The Adventist Review of January 26, 2000, has printed an article
by Roger W. Coon, entitled "Cut From the Same Cloth." Below is the beginning of
a series of responses to Coon's article.
THE
ULTIMATE BETRAYAL
By Neil C. Livingston
Remove
not the ancient landmark, Which thy fathers have set
Proverbs 22:28
This
policy is the first step in a succession of wrong steps," Ellen White
warned. "The principles which have been advocated in the American
Sentinel are the very sum and substance of the advocacy of the Sabbath, and
when men begin to talk of changing these principles, they are doing a work which
it does not belong to them to do. . .." (Counsels to Writers and Editors,
page 96, emphasis supplied).
This statement by Ellen White was made in reference to an incident
that took place in 1890 in which ministers who were in charge of the American
Sentinel (Seventh-day Adventist Religious Liberty magazine of the day,
forerunner of our contemporary Liberty magazine) met behind closed doors
to contemplate dropping the name Seventh-day Adventist from the magazine. This
was proposed to gain acceptance from the Sunday-keeping churches. Ellen White
received a vision of what was taking place and gave the following
testimony:
In the night season I was present in several councils, and there I
heard words repeated by influential men to the effect that if the
American Sentinel would drop the words "Seventh-day Adventist" from its columns,
and would say nothing about the Sabbath, the great men of the world would
patronize it. It would become popular and do a larger work. This
looked very pleasing. These men could not see why we could not affiliate with
unbelievers and non-professors to make the American Sentinel a great
success. I saw their countenances brighten, and they began to work on a policy
to make the Sentinel a popular success.
Ellen G. White, Manuscript Release, No 1033, pages 59, 60.
(emphasis supplied).
"These men could not see why we could not affiliate with
unbelievers and non-professors." This is a definite statement against Ecumenism,
against affiliating with unbelievers and non-professors. Unbelievers and
non-professors of what? The third angel’s message, of course! "Can two walk
together, except they be agreed?" the Bible states. (Amos 3:3). "These men could
not see why we could not affiliate," the Spirit of Prophecy agrees. Yet in 1926,
eleven short years after the death of Ellen White, SDA leadership officially
voted that, "We recognize every agency that lifts up Christ before man as a part
of the divine plan for the evangelization of the world, and we hold in high
esteem the Christian men and women in other communions who are engaged in
winning souls to Christ." ("Relationship To Other Societies," General Conference
Executive Committee, 1926, emphasis supplied).
Then in 1955, again there were men at the head of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church who "could not see why we could not affiliate with unbelievers
and non-professors." Oh, but now there was no living prophet to stem the
overwhelming tide of Ecumenism about to flood into the Church. There were only
the writings of the prophet, which leadership had been ignoring for many
years.
The Fourth Wrong Step Toward
Ecumenism
We now come to the fourth wrong step toward ecumenism - the
Evangelical Conferences of 1955-56. Documentation of this historical event is
taken from four reliable eyewitness participants, plus two other reliable
sources:
(1) Leroy Edwin Froom, Movement of Destiny. Froom made an
early contact with the noted Evangelical, Dr. E. Schuyler English, editor of
Our Hope magazine. Froom also played a major role in the Evangelical
Conferences.
(2) T. E. Unruh, the first Seventh-day Adventist contact with the
noted Evangelical, Dr. Donald Grey Barnhouse, editor of Eternity
magazine. "When the events described here took place, Unruh was President of the
East Pennsylvania Conference." (Editor’s Note, Adventist Heritage, Vol.
4, No. 2, 1977).
(3) Dr. Donald Grey Barnhouse, "popular radio preacher, minister,
of the Tenth Presbyterian Church of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, author of a
number of Evangelical books, and founder and senior editor of the influential
Eternity magazine." (T. E. Unruh, The Adventist Heritage, Vol. 4,
No. 2, 1977, page 35). Barnhouse was also the chairman of the conferences
between the Evangelicals and the Seventh-day
Adventists.
(4) Walter R. Martin, Eternity magazine. Martin worked with
Dr. Barnhouse and was a major Evangelical participant in the conferences. At
that time he was preparing his Doctoral manuscript on titled, The Truth About
Seventh-day Adventists.
(5) Video tapes of the John Ankerberg television program,
(1983), featuring as guests, Dr. Walter R. Martin (author of The Truth About
Seventh-day Adventists and The Kingdom of the Cults), and Dr. William
G. Johnsson, current Editor of the Adventist
Review.
(6) Virginia Steinweg, Without Fear or Favor, "The Life of
M. L. Andreasen," Review and Herald Publishing Association, Washington, D.C.,
1979.
Leroy Froom’s Eyewitness Report Of the Evangelical
Conferences
"The following chain of circumstances began before the contacts
with Walter R. Martin and Donald Grey Barnhouse," Leroy Froom stated. "However,
this earlier exchange with Dr. English had a definite bearing upon - though it
was separate from - the conferences with Martin and Barnhouse." (Leroy Edwin
Froom, Movement of Destiny, pages 468,
469).
"One of the later type [articles] appeared in 1955 in a brief
editorial note in Our Hope, published in Philadelphia and edited by Dr.
E. Schuyler English, also chairman of the Revision Committee of the Scofield
Reference Bible," Froom recalled. "A chain of unique circumstances grew out of
this editorial item that should be told, for his journal led the way in
corrective undertaking." (ibid., MD, p. 468).
The footnotes in the "Scofield Reference Bible" are one of
the most anti-Adventist compositions known to man. And now Froom discloses that
Dr. E. Schuyler English was the chairman of the Scofield Reference Bible
"Revision Committee." How could Dr. English be objective to "true"
Seventh-day Adventist doctrine?
"In order to understand the. . .conferences with Evangelicals
Martin and Barnhouse - and the resultant book Seventh-day Adventists Answer
Questions on Doctrine (1957) - it is necessary to go back to 1955, and
certain pre-preliminary exchanges with Dr. English, of Our Hope
[magazine]," Froom continues. "In an editorial note in his January, 1955, issue,
English stated erroneously, that Seventh-day Adventists `deny Christ’s Deity’
(p. 409). And he added that we are a group that `disparages the Person and work
of Christ’" (ibid., MD, p. 469).
"As to the latter expression, Dr. English based this misconception
upon his understanding that we hold that Christ, during His incarnation,
`partook of our sinful, fallen nature,’" Froom quoted English. "In this
expression he was clearly alluding to the then off-cited note in the old edition
of Bible Readings." (E. Schuyler English, letter to L. E. F., Mar.
11, 1955, p. 1). (ibid., MD, p. 469).
Notice that Froom says the reason Dr. English believed that
Seventh-day Adventists `deny Christ’s Deity’ was because the book Bible
Readings stated that "we hold that Christ, during His incarnation, partook
of our sinful, fallen nature." Was Dr. English right? No. Pioneer Seventh-day
Adventists did believe in the "Deity of Jesus Christ." Did pioneer
Adventists believe that while on earth Christ "partook of our sinful, fallen
nature?" Yes they did. Was the position on Christ’s human nature, published in
Bible Readings, the correct position of pioneer Adventists? Yes, indeed
it was.
"We immediately wrote to Dr. English expressing concern over his
mistaken understanding of our teachings on these and other points," Froom
stated. "And further, that the old Colcord minority-view note in Bible
Readings - contending for an inherent, sinful, fallen nature for Christ -
had years before been expunged because of its error."
Who were the "we" that wrote to Dr. English and dared to explain
to him what Seventh-day Adventists believe? When was the statement in Bible
Readings "expunged," and who had the authority to delete Adventist doctrine
from one of Adventism’s most treasured and influential missionary books?
The Expunged Note In Bible
Readings
"Cognizance must also be taken of the correction, in 1949, of a
definite error appearing in a note on the nature of Christ during the
incarnation," Froom stated. "For years it had appeared, in the standard Bible
Readings for the Home Circle. It was in the section on "A Sinless Life.’"
(ibid., MD, pp. 427, 428, emphasis supplied).
Observe that Froom admits that, "For years it [the note] had
appeared, in the standard Bible Readings for the Home Circle." Later
Froom stated that the note had been inserted in Bible Readings in 1914
and continued until 1949, a period of 35 years. Remember, Froom stated in a
previous chapter that the "new" Statement of Fundamental Beliefs in 1931 were
accepted because there was not one protest of objection against them! If
the note in Bible Readings was "a definite error," as Froom states,
then why had not someone protested against it during those 35 years?
