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Society of Adventist Communicators Highlights Ministry Importance

Hundreds gather for the 2024 convention to learn, connect, and worship.

Nicole Dominguez, for North American Division News

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Society of Adventist Communicators Highlights Ministry Importance
Bekah McNeel, an award-winning journalist, talks about her book, This is Going to Hurt: Following Jesus in a Divided America, at the 2024 Society of Adventist Communicators Convention. [Photo: Art Brondo]

On October 17, more than 260 registered communicators, including professionals and students, gathered at the Hilton Oak Brook Hills Resort and Conference Center in Oak Brook, Illinois, United States, to attend the 2024 Society of Adventist Communicators (SAC) Convention.

For the next three days, participants enjoyed the trademark features of the annual SAC convention, including breakout sessions, local media tours for college students, new tech discoveries, and top-notch speakers to engage and inspire.

Media Tours, AI, and More

Thursday was registration day for the writers, social media managers, communication directors, designers, photographers, podcasters, pastors, and other attendees. While students, at a record-breaking number of 76, took media tours to places such as InterVarsity Press, the CBS and ABC Chicago affiliate TV stations, and Edelman, a global public relations firm, on-site meetings were held for union publication editors and a meet-and-greet for conference communication directors.

The first general session in the afternoon set the tone for the convention with a welcome from SAC president Brenda Dickerson and executive director Kimberly Luste Maran before the opening speakers took the stage. There were three presentations, each exploring the ways communicators must apply their skills. 

Author and award-winning journalist Bekah McNeel opened with her presentation, “Stories that Hurt, Stories that Heal in a Divided America,”urging communicators to confront internalized “us vs. them” narratives that politicize our perspective on human issues. “Politics have coercive power. We often discuss human issues in and through political language, stripping it of its humanity,” McNeel said.

Dewey Murdick, executive director at Georgetown University’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET), discussed a practical roadmap for artificial intelligence in church communications through his presentation “Decoding the AI Communication Puzzle: A Pragmatic Guide to Pros, Pitfalls, & Possibilities.”Murdick’s presentations explored the nuances that can come from applying AI to everyday communications needs and the advancements still to be made. 

Greg Dunn, SAC vice president for recruiting and development, and Kevin Lampe also took the stage, sharing how they handle crisis communication at their Chicago-based firm Kurth Lampe, engaging the audience with an activity and challenging them to apply what they’d learned to a real-life crisis.

The evening concluded with a reception in the exhibitor’s hall so that attendees could learn, mingle, and network. 

The bulk of the convention’s agenda took place on Friday, with attendees gathering early to attend TechTalk with Bryant Taylor, Southern Union Conference communication director, which has become a beloved mainstay of SAC. Though new technology and programs geared toward videographers, editors, and creatives were still featured, this year’s presentation included a new element. Sandy Audio Visual (SAV) sponsored a portion of a technology raffle and offered a presentation by Colin Sandy, the company’s founder, who introduced the company’s mission and vision and the technology it offers. 

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Keynote, Breakouts, and Vespers (and S’mores)

After TechTalk, Lynn Hanessian, chief strategist for Edelman, spoke on “Leveraging Data to Drive a More Effective Communication Strategy.” In her keynote address, Hanessian systematically went through how data management can help organizations recognize areas of both need and growth. “Creative and impactful communications are guided by analytics: informed by stakeholder priorities, refined by audience testing, and assessed by measurable results,” Hanessian explained as she explored why and how data is central to communications strategy and success.

Friday featured three breakout sessions, each with five workshops on topics ranging from copyright law to podcasting, crisis communication, résumé review, communicator “self-care,” technology breakdowns, and more. 

“We were able to have a student [orientation] conference where we got to know each other — what we were most interested in, where we were coming from,” Laura Cruz, a student from La Sierra University in California, said. “We’ve been very, very, very busy with all the workshops that they’ve offered us here. I’ve learned how to use AI, to leverage it for my career. I’ve also learned how to develop and grow my career from the very beginning.

“My favorite part, though,” Cruz said, “was the workshop that they set up for us students where we did mock interviews and résumé check. I’m very, very thankful for the opportunity to be here this year, and I hope to see everyone again in the next year.” 

As participants milled about the outer hallway during breaks, they could visit booths from the numerous sponsors and exhibitors of the event, including AdventHealth, AdventSource, Adventist Health, Adventist HealthCare, Adventist Connect, SermonView, Sandy Audio Visual, Adventist Community Services, and Voice of Prophecy; or visit the podcasting booth with a complete set-up for roaming attendees to try their hand at podcasting. One exhibit allowed communicators to try new technology and test features such as sound editing programs, aerial drones, and camera setups. 

