I especially like what he said here: “I want to see …

Comment on Ted Wilson: “We will not flinch. We will not be deterred.” by Shane Hilde.

I especially like what he said here:

“I want to see that all Seventh-day Advent ist teachers, whether they are theologians or science teachers, believe and accept the biblical creation as the church has voted and understood it. That is our goal, and that is what we need to move toward.”

Shane Hilde Also Commented

Ted Wilson: “We will not flinch. We will not be deterred.”
[…] my question: If the church won’t “flinch” in our stand for creation, will we be consistent? If we stand against Darwinism, will we stand […]


Ted Wilson: “We will not flinch. We will not be deterred.”
I can’t think of a better man for the job than elder Ted Wilson. His address at the GC made it clear that he stands firmly on all the solid pillars of the Adventist faith, including the LORD’s prophet, Ellen White 
Let us put our prayers and full support behind Elder Wilson as we prepare to finish the work of the 3 angels and go home.
 
Steve Billiter
http://everlasting-gospel.blogspot.com/


Ted Wilson: “We will not flinch. We will not be deterred.”
I agree with and fully support Elder Ted Wilson in his early efforts as President of the GC to support our fundamental stand on a literal creation week and to expect support of the same from all paid SDA Church employees…

Sean Pitman
www.DetectingDesign.com


Recent Comments by Shane Hilde

Why Vaccinate Kids Against COVID-19?
[…] Based on similar misinformation to that already described, RFK Jr. has removed access to mRNA vaccines against COVID-19 from women and children, claiming that healthy children don’t need to get vaccinated since it is very unlikely for children to die of COVID-19.  In response, a lawsuit has been issued, as of July 7, 2025, by six leading medical organizations, including the American Public Health Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Infectious Diseases Society of America, the American College of Physicians, the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine and the Massachusetts Public Health Alliance, along with an anonymous pregnant physician, against Robert F. Kennedy Jr., as the current Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) (Link, Link). This lawsuit alleges that Kennedy unlawfully removed COVID-19 vaccine recommendations for children and pregnant women and dismissed expert advisors from the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), replacing them with individuals who espouse anti-vaccine viewpoints. . The fact is that RFK Jr. has no scientific basis for his actions here.  The mRNA vaccines have not been shown to harm pregnant women, unborn children, or born children, while at this same time, have shown strong benefits, to include a significant reduction in hospitalizations, long-term injuries (to include Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children (MIS-C) and Long COVID). (Link) […]


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[…] The “Largest Autopsy Study” was written by Peter McCullough and others who are also well-known for spreading false and misleading information on vaccines, claimed that: . “There is a high likelihood of a causal link between COVID-19 vaccines and death in most cases.” . This pre-print was withdrawn from The Lancet and later from the journal Forensic Science International in August of 2024. Why? Because of concerns about the paper, including “inappropriate” citations and design methodology; “errors, misrepresentation, and lack of factual support for the conclusions”; along with “failure to recognize and cite disconfirming evidence.” Also note that this paper was based on 44 studies comprising 325 autopsies. What is most interesting is that the authors of the studies themselves came to the opposed conclusion. 105 of the autopsies cited in the McCullough paper came from a single paper from Colombia. The authors of this paper found “no relation between the cause of death and vaccination.” Similarly, the McCullough and his co-authors counted 24 of 28 autopsies from a study from Singapore as vaccine-related, even though the original authors identified “no definite causative relationship” to mRNA vaccines. The authors of a German study also attributed 13 of 18 autopsy deaths to preexisting diseases, but McCullough et al., decided 16 of these cases were vaccine-related. (Link, Link)  McCullough and the other authors of his paper didn’t perform the autopsies themselves.  They reinterpreted the autopsy cases of others based only on the reports of others and in opposition to how the authors of these reports interpreted their own cases. This isn’t how good science is done.  This is an example of simply making stuff up out of this air in an effort to support one’s own preconceived notions of reality. . In short, the autopsy reports come from 14 countries that collectively administered some 2.2 billion vaccine doses. If the COVID-19 vaccines truly were as dangerous as the review authors contend, this would be evident in other data sources — but it’s just not there. Vaccine safety surveillance systems and other studies from across the globe have found that serious side effects can occur, but they are relatively rare. . The Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca vaccines, for example, can, in very rare cases, cause a dangerous and sometimes fatal blood clotting condition combined with low blood platelets. Rarely, the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines from Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech have caused inflammation of the heart muscle or surrounding tissue, known as myocarditis or pericarditis in young men after the second dose. In comparison, the COVID-19 infection itself was much more commonly associated with myopericarditis and with much greater severity and risk of death. It’s just that the benefits outweighed the risks. There are risks, as there are for everything, but what conspiracy theorists and anti-vaxxers do is falsely enhance the risks while minimizing the benefits. (Link) […]


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[…] O pastor Conrad Vine, então presidente da Adventist Frontier Missions (AFM), emergiu como figura central na polêmica sobre vacinação obrigatória durante a pandemia. Conhecido por sua defesa ferrenha da liberdade individual, ele se posicionou publicamente contra as políticas institucionais da Igreja, que apoiaram exigências de imunização  youtube.com+3educatetruth.com+3educatetruth.com+3. […]


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[…] Smallpox was also a scourge in her day, so much so that she did not oppose the use of vaccines as an aid to help the human immune system better fight against smallpox infections.  Even though she did have a bad experience when vaccinating her children when they were young, she did not oppose her adult son, William, when he and his associates were vaccinated for smallpox – and was likely vaccinated against smallpox herself (Link). […]


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[…] the VAERS database was able to detect rare adverse effects, such as Guillain-Barré syndrome, and myocarditis in young men following the second dose of the mRNA vaccines (Link).  However, contrary to Dr. […]