The Alleged Erroneous Note
The expunged note in Bible Readings was found on page 174
in the chapter "A Sinless Life." The note was in response to question number 6,
"How fully did Christ share our common humanity?" The Scripture reference was
Hebrews 2:17, "Wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his
brethren, that he might be a merciful and faithful high priest in things
pertaining to God, to make reconciliation for the sins of the people." The
expunged note that Dr. English, Leroy Froom, and Adventist leadership, then and
now, have an aversion to reads as follows:
In His
humanity Christ partook of our sinful, fallen nature. If
not, then He was not "made like unto His brethren," was not "in all points
tempted like as we are," did not overcome as we have to overcome, and is not,
therefore, the complete and perfect Saviour man needs and must have to be saved.
The idea that Christ was born of an immaculate or sinless mother, inherited no
tendencies to sin, and for this reason did not sin, removes Him from the
realm of a fallen world, and from the very place where help is needed. On
His human side, Christ inherited just what every child of Adam
inherited-a sinful nature. On the divine side, from His very
conception He was begotten and born of the Spirit. And all this was done to
place mankind on vantage-ground, and to demonstrate that in the same way
everyone who is "born of the Spirit" may gain like victories over sin in his
own sinful flesh. Thus each one is to overcome as Christ overcame.
Rev. 3:21. Without this birth there can be no victory over temptation, and no
salvation from sin. John 3:3-7.
Bible
Readings for the Home,
Copyright Review and Herald Publishing Association, all editions 1914-1949,
Pacific Press Publishing Association, page 174. (emphasis
supplied).
This powerful pioneer Adventist statement on victory over sin is
obviously a thorn in the side of contemporary "new theology" Seventh-day
Adventists. The new note that was placed in Bible Readings in 1949 reads
as follows:
Jesus Christ is both Son of God and Son of man. As a member of the
human family "it behoved Him to be made like unto His brethren" - "in the
likeness of sinful flesh." Just how far that "likeness" goes is a mystery of
the incarnation which men have never been able to solve.
Bible
Readings for the Home,
Copyright Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1959 edition, Pacific Press
Publishing Association, page 143. (emphasis
supplied).
Froom’s Explanation Of the Expunged Note In Bible
Readings?
"Apparently it was first written by W. A. Colcord, in 1914," Froom
wrote. "It likewise involved one of those questions upon which there had been
variance of view through the years." (ibid., MD, pp. 427, 428, emphasis
supplied).
Froom was back to his devious method of insinuation without
documentation. "Apparently it was first written by W. A. Colcord, in 1914."
Froom gives no historical references to the fact that Colcord might have written
the note - just insinuation by the use of the word "apparently."
Froom then states that, "It likewise involved one of those
questions upon which there had been variance of view through the years." Again
no documentation, just insinuation. Is this statement true? No. The truth is
that James White and all pioneer Seventh-day Adventists, including Ellen White,
believed the human nature of Christ to be as it was written in Bible
Readings.
Pioneer Adventists and Christ’s Human
Nature
In his excellent research book, The Word Was Made Flesh,
Dr. Ralph Larson found over 1,100 statements by Ellen White and other pioneer
Adventists that Jesus came to earth in the nature of Adam after the fall
in Eden. Larson did not find one statement that Christ took the nature of Adam
before the fall. There is a document in the Ellen G. White Estate,
however, which reveals that the apostate "Holy Flesh" movement in Indiana
(1899-1900) taught the false doctrine that Christ took upon Himself the nature
of Adam before the fall. This document was in the form of a letter to Ellen
White from Stephen N. Haskell, mailed from Battle Creek, Michigan on September
25, 1900:
When we stated that we believed that Christ was born in fallen
humanity, they [the Holy Flesh leaders] would represent us as believing that
Christ sinned, notwithstanding the fact that we would state our position so
clearly that it would seem as though no one could misunderstand
us.
Their point of theology in this particular respect seems to be
this: They [the Holy Flesh leaders] believe that Christ took Adam’s nature
before he fell; so He [Christ] took humanity as it was in the garden of
Eden, and thus humanity was holy, and this is the humanity which Christ had;
and now, they [the Holy Flesh leaders] say, the particular time has come for us
to become holy in that sense, and then we will have "translation faith" and
never die.
Stephen N. Haskell, Letter #2, to Ellen G. White, dated at
Battle Creek, Michigan, September 25, 1900. (emphasis
supplied).
Many quotations from pioneer Adventists on the human nature of
Christ, that concur with the expunged note in Bible Readings, could be
presented. However, only nine will be sufficient to demonstrate this point
clearly.
"He [Christ] was indeed a partaker of flesh and blood like unto
us," D. Lacy wrote, "and why? That He might know in His person and be
touched with the feeling of our infirmities." (Bible Echo, 4/01/90, p.
99, emphasis supplied).
"In coming down from the throne of glory which Christ had with the
Father before the world was, to take upon Himself the likeness of sinful
flesh," S. McCullagh, first Secretary of Australasian conference, wrote, "it
was that humanity might be met where they were in their low state.
(ibid., Bible Echo, 1/15/1900, p. 43, emphasis
supplied).
"Henceforth the church was to look backward to a Saviour who had
come - who lived in sinful flesh," Eugene William Farnsworth wrote.
(1847-1935). (ibid., Bible Echo, 11/23/03, p, 568, emphasis supplied).
"(Jesus) took our nature upon Himself," E. Hillard wrote,
"and was subject to our temptations." (ibid., Australia, Signs of the
Times, 10/12/03, p, 492, emphasis supplied).
"Do not forget that the mystery of God is not God manifest in
sinless flesh but God manifest in sinful flesh," Alonzo T. Jones wrote.
"There could never be any mystery about God’s manifesting Himself in sinless
flesh, in one who had no connection whatsoever with sin. That would be plain
enough. But that He can manifest Himself in flesh laden with sin and with all
the tendencies to sin, such as ours is - that is a mystery."
(ibid., Bible Echo, 11/30/96, p, 370, emphasis supplied).
"By partaking of our nature, His human arm encircles the
fallen race," Stephen N. Haskell wrote.(ibid., Bible Echo, 2/15/92, p.
56, emphasis supplied).
"Christ, in order to reveal His father’s love," W. H. Pascoe
wrote, "took upon Himself our flesh, linked humanity with divinity,
became subject to all our aches and pains. . . ‘Himself took our infirmities.’ "
(ibid., Australia, Signs of the Times, 7/04/04, p. 324, emphasis
supplied).
"But who did keep the commandments?" William Warren Prescott asks.
(1855-1944). "Jesus Christ. And who can do it over again, even in sinful
flesh? Jesus Christ." (ibid., Bible Echo, 12/09/95, p. 380, emphasis
supplied).
"He [Christ] came, not where man was before he fell," W. W.
Prescott stated, "but where man was after he fell." (ibid., Bible
Echo, 1/6/96 and 1/13/96) (emphasis supplied).
"And notice, it was in sinful flesh that He [Christ] was
tempted, not the flesh in which Adam fell," Prescott concluded. "This
is wondrous truth, but I am wondrous glad that it is so. It follows at once that
by birth, by being born into the same family, Jesus Christ is my brother in
the flesh." (ibid., Bible Echo, 1/6/96 and 1/13/96, emphasis
supplied).
"Because we are partakers of flesh and blood, and heirs of its
weaknesses," George Bert Starr wrote. (1854-1944), "He [Christ] became
partaker of our nature. (ibid., Australia, Signs of the Times,
7/04/04, p. 323, emphasis supplied).
Ellen White and Christ’s Human
Nature
Many statements by Ellen White can be produced that concur with
the position of pioneer Adventists on Christ’s human nature. However, we will
consider only three very plain statements to demonstrate this
point.
(1) Think of Christ’s humiliation. He took upon Himself fallen,
suffering human nature, degraded and defiled by sin. He took our sorrows,
bearing our grief and shame. He endured all the temptations wherewith man is
beset. He united humanity with divinity: a divine spirit dwelt in a
temple of flesh. . .. "The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us," because
by so doing He could associate with the sinful, sorrowing sons and daughters of
Adam.
Ellen G. White, The Youth’s Instructor, December 20, 1900.
(emphasis supplied).
(2) He who considered it not robbery to be equal with God, once
trod the earth, bearing our suffering and sorrowing
nature.
Ellen G. White, The Bible Echo, August, 1887, page 114.
(emphasis supplied).
(3) The example He has left must be followed. He took upon His
sinless nature our sinful nature, that He might know how to succor those
that are tempted.
Ellen G. White, Medical Ministry, page 181. (emphasis
supplied).
Leroy Froom’s Erroneous Conclusion On Bible Readings
Note
"Latitude had therefore been the accepted attitude on the
question," Froom concluded. "As a result, Adventists had long been censored
by theologians not of our faith for tolerating this erroneous minority
position, and this particular printed statement." (ibid., Movement of
Destiny, page 428, emphasis supplied).
