PAdventist Pulse
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PAdventist Pulse
  • Statistics
  • Tithe flow
  • Research
  • Reports
Explore the data
Research · evidence-graded

Every claim carries
its own receipts.

Each summary states the question it set out to answer, grades its own confidence, and lists the sources it rests on. Work that is not finished says so.

182
Research summaries
2
Published
0
Primary sources cited
69
Mean evidence score

Research summaries

  • PublishedRS-8C5D402026-03-07T00:00:00.000Z

    Does the Adventist Health Message Create a Barrier to Entry for Prospective Members?

    The Adventist health message—encompassing dietary guidelines, temperance principles, and holistic wellness teaching—functions as both an evangelistic asset and a significant barrier to entry, depending on how it is presented. Research from multiple regions indicates that when delivered legalistically, without cultural contextualization, or as a prerequisite for membership, the health message alienates prospective members and creates guilt among existing ones. Conversely, when presented as an inv...

    health-messageevangelismbarriersconversionvegetarianismlegalism
    ›14 sources
    Open research →
    Evidence
    B68/100
    Confidence
    Not recorded
    Sources
    14
    Words
    2,318
  • PublishedRS-8C5D3F2026-03-07T00:00:00.000Z

    Vegetarianism and Veganism Among Adventist Members by Generation and Region

    Despite the Seventh-day Adventist Church's long-standing advocacy for plant-based diets, data from the Adventist Health Study-2 (AHS-2) reveals that fewer than half of North American Adventists are vegetarian, with approximately 47% identifying as non-vegetarian. Dietary patterns vary significantly by age, with older members more likely to follow vegetarian diets for health reasons, while younger Adventists—when they adopt plant-based eating—are more motivated by environmental concerns. Regional...

    vegetarianismveganismdietgenerationregionahs-2health-message
    ›16 sources
    Open research →
    Evidence
    B62/100
    Confidence
    Not recorded
    Sources
    16
    Words
    2,151
  • In reviewRS-8C5CDF2026-03-03T00:00:00.000Z

    Critical Disengagement Age Window — When and Why Adventist Youth Leave

    Is there a statistically identifiable age or life-stage at which Adventist youth are most likely to stop attending, and does this window differ by gender, education pathway, or cultural background?

    Research consistently identifies ages **17–23** as the critical disengagement window for Adventist youth, with 40–50% of baptised teens leaving by their mid-20s. However, recent broader data challenges whether this is uniquely an 18–23 phenomenon: the American Survey Center (2024) found that 57% of Americans who disaffiliate do so **before age 18**, with 74% of current 18–29-year-olds reporting they left by age 17 or earlier. This suggests the Adventist 18–23 window may reflect not when faith is...

    disengagementemerging-adulthoodtransition18-23youth-retentioncritical-windowNorth AmericaAustraliaEuropeGlobal
    ›11 sources
    Open research →
    Evidence
    B78/100
    Confidence
    high
    Consistently reported across every period examined
    Sources
    14
    Words
    2,271
  • In reviewRS-8C5CD52026-03-07T00:00:00.000Z

    Ellen White's Ministry Model vs the Modern Settled Pastor — How Has It Helped or Hurt Mission?

    Ellen White repeatedly warned against ministers 'hovering over churches.' The modern Adventist Church has largely adopted a settled-pastor model. Is there measurable evidence this shift has helped or hurt mission outcomes?

    > *"They should feel that it is not their duty to hover over the churches already raised up, but that they should be doing aggressive evangelistic work."*

    pastoral-ministrychurch-growthlay-leadershipellen-whiteconference-administrationglobal-comparison
    ›31 sources
    Open research →
    Evidence
    77/100
    Confidence
    medium
    Reported with known gaps in at least one period
    Sources
    31
    Words
    2,236
  • In reviewRS-8C5D1C2026-03-07T00:00:00.000Z

    Vacation Bible School and Community Engagement

    Do churches that run Vacation Bible School (VBS) programs show higher community engagement?

    Vacation Bible School (VBS) is one of the most widely deployed children's ministry programmes across Protestant Christianity, with LifeWay resources alone reaching over 25,000 churches and 3 million participants annually for 95 years. Within Adventism, VBS operates under the Children's Ministries department and is widely used in North America, the South Pacific, and other English-speaking divisions. Cross-denominational evidence strongly supports VBS as an effective community engagement tool — i...

    ›18 sources
    Open research →
    Evidence
    B77/100
    Confidence
    Not recorded
    Sources
    18
    Words
    2,493
  • In reviewRS-8C5CEE2026-03-07T00:00:00.000Z

    Digital Ministry Beyond View Counts

    Which digital ministry models have produced measurable real-world engagement, not just vanity metrics?

    Churches have rapidly adopted digital tools—90% now operate hybrid models—yet most still measure success through vanity metrics like views, likes, and follower counts. These numbers reflect reach but not discipleship, spiritual formation, or real-world behavioural change. Research from Barna, Carey Nieuwhof, and church technology platforms suggests that meaningful digital ministry metrics should track online-to-offline conversion (event sign-ups from digital prompts), discipleship depth (daily s...

