.
So, as you celebrate National Best Friends Day let your best friend(s) know how much they mean to you. Pick up the phone, call them, send a text, or send them an email.
In John 15:15,16 Jesus says “I no longer call you servants…Instead, I have called you friends, for everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you. You did not choose me, but I chose you.” The best of our earthly friendship are mere reflections of the friendship that Jesus offers us. He has also promised that He will be with us ‘even to the ends of the earth.’ Take advantage of that friendship. He loves you and me without limits and has shared that love to us making it possible for us to live our lives in love and friendship.
Gerald Christo
Pastor, Young Adults
“For I am convinced that…’nothing’…can separate from the love of God.” Romans 8:38, 39


SASDACINFO

SASDACINFO – November 18, 2020
 
VESPERS: Mr. Stanley Benjamin
Vespers – Fridays @7:30 p.m.
(50 family units limit)
 
DIVINE SERVICE SPEAKER: Pastor Franklin David
 
TWO WORSHIP SERVICES: Please join us for worship either in the first or second service. As per county regulations, we are allowed ONLY 50 FAMILY UNITS/INDIVIDUALS. A family unit consist of father, mother, children or individuals staying in the same house. Families please sit together in one pew and as far as possible from another family.
First Service @ 9 a.m.
(50 family units limit)
Sabbath School: 10:00 a.m.
(50 family units limit)
Second Service: 11:00 a.m.
(50 family units limit)
Please follow the safety guidelines mandated by Federal, State and County authorities. The Guidelines are:
1. It is mandatory to wear a mask at all times for safety of others and yourself. If you have forgotten your mask, a new one will be provided. If you cannot wear a mask or refuse to wear one, we request you to worship online as deacons will not permit you to come in. Gloves also will be provided if needed. Sanitizers are placed at different stations, please use them.
2. As per regulations, only 50 family units will be allowed into the sanctuary for each service. You are requested to sit in every other pew.
3. We will be using only upper level. The basement door will remain closed.
4. The main entrance will be used for entry only. Please note there will be only one entrance.
5. There will be two exits.
-Through the exterior door next to prayer chapel
– Through the exterior door next to the coat closet area
6. Please Maintain a minimum of six feet of physical distance from one another and follow the posted signs.
7. Members are requested to leave the building right after the service is over. Please do not remain in the sanctuary or congregate in the narthex.
8. If you are sick, have any health conditions, have come in contact with Covid-19 patients or anyone in your house has come in contact with Covid-19 patients, we request that you stay home and worship with us online at 11:00 a.m.
 
ZOOM SABBATH SCHOOL LESSON STUDY @10:00 A.M.- 10:55 A. M.
Beginners & Kindergarten – Zoom ID: 544-906-348, Password: 034417
Primary I & II – Zoom ID: 578-824-5309,
Juniors Zoom ID: 630-715-4157, Password: 235754
Earliteens Zoom ID: 845-0717-1914, Passcode: 11234
Youth – Zoom ID: 225-024-8896,
Password: Waiting room
Collegiate – Zoom ID: 914-794-261,
password: 984935v
Young Adults – Zoom ID: 742-503-651
HERNDON CAMPUS CHURCH: Dr. Paulasir Abraham will be the speaker this Sabbath, November 21, 2020.
 
BERNADETTE AND WINSTON CHARLES ACCOMPANIED BY DOUGLAS LIRA AND ETHAN VINODH will be in concert on Friday, December 11 at 7:30 p.m. Join us in worship concert and be blessed!
 
ORCHESTRA practice is held every Saturday from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Location: Sanctuary and narthex
 
BAPTISMAL CLASS VIA ZOOM is held on Mondays from 6pm to 7pm and Fridays after vespers 8:30 pm to 9:30 p.m.
 
HOUR OF POWER is held on Mondays and Wednesdays from 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. via zoom. Zoom ID: 240-954-4859. Let us make prayer a pandemic to end Covid-19.