Ample evidence has already been shown that the teaching of pioneer
Seventh-day Adventists and Ellen White, on the nature of Christ while in the
flesh, was not an "erroneous minority position," as Froom alludes.
Further, it has been adequately demonstrated that the statements of pioneer
Adventists and Ellen White harmonized perfectly with the statement in Bible
Readings for the Home.
Who Dared To Expunged the Note In Bible
Readings?
"In 1949, Professor D. E. Rebok, then president of our Seventh-day
Adventist Theological Seminary, when it was still in Washington, D. C., was
requested by the Review and Herald to revise Bible Readings for the Home
Circle," Froom stated. "Coming upon this unfortunate note on page 174, in
the study on the "Sinless Life," he recognized that this was not true."
(ibid., Movement of Destiny, page 428, emphasis supplied).
Who were the men at the Review and Herald Publishing Association
that authorized Rebok to revise Bible Readings for the Home? Was it only
Rebok’s opinion that "this was not true," or was it also the opinion of the
Adventist leadership in 1949?
"But in eliminating the note he found that some still held with
Colcord in his position," Froom added further. (ibid., MD, p. 428). Froom
does not divulge who the "some" faithful Adventists were that still held with
Colcord (if he indeed was the one who had inserted the note in Bible
Readings), Ellen White, and other pioneer Adventists. However, in his
splendid research book, The Word Was Made Flesh, Dr. Ralph Larson did
document who the "some" were in 1949 that still believed the true human nature
of Christ as taught by pioneer Seventh-day
Adventists.
"It was the same flesh as we of the human family possess,"
Berthold H. Swartakopf wrote. (ibid., Australia, Signs of the
Times, March 21, 1949, page 7, emphasis
his).
"The Son of God became the Son of Man. . .," Robert Hare wrote.
"Dressed in human flesh, united with the one fallen race in the
universe." (ibid., Australia, Signs of the Times, June 20,
1949, page 7, emphasis supplied).
"When we read His (Christ’s) genealogy as given to Matthew and
Luke," Mary E. Walsh wrote (Bible Instructor, Doctrinal Bible Studies for the
Layman, Bible Studies for Catholics; author, The Wine of Roman
Babylon), "we know that His earthly forebears were men who were marked
with human weakness." (ibid., Australia, Signs of the Times,
November 24, 1949, page 11, emphasis
supplied).
"He is touched with our feelings and infirmities," J. A. McMillan
wrote, "because He shares our nature." (The Bible and Our Times,
England, December 11, 1952, page 13, emphasis
supplied).
"The controversy of the ages was on," Benjamin P. Hoffman wrote.
(Missionary, College teacher, Seminary Professor).. "Its issue was to be
determined in the person of Him who became the partaker of the same flesh and
blood with fallen humanity." (Review and Herald, April 9,
1953, page 4, emphasis supplied).
"Every day of His humiliation in sinful flesh was a day of
suffering," H. L. Rudy wrote. (Conference President, General Conference
Vice-President). (ibid., Review and Herald, October 14,
1954, page 3, emphasis supplied).
"Only as a man with the same handicaps and limitations as other
men, could Jesus be a perfect example for other men," G. Stevenson wrote
(Editor, Signs of the Times, South Africa). "It was necessary that
there should be no natural difference between Himself and the men He came to
save." (South Africa Signs of the Times, Vol. 20, No. 2, page 3,
emphasis supplied).
Froom’s Own Son Concurred With Pioneer
Adventists
"He was born as a babe in Bethlehem, subject to like passions
as we are," Fenton Edwin Froom wrote. "If Christ had been exempt from
temptation, without the power and responsibility to choose, or without the
sin-filled inclinations and tendencies of our sinful nature, He could not
have lived our life without sin." (Our Times, December, 1949,
page 4, emphasis supplied).
Curiously, this statement by Leroy Froom’s son, Fenton, is more
clear than any pioneer statement on Christ’s Human Nature! The contradiction
is that Leroy Froom’s own son, Fenton, was one of those who "still held with
Colcord in his position."
"So the inaccurate note was deleted, and has remained out in all
subsequent printings [of Bible Readings], " Leroy E. Froom concluded
triumphantly. "Thus another error was removed through these revisions of the
1940's, as concerned some of our standard and otherwise helpful
books." (ibid., MD, p. 428).
Our standard books were "otherwise helpful," except for the errors
that Froom and other leaders alleged! Errors were "removed from some of our
standard books?" We are not told which of our other "standard" books were
"revised" during the 1940's.
Standard Seventh-day Adventist Books Not To Be
Revised
We do know the details of the revision of one major Seventh-day
Adventist book in the 1940's. Uriah Smith’s book, Daniel and the
Revelation, was first published in 1881. By 1888 the book had gone through
six editions, but with no revisions! In 1941 the first "revised" edition
was published, long after the death of Uriah Smith. The largest and last
revision was done in 1944, again long after the death of Uriah
Smith.
W. W. Prescott, former president of Battle Creek College, who had
from 1903 to 1909 served as editor of the Review and Herald, and was
in 1910 carrying leadership responsibilities, and A. G. Daniells,
president of the General Conference, having espoused the so-called "new view" of
the identity of the "daily" of Daniel 8:13 (See SDA Encyclopedia,
article, "Daily"), were drawn into heated discussions with advocates of the "old
view" expounded by Uriah Smith in his much-used and fruitful book Thoughts on
Daniel and the Revelation. . .. There was talk of the possible revision
of books in which the old view was advocated, particularly the widely
sold Thoughts on Daniel and the Revelation.
Publishers note, Ellen G. White Estate, Manuscript
Releases, Vol. 18, page 49. (emphasis
supplied).
Uriah Smith passed away in 1903, seven years before this proposal
to revise his book was attempted. The revision of these standard Seventh-day
Adventist books was done in total opposition to the counsel given by Ellen
White.
"If we should now sow broadcast seeds of doubt as to the
correctness of our printed books and tracts, and encourage the thought that
there must needs be a general revision of our published books," Ellen White
counsels, "a work will have begun that the Lord has not appointed us to
do." (Letter 70, 1910, pages. 1, 3, August 11, 1910) (See also,
Manuscript Releases, Vol. 10, "Counsels Concerning W. W. Prescott and A.
G. Daniells," pages 364- 366, emphasis
supplied).
"Even a suggestion as to inaccuracies would, if made public, lead
some to vindicate their course of action in spending much time in an effort
to search for flaws and to find fault," Ellen White counseled. "It is not
safe to set some minds running in such channels of thought, as this would lead
to a harvest of doubt and unbelief. I know whereof I speak, for the Lord has
opened this matter before me." (ibid., Letter 70, 1910, pages.
1, 3, August 11, 1910, emphasis supplied).
"In the night season I have seen men looking over our printed
books in search of something to criticize, and the adversary was standing
by their side, making suggestions to their minds," Ellen White concluded.
"The natural result of unwise criticism would be to bring infidelity into our
ranks." (ibid., Letter 70, 1910, pages. 1, 3, August 11, 1910,
emphasis supplied).
The Nature Of Adam - Before the Fall, Or After the
Fall?
In his letter to Froom, Dr. English stated that, "He [Christ] was
perfect in His humanity, but He was none the less God, and His conception in His
incarnation was overshadowed by the Holy Spirit so that He did not partake of
the fallen sinful nature of other men." (ibid., MD, p. 469, emphasis
supplied). In his reply letter to Dr. English, Froom stated, "That, we in
turn assured him, is precisely what we [Seventh-day Adventists] likewise
believe." (ibid., MD, p. 470, emphasis
supplied).
In his book Movement of Destiny, Froom stated that, "He
[Christ] was like Adam before his fall, who was similarly without any
inherent sinful `propensities.’" (ibid., MD, p. 428, emphasis supplied).
Is this the position of Ellen White and pioneer Seventh-day Adventists? No. It
is not. Note carefully the following two statements from the pen of
inspiration:
(1) He [Christ] took the nature of man, with all its
possibilities. We have nothing to endure that He has not endured. . .. Adam
had the advantage over Christ, in that when he was assailed by the tempter,
none of the effects of sin were upon him. He [Adam] stood in the strength
of perfect manhood, possessing the full vigor of mind and body. He [Adam] was
surrounded with the glories of Eden, and was in daily communion with heavenly
beings. It was not thus with Jesus when He entered the wilderness to cope
with Satan. For four thousand years the race had been decreasing in physical
strength, in mental power, in moral worth; and Christ took upon
Him the infirmities of degenerate humanity. Only thus could He rescue man
from the lowest depths of degradation.
