Clifford R. Goldstein (born in 1955) is an American author and editor. He is a leading figure in the Seventh-day Adventist denomination and espouses mainline Adventist beliefs.[1][2]
He edited the journal Shabbat Shalom from 1984 till 1992. In the early 90s, Goldstein interpreted the end of the Cold War as a new sign of the end of the world, with the end of the Soviet Union as the end of "the most implacable barrier to Adventist eschatology."[4] He was a popular apocalyptic writer in the church at this time.[5]
Goldstein and his wife Kimberly have two children.[3]
Beliefs
According to Goldstein he has never been a member of the Adventist Theological Society (ATS).[8] However he has been described as one of the two "effective spokesmen for the ATS perspective", and "the most visible and vocal exponent of the ATS agenda".[9]
He is known to espouse the belief that one cannot be an Adventist and an Evolutionist, a claim that some disagree with.[2]
^ abcBrief biographyArchived 2003-05-11 at the Wayback Machine on the publisher's page for his book God, Gödel, and Grace: A Philosophy of Faith. Accessed 2008-01-19
^Available online from the Sabbath School Network here (an independent site), and from the ArchivesArchived 2012-07-21 at archive.today of the official Adult Bible Study Guide website