Caroling



Freedom of Religion

Our President, last year on this day, made this statement: “Our forefathers, seeking refuge from religious persecution, believed in the eternal truth that freedom is not a gift from the government, but a sacred right from the Almighty God. On the coattails of the American Revolution, on January 16, 1786, the Virginia General Assembly passed the Virginia Statute of Religious Freedom.” Every year on this day, the sitting President makes a proclamation. I have not been able to read today’s as yet but in last year’s statement, the President said: “Our Constitution and laws guarantee Americans the right not just to believe as they see fit, but to freely exercise their religion.” One need not go too far from our church and we can find a Sikh Gurudwaras, Muslim mosques, Hindu temples and Buddhist monasteries. My reading reveals that the Byron Union School District in California has instituted a mandatory three-week course on Islam as part of the seventh-grade history class. Students in the class not only receive handouts on Islam and the life of Mohammed, they must also:
1. Chant praise to “Allah, Lord of Creation.” 2. Pray “in the name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful.” 3. Stage their own Jihad! 4. Dress up as Muslims and choose new Muslim names. If one of us goes into a public school to talk about the Beatitudes and pray in the name of Jesus, we will be taken to task. We struck down religious instruction in our schools in 1948. We said the recitation of prayer in public schools is unconstitutional in 1962, took down the Ten Commandments from public schools in 1980 and in 1992, a pastor was forbidden to offer a Christian prayer in a public school graduation. So, while I am deeply grateful for the religious freedom I enjoy, I am also deeply confused to note that we are not even allowed a Christian prayer in public in a nation that was built on the Holy Bible.
Shalom, Shalom!
Franklin G. David
“See the invisible, hear the inaudible, believe the incredible, and think the unthinkable.”


SAYC2017 Program

Schedule

September 1, Friday
5:00 pm Registration
6:00 pm Dinner
7:30 pm Keynote I
John Daniel, Associate Pastor, Southern Asian Church
 7:00pm Presentation I
Terry Ford, President, Adventist HealthCare
*The hall will be open till 10:00pm for anyone who wishes to stay back and socialise
 
September 2, Saturday
9:00 am Devotion
Bill Miller, President, Potomac Conference of Seventh-day ADventists
10:00 am Bible Study
11:00 am Keynote II
Bill Miller, President, Potomac Conference of Seventh-day Adventists
1:00 pm Lunch
3:00 pm  Presentation II
Weymouth Spence, President Washington Adventist University
5:00 pm Musical Meditations
6:30 pm Dinner
7:00 pm Devotion
 
8:30 pm Social Night
*The hall will be open till 10:00pm for anyone who wishes to stay back and socialise
 
September 3, Sunday
8:00 am Devotion
8:30 am 5k Fun Run / Health Awareness
9:00 am Habitat for Humanity I
12:00 pm Lunch
1:00 pm Habitat for Humanity II
6:00 pm Dinner
7:00 pm Devotion
 
September 4, Monday
 
 
8:45 am SmarTrip® cards and sack lunch can be picked up from the Church.
9:00 am Shuttle to Silver Spring Metro Station
 

Self Guided Tour of Washington DC


More Blessed to Give

Many years ago, when our church was in its infancy stage, we raised funds to build churches in India even though we did not have a church building of our own.  One day when I went to give the money that our church members had contributed to Dr. D. R. Watts who was then the president of Southern Asia Division, he told me “Franklin, why don’t you bring some of your members for a mission project in the Southern Asia Division.”  I told him that I don’t believe in doing so because there were good preachers there who could preach in their own language and be much more effective than any one of us coming. I only believe in raising funds here and sending it there to the Southern Asia Division.” He looked me straight in the eyes and made this statement that I have never forgotten.  He said, “Franklin, you people who live in America need us more than we need you.  Bring your members for one mission trip and you will find how rewarding it is for all those who come.”  That thought has stayed in my mind and now I have gone on several such mission trips to India and been blessed.  This last time, my wife came along with me and she says that she was truly blessed and wants to come along the next time.  I invite all those who are interested to come next year and experience the transformation that can take place in your spiritual life. 
 
And on the domestic front, our youth and collegiates have been going on mission trips almost every summer.  After they return, they share how richly blessed they were from the experience. This evening between 5-8 p.m., our youth are raising funds for their mission trip at Chick-Fil-A, 12289 Tech Road, Silver Spring, MD 20904. Chick-Fil-A will be donating 20% of all those orders between 5-8 p.m. today, April 5, 2017.  Please mention “SASDAC Youth Mission Trip Fundraiser” when you order.  Thank you for supporting our young people.
 
Shalom, Shalom! 
Pastor Franklin David
 
“See the invisible, hear the inaudible, believe the incredible, and think the unthinkable.”