Ellen G. White, Manuscript. 113, 1902, pages. 1, 2. (See,
Desire of Ages, page 117) (emphasis
supplied).
(2) In Christ are united the divine and the human. The Creator and
the creature, the nature of God, whose law had been transgressed, and nature
of Adam, the transgressor, meet in Jesus,-the Son of God and the Son of man.
Ellen G. White, Bible Training School, February 1, 1908.
(emphasis supplied).
It is obvious from these two statements that Leroy Froom is not in
harmony with the Spirit of Prophecy on the nature that Christ assumed while in
the flesh. What Froom told Dr. English that Seventh-day Adventists believe is
just not true. This is not what Seventh-day Adventists historically believed and
taught in their writings.
Tobie E. Unruh’s First Contact With
Evangelicals
"While some Adventist and non-Adventist dissidents have been
vociferous in their denunciation of the Adventist definitions of the Evangelical
evaluation," T. E. Unruh began, "in retrospect the conferences improved the
understanding and appreciation of the Seventh-day Adventist church on the part
of many Evangelical leaders and likewise warmed many Adventist leaders toward
the Evangelicals." (T. E. Unruh, The Adventist Heritage, Vol. 4, No.
2, 1977, page 35, emphasis supplied).
We might paraphrase Unruh’s statement "and likewise warmed many
Adventist leaders toward Babylon." In this first paragraph Unruh added, "It
was a time when the gates between sheepfolds stood open." (ibid., AH,
p. 35, emphasis supplied). The time was right for Evangelical heresies to be
introduced into the Seventh-day Adventist
Church.
"There was no thought of precipitating in anything of such
historic consequence when I wrote a letter on November 28, 1949, commending
Dr. Donald Grey Barnhouse for his radio sermons on righteousness by faith based
on the book of Romans," Unruh disclosed. "At the time, Dr. Barnhouse was a
popular radio preacher, minister, of the Tenth Presbyterian Church of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, author of a number of Evangelical books, and founder
and senior editor of the influential Eternity magazine."(ibid.,
AH, p. 35). Unruh added further that, "I was the president of the East
Pennsylvania Conference, with headquarters in Reading." (ibid., AH,
p. 35, emphasis supplied).
Tobie E. Unruh, president of the East Pennsylvania Conference, was
the first Seventh-day Adventist (other than Leroy Froom) to reach out to the
Evangelical leaders. Unruh must have had an obscure knowledge of the true
teaching of Righteousness by Faith as it was taught by Ellen White and pioneer
Adventists E. J. Waggoner and A. T. Jones.
"The Lord in His great mercy sent a most precious message
to His people through Elders Waggoner and Jones. . . ," Ellen White
wrote. "It presented justification through faith in the Surety; it invited the
people to receive the righteousness of Christ, which is made manifest in
obedience to all the commandments of God." (Testimonies to Ministers,
pages 91-92, emphasis supplied).
What would Dr. Barnhouse, a Presbyterian minister, know about the
true teaching of Righteousness by Faith? The Lord sent a special, "a most
precious message," to the Seventh-day Adventist Church on Righteousness by
Faith. Why did not Jesus simply tell Adventists to "Study Righteousness by Faith
as taught by the Presbyterian Church?
"In his reply to my letter Barnhouse expressed astonishment
that an Adventist clergyman would commend him for preaching righteousness by
faith," Unruh continued, "since in his opinion it was a well known fact
that Seventh-day Adventists believed in righteousness by works."
(ibid., AH, p. 35, emphasis supplied).
Notice that Barnhouse was astonished that an Adventist would
believe in the "free grace" concept of Righteousness by Faith as taught by a
Presbyterian. Indeed, Barnhouse stated that "it was a well known fact that
Seventh-day Adventist believed in righteousness by
works."
Dr. Barnhouse also knew that Adventists believed in a different
Christ than Evangelicals. The Christ of the Seventh-day Adventist is "the Lord
of the Sabbath,"(Matt. 12:8), and the Christ that Adventists believed in, came
to earth in the human nature of "the seed of Abraham." (Heb. 2:16). Unruh
verified this pioneer position of Seventh-day Adventists on the human nature of
Christ by relating that Barnhouse "went on to state that since boyhood he had
been familiar with Adventists and their teachings, and that in his opinion
about their views about the nature and work of Christ were Satanic and
dangerous." (ibid. AH, p. 35, emphasis supplied). Barnhouse then
concluded his letter "by inviting this strange Adventist to have lunch with
him." (ibid., AH, p. 35). Notice that Dr. Barnhouse considered Unruh to
be a "strange Adventist" because of his "Presbyterian" concepts of Righteousness
by Faith.
"We did not then get together for lunch, but we did correspond for
a time," Unruh recalled. "I returned a soft answer to the first letter from
Barnhouse and sent him a copy of Steps to Christ, at the same time
affirming the evangelical character of Adventist doctrine."
(ibid., AH, p. 35, emphasis supplied).
T. E. Unruh obviously did not have a clear concept of what
Seventh-day Adventists really believe, because true Adventist doctrine does not
have an "evangelical character." Adventists are not a part of Evangelical
Babylon. The Advent message calls people out of the erroneous Sunday-keeping
churches of Babylon.
Unruh’s Misconception Of Evangelical
Trust
"I thought we had an agreement that Barnhouse would publish no
further criticism of Adventists before there was further contact and
clarification," Unruh lamented. "However, in Eternity for June 1949,
he sharply criticized Steps to Christ and its author [E. G.
White]. After that, I saw no point in continuing the correspondence."
(ibid., AU, pp. 35, 36, emphasis supplied).
Where was Unruh’s head? Evangelicals have always "sharply
criticized" Adventist literature and Ellen White. Our faith cannot be
compromised with that of the Evangelical Sunday-keeping churches of Babylon.
"There is as great a difference in our faith and that of nominal professors, as
the heavens are higher than the earth," Ellen Whites reminds us. (Spiritual
Gifts, Vol. 2, page 300).
"Here a man of great spiritual stature, a bold crusader for
truth, revealed his prejudice against Adventism and Ellen White," Unruh
recalled of Barnhouse.
Unruh’s perception of Adventism is totally devoid of
understanding! That a Seventh-day Adventist Conference President regarded a
Presbyterian to be "a bold crusader for truth" is beyond the
comprehension of any thinking Adventist.
About the Ellen White book Steps to Christ, Unruh stated
that Barnhouse "quoted a number of statements which he called half truths
introducing Satanic errors, like a worm on a hook, `the first bite is all worm,
the second bite is all hook. That is the way the Devil works.’" (ibid.,
AH, p. 36, emphasis supplied).
Unruh should have known that Dr. Barnhouse and all Evangelicals
believe in, (1) the sacredness of Sunday, the child of the Papacy, (2) that man
goes to heaven or hell when he dies, (3) the rapture of the living saints, and
all the rest of the false doctrines of Babylon. How could Unruh continue to
believe in a man who accused the messenger of the Lord of teaching "Satanic
errors," and "that is how the devil works?" After reading the wonderful inspired
work, Steps to Christ, Dr. Barnhouse could glean nothing from the book,
only condemnation! Unruh then added that, Barnhouse came to the place where he
"acknowledge that Seventh-day Adventists were his brethren in Christ."
Preposterous! (ibid., AH, p. 36).
"In the spring of 1955, almost six years after my correspondence
with Dr. Barnhouse began," Unruh continued, "I heard from Walter R. Martin, who
had seen our correspondence and who asked for face to face contact with
representative Seventh-day Adventists. Martin had written a chapter critical of
Adventism in his Rise of the Cults and now wanted to talk with Adventists
before doing further writing on the subject of our doctrines." (ibid.,
AH, p. 36).
Tobie Unruh’s Eyewitness Report Of the Evangelical
Conferences:
Considering time and place in history we now come to the infamous
Evangelical Conferences of 1955-1956. Why were Adventist leadership so anxious
to meet "face to face" with those who were "critical of Adventism?"
Unruh’s Short Sketch Of Walter Martin’s
Credentials:
Walter Martin had come to the attention of Dr. Barnhouse when the
former was in his early twenties, a graduate student in the history of American
religion at New York University. By 1955 Martin had to his credit several books
about American Cults which were recognized as standard works in that field. He
was a consulting editor on Eternity staff, a Southern Baptist clergyman,
and a member of the Evangelical Foundation, known to the faithful as "How
Firm a Foundation," an organization started by Christian businessmen who managed
the financial aspects of the Barnhouse
Enterprises.
T. E. Unruh, Adventist Heritage, Vol. 4, No. 2, 1977, pages
36, 37.
