Insight, successor to The Youth's Instructor, was a weekly magazine designed for Seventh-day Adventist young people, published from 1970âÂÂ2017 by Review and Herald. It was described as one of the "most important" Adventist magazines.
The predecessor magazine, known as The Youth's Instructor, was established in 1852 by James White, husband of Ellen G. White. It was distributed primarily through the Sabbath schools.
Under the editorship of Lora E. Clement in the early-mid 1900s, the circulation increased from about 25,000 to 50,000.
The Youth's Instructor was replaced by Insight in 1970. The headquarters of Insight was in Hagerstown, Maryland.<blockquote>"In 2016 Lori Tripp Peckham returned as editor to curate one final year of Insight. The âÂÂfarewell tour,â with no original material in each issue beyond a short editorâÂÂs message, reprinted story and feature highlights from throughout the magazineâÂÂs history. âÂÂNow itâÂÂs time for a change,â Peckham wrote to readers. âÂÂThe North American Division Youth and Young Adult Ministries Department is launching something completely new. Keep watching right here to find out whatâÂÂs coming next.âÂÂ<sup>113</sup>
One year later Insight printed its last issue, dated July 1, 2017, though with no announcement of anything new to succeed it. While the NAD focused on developing resources for Sabbath school programming,<sup>114</sup> the church created no new media to replace Insight."</blockquote>