    ›17 sources
    Open research →
    Evidence
    B76/100
    Confidence
    Not recorded
    Sources
    17
    Words
    2,192
  • In reviewRS-8C5CF52026-03-07T00:00:00.000Z

    Church Size and Member Satisfaction — Is Bigger Better?

    Is there an optimal congregation size for member satisfaction, spiritual growth, and retention?

    Research on optimal church size reveals consistent trade-offs rather than a single ideal: small churches (under 100 attendees) score highest on spiritual growth, belonging, and meaningful worship but struggle with resources, programme breadth, and numerical growth. Large churches (250+) offer broader programmes, report more "changed lives," and excel at evangelism but show lower participation ratios, weaker follow-up on lapsed members (only 37% definitively contact those who stop attending), and...

    ›16 sources
    Open research →
    Evidence
    B76/100
    Confidence
    Not recorded
    Sources
    16
    Words
    2,216
  • In reviewRS-8C5D152026-03-07T00:00:00.000Z

    Community Health Programs as Evangelistic Entry Points

    How effective are Adventist community health programs (cooking schools, health expos) as evangelistic entry points?

    The Adventist health message has functioned as the "right arm of the gospel" since Ellen White first articulated this strategy in the 19th century. Community health programmes — CHIP (Complete Health Improvement Program), cooking schools, health expos, stop-smoking clinics, and health screening events — represent the denomination's most distinctive evangelistic entry point, backed by over 35 published scientific papers documenting CHIP's clinical effectiveness in chronic disease prevention and r...

    ›12 sources
    Open research →
    Evidence
    B76/100
    Confidence
    Not recorded
    Sources
    12
    Words
    1,936
  • In reviewRS-8C5CF32026-03-07T00:00:00.000Z

    Adventist Media Influence — Does Investment in Media Ministry Produce Measurable Baptisms?

    What is the conversion rate from Adventist media ministries (Hope Channel, AWR, It Is Written) to actual baptisms?

    The Seventh-day Adventist Church operates one of the most extensive religious media networks globally, including Hope Channel (84 affiliates worldwide), Adventist World Radio (AWR), It Is Written, and numerous regional productions. These ministries report impressive reach metrics—Hope Channel New Zealand averages 200,000 monthly viewers; Hope Channel Kenya reached 100,000 YouTube subscribers; a South Philippines programme reached 1 million followers. However, specific quantitative data connectin...

    ›16 sources
    Open research →
    Evidence
    B75/100
    Confidence
    Not recorded
    Sources
    16
    Words
    1,975
  • In reviewRS-8C5D082026-03-03T00:00:00.000Z

    Running on Empty — Adventist Pastor Burnout Rates

    What is the burnout rate among Adventist pastors, and how does it compare to other denominations?

    Adventist pastors experience burnout at rates comparable to or slightly higher than their counterparts in other denominations. The 2024 Global Adventist Pastors Survey found that **44% of Adventist pastors report feeling "run down and drained of physical or emotional energy"** (15% strongly agree, 29% agree more than disagree). Regional studies paint an even grimmer picture: over 40% of Adventist pastors in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Taiwan reported frequently feeling depressed or worn out, with ...

    pastoral-careburnoutclergy-healthmental-healthdenomination-comparisonGlobalNorth AmericaEast Asia
    ›19 sources
    Open research →
    Evidence
    B75/100
    Confidence
    high
    Consistently reported across every period examined
    Sources
    19
    Words
    2,212
  • In reviewRS-8C5D612026-03-08T00:00:00.000Z

    Theologically Conservative, Methodologically Progressive — The Biblical Framework for Adventist Adaptive Capacity

    How does the church distinguish between non-negotiable theological foundations and flexible methodological application — and what happens when it confuses the two?

    This meta-LRP establishes the foundational analytical framework that governs all AdventistPulse research. It examines how the Seventh-day Adventist Church — and Christianity more broadly — navigates the distinction between non-negotiable theological foundations and flexible methodological application.

    adaptive-capacitytheologymethodologychurch-growthidentityeditorial-paradigmGlobal
    ›0 sources
      Open research →
      Evidence
      B75/100
      Confidence
      Not recorded
      Sources
      0
      Words
      5,707
    • In reviewRS-8C5CE02026-03-07T00:00:00.000Z

      Pathfinder Investiture Level vs Adult Retention

      Do Pathfinders who achieve Master Guide show higher adult retention?

      The Pathfinder program is widely regarded as one of the Adventist Church's most effective youth retention tools, with South American data suggesting seven out of ten members credit Pathfinders with keeping them in the church. A 2019 survey of 993 Pathfinder participants at the Chosen International Camporee found 85% intend to remain active Adventists when independent. However, no published study directly measures whether achieving Master Guide — the highest investiture level — correlates with hi...

      ›12 sources
      Open research →
      Evidence
      B74/100
      Confidence
      Not recorded
      Sources
      12
      Words
      1,795
    Previous12…16Next

    Evidence grade and confidence are editorial judgements recorded with each summary, not computed from the sources. A draft or in-review summary is shown here deliberately — hiding unfinished work would misrepresent how much is settled.

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