Unruh is now stating that the Evangelical Foundation is "known to
the faithful" as "How Firm a Foundation." This statement is so foreign to
pioneer Seventh-day Adventist thinking that it boggles the mind! It is
organizations like the "Evangelical Foundation," the "Lord’s Day Alliance," and
the contemporary "Christian Coalition," that will be successful in establishing
a national Sunday Law in America. Are these people "the faithful?" No. The real
faithful are those who recognize "How Firm Is Our Seventh-day Adventist
Foundation," not "How Firm Our Evangelical Foundation." Indeed the faithful few
are Seventh-day Adventists who are watching prudently the waymarks, the
sign-posts, of political developments in the contemporary Evangelical
Sunday-keeping Churches of America. Watching as these churches of Babylon are
moving slowly but surely toward a national Sunday Law. The faithful few are
Adventists who recognize pioneer Adventist doctrine as "How Firm Our
Foundation." The faithful few are those who "keep the commandments of God, and
the faith of Jesus." (Rev. 14:12).
"It was understood at the onset that Martin, a research
polemicist, had been commissioned to write against Seventh-day
Adventism," Unruh recalled. "Nevertheless, he declared that he wanted direct
access so he could treat Adventists fairly." (ibid., AH, p. 37, emphasis
supplied).
Again, Adventist leadership was content to confer with an
influential Evangelical who "had been commissioned to write against Seventh-day
Adventism." Why should Adventist leadership trust leaders of Babylon who had
already shown their hatred of Seventh-day Adventist truth?
"When I explained to a friend at Adventist headquarters in
Washington, D.C., they agreed that Martin should be treated fairly, and
provided with the contacts he sought," Unruh continued. "Martin expressly
asked to meet Leroy E. Froom, with whose Prophetic Faith of Our
Fathers he was already familiar with. Froom suggested the inclusion of W.
E. Read, then a field secretary of the General Conference." (ibid.,
AH, p. 37, emphasis supplied).
In our study of apostasy in the history of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church, the name of Leroy Froom looms once again as a major
participant. Not only that, but Froom was allowed to choose another to serve on
the conferences. Unruh then disclosed that, "I served as moderator or chairman
throughout the conferences." (ibid., AH, p. 37). This would make Unruh’s
documentation, as chairman of the Evangelical Conferences, a valuable one
indeed.
"In March 1955, Martin came to Washington for his first meeting
with the Adventists," Unruh continued. "With him was George E. Cannon, a
professor of theology on the faculty of the Nyack, New York, missionary college.
Martin, for his part, seemed to expect a degree of resistance and cover-up, such
as he may have met in some of his other investigation. . .." (ibid., AH,
p. 37). Unruh added further that, "This first meeting can best be described as a
confrontation."
Walter Martin stated in 1984 on the John Ankerberg television
program that, "George Cannon took out his Greek New Testament and proved from
the Greek that, at the ascension, Christ went into the most holy place in
the heavenly sanctuary, not in 1844, as Mrs. White says - and all the Adventists
present, Froom, Anderson, Read, Figuhr, Heppinstall, and others, agreed with
Cannon that this was a true exegesis of Hebrews 9."
"Martin began going through a list of questions which reflected
his reading, "Unruh recalled. "We Adventists, rather than launching into a
defense, began with a positive presentation in which we emphasized those
doctrines held by our church in common with Evangelical Christians of all
faith in all ages." (ibid., AH, pp. 37, 38, emphasis supplied).
Doctrines held in common with Evangelicals? What does the pen of
inspiration say about such a position?
"Here is to be found an image of the papacy," Ellen White replies
to our question. "When the churches of our land, uniting upon such points of
faith as are held by them in common. . .." (Spirit of Prophecy. p.
278).
Leadership Defines Doctrine To
Evangelicals
(1) "We stated our conviction that the Bible is the Inspired Word
of God and the only rule of Adventist faith and practice." This first statement
is true. The Bible is our only rule of
doctrine.
(2) "We affirmed our belief in the eternal and complete deity of
Christ, in His sinless life in the incarnation." This second statement is also
true. Adventists have always taught that Christ lived a sinless life.
However, it must be remembered that the Evangelical concept of the doctrine of
the "deity" of Christ is a different concept than that which was held by pioneer
Seventh-day Adventists. Pioneer Adventists believed that "Christ lived a sinless
life in sinful flesh." Documentation for this has already been presented
above. (For further study see, Dr. Ralph Larson, The Word Was Made
Flesh). What Unruh and the contemporary Adventist conferees told the
Evangelicals was the same thing Leroy Froom told Dr. E. Schuyler English. In his
letter to Froom, Dr. English had stated that, "He [Christ] was perfect in His
humanity, but He was none the less God, and His conception in His incarnation
was overshadowed by the Holy Spirit so that He did not partake of the
fallen sinful nature of other men." In his reply letter to Dr. English,
Froom had stated, "That, we in turn assured him, is precisely what we
[Seventh-day Adventists] likewise believe." (ibid., Movement of
Destiny, page 470, emphasis supplied). Remember Froom had also stated that,
"Dr. English based this misconception [of our belief in the deity of Christ]
upon his understanding that we hold that Christ, during His incarnation,
`partook of our sinful, fallen nature.’ In this expression he was clearly
alluding to the then off-cited note in the old edition of Bible
Readings." (E. Schuyler English, letter to L.E.F., Mar. 11, 1955, p.
1, emphasis his). (See also, MD, p. 469).
(3) Unruh related how they told the Evangelical conferees that we
also believe, "In His atoning death on the cross, once for all and
all-sufficient." (emphasis supplied). This again was a partial truth.
Pioneer Seventh-day Adventists did believe in the atoning death of Christ on the
cross. But the wording implies a completed atonement on the cross, which pioneer
Adventists did not believe. (Ample documentation for the "final atonement in
heaven" was presented above in Chapter #12, "The Final
Atonement").
(4) The Adventist conferees told the Evangelicals that we believe
"in His literal resurrection, and in His priestly ministry before the Father,
applying the benefits of the atonement completed on the cross."
(Questions on Doctrine, pages 354, 355, emphasis theirs). Again a partial
truth. Pioneer Adventists did believe in Christ’s literal resurrection, they did
not believe that as our High Priest, Christ is "applying the benefits of the
atonement completed on the cross." They did not believe that the atonement
was finished and completed on the cross. They believed that the "final
atonement" was begun in 1844 in the heavenly sanctuary and will be final and
complete at the close of probation when Michael, Jesus Christ, our High Priest
stands up. Dan. 12:1. (See, Owen R. L. Crosier, Day-Star, Extra, February
7, 1846; James N. Andrews, The Sanctuary and Twenty-Three Hundred Days,
Steam Press of the Seventh-day Adventist Publishing Association, Battle Creek,
Mich. 1872, page 90; Joseph Bates, Eighth Way Mark, "Bridegroom Come,"
page 101; Stephen N. Haskell, "Preparation For Reception Of the Holy Spirit,"
1909 General Conference Daily Bulletin, May 20, 1909, page 106; A. T.
Jones, "The Times of Refreshing," The Consecrated Way To Christian
Perfection, page 124; J. N. Loughborough, Great Second Advent
Movement, page 334; E. J. Waggoner, Review and Herald, September 30,
1902; James White, "The Sanctuary," Bible Adventism, pages 185,
186).
The four Adventist conferees "rephrased" our doctrines so they
would be accepted by the Evangelicals and they would then consider us brethren
and would no longer think of Adventism as a cult. Notice how the thread of
ecumenism runs strongly throughout the history of the Seventh-day Adventist
Church after the death of Ellen White and the other pioneer
Adventists.
"It quickly became clear to the Adventist conferees that both
questions and answers would have to be stated formally in writing," Unruh
continued, "that the answers would have to be made crystal clear to the
Evangelical conferees and to those they represented, and that a way would have
to be found to demonstrate the consensus we were sure we had. Martin was given
books and periodicals to substantiate the claims we had made in our opening
statement." (ibid., AH, p. 38).
"The immediate concern of the Adventists was the list of questions
with which Martin had begun his interrogation," Unruh stated. "Froom, who had
a facile pen, took the responsibility of composing the initial answers, in a
document running into twenty pages, whipped into shape by his secretary
after hours until two o’clock in the morning." (ibid., AH, p. 38,
emphasis supplied).
Again Leroy Froom is heavily involved in stating what Seventh-day
Adventists believe to contemporary Evangelical leaders. One man was telling
the leaders of Babylon what Adventists really
believe!