“I love not just the networking, but really building relationships while I’m here,” Kristina Busch, Southwestern Union Conference communication director and editor of the Record, said. “Over the years I’ve gotten to know a lot of people, … this also brings together people who are all doing the same thing, this complicated area of ministry, that we’re doing because we love the Lord. We come back here; we want to share our ministry.”

Busch confessed, “And it’s just really exciting to fill up your cup with professionals that are doing what you’re doing. I’m terrified of AI, and 18 years in the profession, I don’t want to learn about AI, but it’s a necessity, and coming here is making it a little bit less scary to see my colleagues doing it, to see how we can use it for ministry, and to see how we shouldn’t use it.… I’m excited to go back [home], learn a little bit more, and get ready for next year.”

After dinner, the attendees’ knowledge of Adventist history was tested with a Kahoot game led by the hosting Lake Union Conference leadership, before a praise team of District 5 church members gathered to lead a song service. Jo Ann Davidson, professor of systematic theology at Andrews University, opened the Sabbath with a thought-provoking sermon on how we as Adventists are so focused on the Sabbath being “right” that we forget the joy of the Sabbath.

“We haven’t entered the joy of the Sabbath,” she said. “We are so focused on the right day, we draw attention to our place on the right day in our name, but the Sabbath is more than ‘not Sunday.’ It’s a day of joy and a royal invitation.”

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Wintley Phipps, renowned speaker and singer, preaches at the 2024 Society of Adventist Communicators convention on October 19. [Photo: Art Brondo]
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Brenda Dickerson (right), Society of Adventist Communicators president through 2024, presents Nicholas Gunn with the 2024 SAC Student of the Year Award on October 19. [Photo: Art Brondo]

The Joy of Connecting, the Joy of Ministry

The joy of the Sabbath was encapsulated Friday evening with a s’mores afterglow event, sponsored by Adventist Learning Community, where attendees could huddle around bonfires, toast marshmallows and assemble s’mores, and forge friendships. College students, young professionals, and established communication directors gathered to enjoy a sweet treat. 

On Saturday (Sabbath) morning, the District 5 praise team opened the service, followed by a Sabbath School panel discussion hosted by the Lake Union Conference. The worship hour started with Wintley Phipps offering his vocal skills with a rendition of “How Great Thou Art.” Phipps’ sermon was a powerful commentary on how the war in heaven became a communication war of disinformation and lies, and how people today still utilize misinformation and name-calling as “the most effective tool in the communication war.” Drawing upon points from Isaiah 59, Phipps implored the audience of communicators to remember that they are “communication soldiers in the war of words.”

After the Sabbath service concluded, attendees could attend one of two guided tours; the first was visiting the Unshackled radio program and the Pacific Garden Mission, and the second was a photo tour of downtown Chicago. Members also had the option of using the time to continue connecting with other attendees, explore the area, or rest. In the evening, however, all participants returned refreshed and well-dressed for the awards banquet.

While enjoying a vegetarian meal, guests saw the proof of concept/pilot episode of The Color of Threads, a Sonscreen and Walla Walla University production that has been making the rounds at film festivals, winning awards for its high-quality performance. Finally, SAC board podcast representative Kirk Nugent and newly elected SAC president JeNean Lendor handed out awards to communicators in professional and student categories ranging from short-form writing to best digital campaign. 

The Reger Smith Cutting Edge Award went to Southern Tidings 2024 Camporee Pin Set, by O’livia Woodard and Christina Norris; and the SAC Award of Excellence went to “Focus on Daniel,” by Voice of Prophecy. The evening ended with Nicholas Gunn receiving the Student of the Year Award; Claudia Allen taking home the Young Professional Award; and finally, Gary Burns earning the Lifetime Achievement Award, which was accepted on his behalf by Matt Webster, a family member, and SAC board representative for communication education. 

“Communications isn’t just another department in the church. It’s also ministry. Let me repeat, it is also ministry,” Nugent said. “If we can frame all of the skills and talents that are being entrusted to God’s people as skill sets that He will require from us for His purpose and for His glory, we can be more inclusive of what it means to utilize [those] skills for ministry.”

The original version of this story was posted on the North American Division news site.

Nicole Dominguez, for North American Division News

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