Heavenly sanctuary and Christ's ministry
Christ carries out priestly ministry in the heavenly sanctuary after his ascension.
What it is: This belief affirms that Christ's ministry after the ascension includes priestly and intercessory action in the heavenly sanctuary.
How the tradition understands it: The heavenly sanctuary is read as an important theological reality for understanding atonement, intercession, judgment, and eschatological hope. Christ is seen as high priest who applies the benefits of his redemptive work.
Textual or traditional basis: Hebrews 8 and 9, Daniel 8, and the symbolic system of the Old Testament sanctuary are central.
Historical context: After 1844, interpretation of the sanctuary became decisive for reorganizing Adventist identity after the Millerite disappointment.
Common objections: Many criticisms question the exegesis of Daniel 8:14 and the relationship between Levitical ritual and Christ's heavenly ministry.
Internal variations: There are differences of emphasis about how to explain sanctuary symbolism, but belief in Christ's heavenly ministry is official and central.
Supportive
Daniel 8:14
Key text for the interpretation of the sanctuary and 1844.
Reference: Daniel 8:14.
Content: The verse speaks of the sanctuary being cleansed or restored, depending on the translation.
Use in debate: It is the most decisive and controversial text in the Adventist formulation of the sanctuary and the investigative judgment.
Hebrews 8:1-2
Christ as minister of the true sanctuary.
Reference: Hebrews 8:1-2.
Content: The text describes Christ as minister of the true sanctuary and the tent set up by the Lord.
Use in debate: It is central to the Adventist doctrine of the heavenly sanctuary.
Hebrews 9:23-24
Christ enters heaven itself to appear before God on our behalf.
Reference: Hebrews 9:23-24.
Content: The passage speaks of Christ entering heaven itself on our behalf.
Use in debate: It is used to support Christ's heavenly and intercessory ministry.
Seventh-day Adventist Church Fundamental Beliefs
Modern official doctrinal summary of the main institutional expression of Adventism.
Reference: The Seventh-day Adventist Church Fundamental Beliefs.
Content: The document gathers official formulations on Scripture, creation, the great controversy, the experience of salvation, the Church, the remnant, spiritual gifts, the Sabbath, the sanctuary, the second coming, death, resurrection, and the new world.
Use in debate: It is the main contemporary institutional source for describing official Adventist beliefs in a concise and comparable way.