Donald Barnhouse’s Eyewitness Report Of the Evangelical
Conferences:
"Immediately it was perceived that the Adventists were
strenuously denying certain doctrinal positions which had been previously
attributed to them," Dr. Barnhouse observed. "As Mr. Martin read their
answers he came, for example, upon a statement that they repudiated absolutely
the thought that seventh day Sabbath keeping was a basis for salvation and a
denial of any teaching that the keeping of the first day of the week is as yet
considered to be the receiving of the antichristian `mark of the beast.’"
(Eternity, October, 1956, emphasis
supplied).
Notice that even the Evangelicals could see that "the Adventists
were strenuously denying certain doctrinal positions which had been previously
attributed to them." However, by "strenuously denying certain doctrinal
positions" an embarrassing problem emerged for the Adventist leadership.
"Martin pointed out to them that in their book store adjoining the
building in which these meetings were taking place a certain volume published by
them and written by one of their ministers categorically stated the contrary
to what they were now asserting," Dr. Barnhouse reported. (ibid.,
Eternity, 10/56, emphasis supplied).
If those allegations were true, what could the Adventist
leadership do at that point to abate the concern of the Evangelicals? The
solution came swiftly - alter the books that disagree with what they were
stating to the Evangelicals!
"The leaders sent for the book, discovered that Mr. Martin was
correct, and immediately brought this fact to the attention of the General
Conference officers," Dr. Barnhouse recalled, "that this situation might be
remedied and such publications be corrected." (ibid.,
Eternity, 10/56, emphasis supplied).
Again we have a historical document stating that Seventh-day
Adventist books were altered. Statements that did not agree with what the
Adventist leadership was telling the Evangelicals, was simply expunged from the
books. This is precisely how the statement on the human nature of Christ was
expunged from Bible Readings for the Home in 1949.
The Big Historical Lie
"This same procedure was repeated regarding the nature of Christ
while in the flesh," Dr. Barnhouse reported further, "which the majority of
the denomination has always held to be sinless, holy, and perfect,
despite the fact that certain of their writers have occasionally gotten into
print with contrary views completely repugnant to the Church at large."
(ibid., Eternity, 10/56, emphasis supplied).
Who were some of these writers who had "occasionally gotten into
print with contrary views" that were "completely repugnant to the [contemporary
Seventh-day Adventist] Church at large?" Ellen White for one! Her books
are filled with statements on the human nature of Christ. (See Dr. Ralph Larson,
The Word Was Made Flesh). Uriah Smith, Waggoner and Jones, W. W.
Prescott, Stephen Haskell, E. W. Farnsworth, G. B. Starr, and many others had
"gotten into print with contrary views" that were "completely repugnant to the
[contemporary Seventh-day Adventist] Church at large?"
The enemy of souls has sought to bring in the supposition that a
great reformation was to take place among Seventh-day Adventists, and that this
reformation would consist in giving up the doctrines which stand as the pillars
of our faith. Were this reformation to take place, what would result? The
principles of truth that God in His wisdom has given to the remnant church,
would be discarded. Our religion would be changed. The fundamental principles
that have sustained the work for the last fifty years would be accounted as
error. A new organization would be established. Books of a new order
would be written. A system of intellectual philosophy would be introduced.
The founders of this system would go into the cities, and do a wonderful work.
The Sabbath, of course, would be lightly regarded, as also the God who created
it. Nothing would be allowed to stand in the way of the new movement. The
leaders would teach that virtue is better than vice, but God being removed, they
would place their dependence on human power, which, without God, is worthless.
Their foundation would be built on the sand, and storm and tempest would sweep
away the structure.
Ellen G. White, Selected Messages, Book 1, pages 204, 205.
(emphasis supplied).
Note carefully the following scenario. (1) Ellen White predicted
that, "The fundamental principles that have sustained the work for the last
fifty years would be accounted as error." (ibid., SM, Bk. 1, p.
204, emphasis supplied). Remember, Ellen White penned this statement at the turn
of the century. The fundamental principles were taught by pioneer Seventh-day
Adventists from 1844 to the turn of the century. That is what is meant by the
statement "the past fifty years." (2) The Evangelical conferees stated that,
"Immediately it was perceived that the Adventists were strenuously denying
certain doctrinal positions which had been previously attributed to them."
(ibid., Eternity, 10/56, emphasis supplied). Ellen White predicted
that "this reformation would consist in giving up the doctrines which stand
as the pillars of our faith." (ibid., SM, Bk. 1, p. 204). (3) The
Evangelicals stated that, "The leaders sent for the book, discovered that Mr.
Martin was correct, and immediately brought this fact to the attention of the
General Conference officers, that this situation might be remedied and such
publications be corrected." (ibid., Eternity, 10/56, emphasis
supplied). To this Ellen White replies, "Who has authority to begin such a
movement? We have our Bibles. We have our experience, attested to by the
miraculous working of the Holy Spirit." (ibid., SM, Bk. 2, p. 205,
emphasis supplied).
"We have a truth that admits of no compromise," Ellen White
concluded. "Shall we not repudiate everything that is not in harmony with
this truth?" (ibid., SM, Bk. 1, p. 205, emphasis supplied).
"They [the Adventist leadership] further explained to Mr. Martin
that they had among their number certain members of their `lunatic fringe’ even
as there are similar wild-eyed irresponsibles in every field of fundamental
Christianity," Dr. Barnhouse reported. "This action of the Seventh-day
Adventists was indicative of similar steps that were taken subsequently."
(ibid., Eternity, 10/56).
This report of what the Adventist leadership told Barnhouse and
Martin is beyond betrayal and deception! To think that contemporary Seventh-day
Adventist leadership had the audacity to call faithful pioneer Adventists such
names as "lunatic fringe" and "wild-eyed irresponsibles" is beyond the realm of
Christian demeanor.
"There are men among us in responsible positions who
hold that the opinions of a few conceited philosophers, so called, are
more to be trusted than the truth of the Bible, or the testimonies of the Holy
Spirit," Ellen Whites replies. "Such a faith as that of Paul, Peter, or John
is considered old-fashioned and insufferable at the present day. It is
pronounced absurd, mystical, and unworthy of an intelligent mind."
(Testimonies for the Church. Vol. 5, page 79, emphasis
supplied).
"The position of the Adventists seems to some of us in certain
cases to be a new position," Barnhouse continued, "to them it may be
merely the position of the majority group of sane leadership which is
determined to put the brakes on any members who seek to hold views divergent
from that of the responsible leadership of the denomination." (ibid.,
Eternity, 10/56, emphasis supplied).
Notice that the "sane [insane] leadership is determined to put
the brakes on any members who seek to hold views divergent from that of the
responsible [irresponsible] leadership of the denomination." First the
Seventh-day Adventist leadership demean faithful Adventists by labeling them
"lunatic fringe"and "wild-eyed irresponsibles." Then the leadership portrays
themselves as "sane leadership" and "responsible leadership" Then this so-called
"sane leadership promised the Evangelical conferees that they "are determined to
put the brakes on" any members who seek to hold views divergent from that of the
responsible leadership of the denomination." What does inspiration say about
this "new movement," this "new theology?"
"Nothing would be allowed to stand in the way of the new
movement," Ellen White replies. "The leaders would teach that virtue is
better than vice, but God being removed, they would place their dependence on
human power, which, without God, is worthless." (ibid., Selected
Messages, Bk. 1, p. 205, emphasis supplied).
Historical documentation of "putting the brakes on" does not here
need to be produced. Any contemporary Seventh-day Adventist layman who has
studied at all in the past forty years knows that more people have been
disfellowshipped for "views held divergent to so-called `sane’ leadership" since
1955 than in the entire history of the Church! The truth is that a
majority of those excommunicated from the Church in the past forty years were
disfellowshipped, not for immoral purposes, but simply because their doctrinal
concepts were not in harmony with the "sane leadership" of the Church, and
because they did not recognize the so-called "duly authorized authority" of the
leadership of the Church. Indeed, "the brakes have been put
on."
As a side-light to this issue, Charles Ferguson, current pastor of
a prominent Seventh-day Adventist Church in the North Pacific Union, in a sermon
given Saturday, February 28, 1995, stated that,"If the Church board voted to
keep Sunday, you should go along with the board’s decision for the sake of the
unity of the Church." (From a tape recording).
"The second [meeting] will never be forgotten by those who
participated in the conferences," T. E. Unruh stated. "As the morning session
began Martin announced that, as the result of the first round of discussion and
the reading matter he had been given, he was admitting that he had been wrong
about Seventh-day Adventism on several important points and had become persuaded
that Adventists who believed as the conferees were truly born again
Christians and his brethren in Christ." (ibid., Adventist Heritage,
Vol. 4, No. 2, 1977, page 38, emphasis supplied).