First Christian College for Women

Thanks to the ones who cared to respond with encouraging words asking me to continue my blog as they do even forward it to some of their colleagues and friends.  That is not just being kind to me but that is what we call as loving-kindness. I am reminded of a Sabbath School teacher who asked her children if anyone could tell the meaning of loving-kindness. A little fellow immediately jumped up and said, “Well, if I am hungry and someone gave me a piece of bread that would be kindness. But if they put a little jam on it, that would be loving-kindness.” Won’t it be nice if we all can add a little jam to all who God brings on our pathway and be lovingly kind to them, first
to our spouse, then our children and then the rest.  About our God, the Psalmist says: “Who redeemeth thy life from destruction; who crowneth thee with lovingkindness and tender mercies.”  Since we are crowned with lovingkindness, Why not spread it around a little bit daily?

Now coming to my quiz from last week. Some of you came very close to the answer but not the correct one I was looking for.  Most of you named the first school that was started in India. That evidently happened to be in Tamil Nadu.  But I had asked for the first school for girls.  As per my records, it was started in response to the letter written with eagle feathers by the missionary to his sister. The sister’s name was Isabella Thoburn.  She started the school with six children in a bazaar area in Lucknow.  Later on it became a boarding high school.  It was the first Christian college for women in Asia, known as the Lucknow Women’s College.  When she died of cholera in 1900 it became the Isabella Thoburn College. I wonder if anyone reading my blog has seen this college.  I would love to hear from them.  Sacrifices of such great missionaries should never be forgotten.

Shalom, Shalom!
Pastor Franklin David

“See the invisible, hear the inaudible, believe the incredible, and

think the unthinkable.”


John Wesley

Yesterday at our staff devotion, we stumbled upon the life style of a great preacher, which I don’t think was an accident but rather that God has a mysterious way of talking to us at the right moment.  John Wesley, on an average, preached three sermons a day for fifty four years.  He did it by traveling on horseback for more than 5000 miles a year.  He also found time to write and edit.  His published works include a four-volume commentary of the entire Bible, a five-volume work on natural philosophy, a four-volume work on church history and an English dictionary.  He also wrote histories of England and Rome,
grammars on Hebrew, Latin, Greek, French and English.  He completed three works on medicine, six volumes of church music, seven volumes of sermons and edited fifty volumes of “The Christian Library.”  Wow! Those are just a few of his great accomplishments.  He woke up at 4 a.m. and went to bed at 10 p.m. and would often say, “I have more hours of private retirement than any man in England.”   How do we plan to manage our days?  Something to think about as we face the
beginning of a New Year. We have all been given identical suitcases, all the same size, but some people pack more into them than others. Apostle Paul admonishes us “to make the most use of our time.”  May God help us heed His counsel and make 2017 a productive year for His glory.  
 
Shalom, Shalom!


Adventist Hill

After a flying visit to Ottapalam where we were given an awesome welcome, we rushed over to Aizawl via Kolkata. While in transit, I could fulfill a long time bucket list desire.  I had the privilege of
visiting the humble abode of a great personality I have admired over the years, Mother Theresa.

Mizoram is beautiful by day and awesome by night.  It’s amazing how houses are built on stilts both in the valleys and mountain slopes utilizing every inch of space.  The function we attended in Aizawl,
the capital city, was graced by her highness, Mrs. Riliani, the first lady of Mizoram, wife of the Chief Minister.  At the ribbon cutting of the neonatal ICU at the SDA Hospital, we were told that if babies
die, it’s because there is not one hospital in all of Mizoram that has a neonatal ventilator.  What a blessing it would be if babies can be saved if they had a neonatal ventilator.  I was able to present
the amount raised in our church for this purpose and the Columbia Union President announced that he will double our contribution and make sure they have one soon.  Incidentally, the Columbia Union also
presented an ambulance to this small little hospital on Adventist Hill.  It is called Adventist Hill because most of the people who live there are Adventists.  They have an 800-member church on this hill with no pastor but taken care by 11 elders.  Wow!  I wish we could model them in the USA.

Shalom, Shalom!
Pastor Franklin David

“See the invisible, hear the inaudible, believe the incredible, and
think the unthinkable.”

TO KNOW HIM AND TO MAKE HIM KNOWN