Who is the great controversy project




















It has already been voted and is called, The Great Controversy Project 2. The website for The Great Controversy Project 2. Before you go… Your financial support allows us to keep growing the best thing about Adventist Today: our international family of readers, writers and other contributors.

Hence we have committed to printing more than 10 million high-quality, full-text Great Controversy books, including the Appendix, to be distributed this year across the North American Division! These books are approximately one-half inch thick with a beautiful eye-catching cover.

You have a wonderful opportunity to be a part of this great missionary project. It is your chance to make this great vision a reality by joining with Remnant Publications, our partner ministry Project Restore, and other ministries, along with thousands of Remnant friends.

Already, in some places it is not possible to mass mail The Great Controversy. We are convinced that sharing these Great Controversy books with our friends and neighbors, in hospitals, churches, and libraries will give people the information they need—that the controversy between good and evil is about to come to an end, and that they have so much to hope for if they will only believe in and follow Jesus.

That is the blessed hope. Already Remnant Publications and Project Restore are moving ahead in faith towards their commitment of printing more than 10 million copies. Praise the Lord! That means we need your prayers and support today to make it possible to take The Great Controversy to the world.

We need you as an individual, along with your church, to partner with us and do something big and bold for God. Seventh-day refers to the belief that the Bible requires observing the Sabbath on Saturday, the seventh day of the week. The postcard inside the books directs people to donate through Remnant's website if they want to support distribution to other households.

There's no argument from Michael Murphy, director of Catholic studies at Loyola University Chicago, a Jesuit Catholic university, about the motivation to send the books. His issue is with the means. Donors are aware the books may get tossed like junk mail, according to the publisher. Yet they still shell out money for the books in the hopes that will some people will flip through it, Hall said.

Some people who got the book have reached out to thank the publisher for the book, while others sent it back with a note they don't need it and won't read it, he said.

But it's their book. They can throw it away," Hall said. The Great Controversy Project 2. The aim was to distribute tens of millions of copies of the book in order to give countless individuals, families, and communities insight into the reality of what is going on in our world. Ten years later, the project seeks to expand the reach to millions of millions of people through personal effort. With a noticeable shift in technology and access to the internet worldwide, The Great Controversy Project 2.



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