"In a dramatic gesture he [Martin] extended his hand in
fellowship," Unruh added triumphantly. (ibid., AH, p. 38).
"Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers," my Bible
says, "for what fellowship. . . hath light with darkness?" (2 Cor. 6:14).
"What can there be in common between these parties?" Ellen White
asks. "There can be no fellowship, no communion. The word fellowship
means participation, partnership." (Fundamentals of Christian Education,
page 476, emphasis supplied).
"What communion can there be between light and darkness, truth and
unrighteousness?" Ellen White asks again. "None whatever. Light
represents righteousness; darkness, error, sin, unrighteousness." (ibid.
Fundamentals of Christian Education, page 476, emphasis supplied).
The Evangelical churches the Adventists were conferring with in
1955 and 1956 were, and still are, in "darkness." They reject totally the three
foundation pillars of Adventism; (1) The final atonement and the blotting out of
sins in the heavenly sanctuary truth of 1844, (2) the seventh day Sabbath, (3)
the soul-sleep of man in death.
The Landmarks Defined
"[1] One of the landmarks under this message was the temple of
God, seen by His truth-loving people in heaven, and the ark containing the law
of God," Ellen White wrote. "[2] The light of the Sabbath of the fourth
commandment flashed it’s strong rays in the pathway of the transgressors of
God’s law. [3] The nonimmortality of the wicked is an old landmark." (Councils
to Writers and Educators, pages 30, 31). Then in this same statement Ellen White
concluded, "I can call to mind nothing more that can come under the head of
the old landmarks." (ibid., Counsels to Writers and Educators, pages
30, 31, emphasis supplied). Again, it cannot be over-stressed that the
Evangelical Sunday-keeping churches of Babylon unequivocally reject all three of
these most important Bible truths of which Ellen White states are "the old
landmarks." Please remember, dear Adventist friend, even after the agreements
made in the conferences of 1955-56, and until this very day, the Evangelicals
still rejected these three "old landmarks" of Seventh-day
Adventism!
"He [Martin] was not convinced that Adventists were right on
doctrines we described as `present truth,’" Unruh continued, "nor was he ever
convinced of these." (ibid., AH, p. 38, emphasis supplied).
True Seventh-day Adventists will never convince most of the
Evangelicals of the "present truth" of the great Advent message. A good case in
point - Dr. Samuele Bacchiocchi’s book, From Sabbath to Sunday, published
by the Pontifical Gregorian University Press, in Rome, Italy, with the
IMPRIMATUR of, R. P. Herve Carrier, S.I., the head Jesuit theologian of the
Jesuit University, was endorsed on the back pages by some of the highest ranking
Roman Catholic and Evangelical scholars - yet to this day not one has
accepted the Bible truth on the seventh day Sabbath!
"We Adventists also faced problems," Unruh recalled. "The
Evangelical conferees were satisfied that we were presenting contemporary
Adventist doctrines, because we were supported by the 1931 Statement of
Fundamental Beliefs, which appeared regularly in official yearbooks and
manuals of the church, and by the amplified statement in the baptismal
covenant." (ibid., AH, p. 38, emphasis supplied).
Again we come back in history to the heretical "1931 Statement of
Fundamental Beliefs" which was written by one man. "As no one else seemed
willing to take the lead in formulating a statement, [M. C.] Wilcox-as a writer
and editor-wrote up for consideration of the committee a suggested summary of
`Fundamental Beliefs of Seventh-day Adventists,’" Leroy Edwin Froom stated about
the 1931 document. (Movement of Destiny, pages. 377-380). Froom stated
further that, "Approval by [the] Committee [was] not required. The authorizing
did not call for submission to any other committee for approval." (ibid.,
MD, 414). Here again, the 1931 "Statement of Fundamental Beliefs" were sustained
in the contemporary Seventh-day Adventist Church because there was no protest or
opposition to the statements first published in the new Church Manual in 1931.
The Adventist conferees should have convinced the Evangelicals of true Adventist
doctrine from Scripture, rather than from a Church Manual and an official
Statement of Beliefs. However, the stratagem the leadership used by falling back
on the 1931 "Statement of Fundamental Beliefs" did not convince the
Evangelicals.
"But, they [the Evangelicals] asked, `if the Adventist church had
reached a firm consensus, why did they find contrary or misleading statements in
Adventist publications, for sale in Adventist book and Bible houses?’" Unruh
continued. "We explained that this was the results of efforts by the church to
avoid an officially adopted creedal statement, and the denomination’s preference
for an open-end theology which permitted new light to penetrate in depth."
(ibid., AH, p. 38).
The Adventist conferees told the Evangelicals that "the church
[wished] to avoid an officially adopted creedal statement." But instead of
proving our cardinal doctrines from Scripture they fell back on the 1931
"creedal" Statement of Fundamental Beliefs. What was the response of the
Evangelicals to this ploy?
"This explanation did not impress them," Unruh lamented.
"They asked if we did not think that we ourselves were to some extent to blame
if these erroneous statements were used against us." Then Unruh made this
astounding admission, "We could only reply that correction had begun."
(ibid., Adventist Heritage, page 38, emphasis
supplied).
Was the Adventist leadership accepting New light from the
Evangelicals in 1955, or were they presenting a new Adventist theology to the
Evangelicals? Indeed, Dr. Barnhouse in his Eternity article had
stated earlier that, "Immediately it was perceived that the Adventists were
strenuously denying certain doctrinal positions which had been previously
attributed to them." (Eternity, 10/56). Again, the Evangelicals did not
believe the Adventist leaders in their attempt to fall back on the 1931
Statement of Fundamental Beliefs to prove unity of the Church in the "new"
doctrine being presented.
"While church leaders had known of the conferences from the start,
a point was reached where we thought it was wise to make a formal report to the
church," Unruh continued. "In a long letter to Froom and Read, dated July 18,
1955, I reviewed the progress in understanding achieved so far in the
conferences." (ibid., AH, p. 38).
Notice that, "Church leaders had known of the conferences from the
start." Finally the four Adventist conferees decided that they should make a
formal report to the Church.
"A copy of this letter was sent to R. R. Figuhr, president of the
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists," Unruh continued. "Thereafter
Figuhr gave the support of his office to the conferences and the publication of
the definitive statement of Adventist belief which resulted." (ibid., AH,
p. 38).
"In anticipation of the extension of Evangelical participation in
the conferences Froom early in August urged the enlargement of the
Adventist conferee group," Unruh revealed. "He recommended the inclusion
of R. Allen Anderson (secretary of the Ministerial Association, GC, and editor
of Ministry magazine) as a regular member because of the latter’s
background as evangelist, college teacher of religion, author, and especially
because of his gift for diplomatic dialogue with leaders of other communions."
(ibid., AH, p. 39, emphasis supplied).
Again, we see Leroy Froom manipulating, dominating, not only the
agenda, but also who was to be added to the conferee team. It should be noted
here that Roy Allen Anderson was converted to the Seventh-day Adventist Church
from the Presbyterian Church. This is significant because the Adventist and
Evangelical conferees were debating "Presbyterian" concepts of Righteousness by
Faith, the doctrine of "free grace," and the atonement completed and final upon
the cross. From editorial statements published in Ministry magazine,
while Anderson was editor, it is obvious that Anderson still held to
Presbyterian theology on righteousness by faith. (See
below).
"Since April he [Anderson] had been participating in the
conferences," Unruh added. "Thereafter he was a member of the team."
(ibid., AH, p. 39).
"We four Adventists [Unruh, Froom, Read and Anderson] were
authorized by the General Conference to plan with Martin and Cannon for the
meeting with Barnhouse at his home in Doylestown," Unruh disclosed. "The
planning was held in Anderson’s Washington office on August 22." [1955]
(ibid., AH, p. 39).
Remember that George Cannon was the man who later in the
conferences took out his Greek New Testament and, according to Walter Martin,
proved that at His ascension, not in 1844, Christ entered the most holy place of
the heavenly sanctuary, and also according to Martin, "all the Adventists
present agreed with Cannon - Leroy Froom, Roy Allen Anderson, Rubin Figuhr, W.
E. Read, Tobie Unruh, Heppinstall - I believed these were all honest men." (Dr.
Walter Martin, (syndicated) John Ankerberg television program,
1984).
"So it came about then on August 25 and 26, 1955, we four
Adventists [Unruh, Froom, Anderson, Read], with Walter Martin and George Cannon,
sat down with Donald Grey Barnhouse, one of the most influential men among
American Protestants and internationally famous as a representative
Evangelical," Unruh concluded, "to discuss what Seventh-day Adventists
really believe. (ibid., AH, p. 39, emphasis supplied).
Notice that only Four men sat down with the leading Evangelicals
and told them what the rest of us Adventist people "really believe." Astounding!
Absolutely amazing!
Leadership Expunges Sentence From Spirit of
Prophecy
In the book Evangelism, pages 592, 593, Ellen White makes
an amazing statement about the leadership of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
near the close of probation. The original source for this statement is found in
Manuscript 15, 1886. However, the last sentence in the original statement
in Manuscript. 15, 1886, is expunged from the Evangelism
statement. First we will note the statement as it appears in
Evangelism:
Under the cloak of Christianity and sanctification, far- spreading
and manifest ungodliness will prevail to a terrible degree and will continue
until Christ comes to be glorified in all them that believe. In the very courts
of the temple, scenes will be enacted that few realize. God’s people will, be
proved and tested, that He may discern "between him that serveth God and him
that serveth Him not."
Ellen G. White, Evangelism, pages 592,
593.
Note that there were no ellipses . . . . at the end of this
statement, although there was one more sentence to follow. Now we will note the
statement as it first appeared in Manuscript. 15, 1886. The expunged last
sentence of the statement will be underscored:
Under the cloak of Christianity and sanctification, far- spreading
and manifest ungodliness will prevail to a terrible degree and will continue
until Christ comes to be glorified in all them that believe. In the very
courts of the temple [Church], scenes will be enacted that few realize. God’s
people will, be proved and tested, that He may discern "between him that
serveth God and him that serveth Him not." Vengeance will be executed against
those who sit in the gates deciding what the people should have.
Ellen G. White, Manuscript 15, 1886. (emphasis supplied).
Notice that it is not God’s intention that Church leaders should
define doctrine to the members of the Church. "Vengeance will be executed
against those who sit in the gates deciding what the people should have."
William Grotheer, writing to the White Estate for an explanation of the expunged
sentence, received this reply: "Unreleased because it could be misused." It was
not in God’s plan that Church leaders should define our doctrines to the leaders
of the modern churches of Babylon. Neither was it God’s plan that the leadership
of the Church should expunge portions from the writings of the Spirit of
Prophecy.
"In the first Doylestown conference there was much discussion of
Froom’s Prophetic Faith of Our Fathers, as providing an historical
background for Adventism," Unruh continued. "It was clear that the
Evangelicals had respect for Froom’s scholarly attainments." (ibid.,
AH, p, 40, emphasis supplied).
Again, Leroy Froom is portrayed as the leading figure in the big
lie that was told to the Evangelicals in 1955. The lie about what Seventh-day
Adventists really believe.
"Our friends [the Evangelicals] helped us to express our
beliefs in terms more easily understood by theologians of other communions,"
Unruh revealed. (ibid., AH, p, 40, emphasis supplied).
An excellent comment to this statement can best be given by the
then editor in chief of the Review and Herald, Francis D.
Nichol:
There is a subtle temptation facing Adventists today-this day of
our increasing popularity-to feel that if we re-phrase our beliefs a
little, setting them forth in less disturbing form, we can have
good fellowship on all sides. . . . Greatly would the evil one like to
persuade us to fall into that trap. . . . The Advent message is poles removed
from the modern religious thinking that would give us a foggy, inspirational
kind of emotion as a substitute for rugged doctrines, and those sharply etched
concepts of God and His requirements, that are vital to true
religion.
Francis D. Nichol, Editor in Chief, Review and Herald,
"Warning Lesson From Bogus Books," February 26, 1959. (emphasis
supplied).
"That same evening, in our motel, Martin and Cannon came to
express their amazement over the change they had witnessed in Dr. Barnhouse,"
Unruh continued. "To them it seemed a miracle. To Martin it meant that he would
not have resistance from Barnhouse in writing the truth about Seventh-day
Adventism, as he had come to see it. (ibid., AH, p. 40, emphasis
supplied).
Martin had come to see Adventist doctrine through the eyes of
Leroy Froom and the other three Adventist conferees. But this was not the true
belief of most Seventh-day Adventists! The Adventist people did not know
anything about what was taking place until the apostate book Questions on
Doctrine was published two years later in 1957.
"We [four] Adventists had come to see that we could state our
doctrinal positions with clarity, in language understood by the theologians
of other churches. . . ," Unruh stated, because, "Our friends helped us
to express our beliefs in terms more easily understood by theologians of other
communions." (ibid., AH, p, 40, emphasis supplied).
Unruh added that in restating the doctrines they were "never
bending for the sake of clarity or harmony alone." (ibid., AH, p. 40).
But indeed the Adventist conferees did "bend for the sake of clarity or harmony"
with the Evangelicals. A new doctrinal phrase, never before known in Seventh-day
Adventist theology was coined at that time, "Christ is now making application
of the benefits of the sacrificial atonement He made on the cross."
(Questions on Doctrine, pages 354, 355, emphasis theirs). Leroy Froom was
probably the first Adventist to use the phrase, "the benefits of His atonement."
This phrase is now prominate in the book, Seventh-day Adventists Believe
- 27."
"There is a sanctuary in heaven, the true tabernacle which the
Lord set up and not man," contemporary SDA Church leadership states. "In it
Christ ministers on our behalf, making available to believers the benefits of
His atoning sacrifice offered once for all on the cross." (Seventh-day
Adventist Believe. . . 27 Fundamental Doctrines, 1988, page 312, emphasis
supplied).
"We say that, while there had been doctrinal deviation, and this
was still a possibility, it was essential for us to demonstrate the existence
of a majority position," Unruh continued, "a preponderant view that a
consensus actually existed, and that we were correctly reflecting that
consensus." (ibid., AH, p. 41, emphasis supplied).
Unruh is here stating that it was important that they convince the
Evangelicals that Adventist leadership was not telling them a lie about what
Seventh-day Adventists believed. It was imperative that the four Adventist
conferees convince the Evangelicals that their position was the majority
position of, not only the "contemporary" Seventh-day Adventist Church at large,
but also the position of pioneer Seventh-day Adventists. However, Barnhouse had
observed that, "The position of the Adventist seems to some of us in certain
cases to be a new position: to them it may be merely the position of the
majority group of sane leadership which is determined to put the brakes on any
members who seek to hold view divergent from that of the responsible leadership
of the denomination." (Eternity, 10/56, emphasis supplied). We repeat
here Donald Grey Barnhouse’s observation of the Adventist approach to this
problem:
The leaders sent for the book, discovered that Mr. Martin was
correct, and immediately brought this fact to the attention of the General
Conference officers, that this situation might be remedied and such publications
be corrected. This same procedure was repeated regarding the nature of Christ
while in the flesh which the majority of the denomination has always held to
be sinless, holy, and perfect, despite the fact that certain of their
writers have occasionally gotten into print with contrary views completely
repugnant to the Church at large. They further explained to Mr. Martin that
they had among their number certain members of their "lunatic fringe" even as
there are similar wild-eyed irresponsibles in every field of fundamental
Christianity. This action of the Seventh-day Adventists was indicative of
similar steps that were taken subsequently.
Donald Grey Barnhouse, Eternity, October, 1956.
Note carefully the phrases used by the Adventist conferees to
convince the Evangelicals that the entire Seventh-day Adventist Church, leaders
and laymen, were united on the false doctrines they were now espousing.
(1) The nature of Christ while in the flesh "which the majority of
the denomination has always held to be sinless." This, of course, is just not
true. (See, Robert J. Wieland and Donald K. Short, 1888-Re-examined,
1950).
(2) Certain Adventist writers had "occasionally gotten into print
with contrary views completely repugnant to the Church at large." This again was
a lie. The Seventh-day Adventist Church was united before 1952 on the nature of
Christ while in the flesh. (See, Ralph Larson, The Word Was Made Flesh,
"One Hundred Years of Seventh-day Adventist Christology," The Cherrystone Press,
P. O. Box 3180, Cherry Valley, California, 92223).
(3) The Adventist conferees told the Evangelicals that among their
members were those of a "lunatic fringe" who were "wild-eyed irresponsibles."
The Adventist conferees were telling the Evangelicals that anyone who believed
the pioneer Seventh-day Adventist position on the nature of Christ while in the
flesh was a "wild-eyed irresponsible" from a "lunatic fringe" of the Church. (4)
The Evangelicals observed that, "This action of the Seventh-day Adventists was
indicative of similar steps that were taken subsequently."
"In another dimension, it was planned to demonstrate consensus by
submitting the questions and answers to Adventist leaders in North America, and
then around the world, using a mailing list of more than 250 names," Unruh
continued. "The document by this time had grown to some sixty questions and
answers, and was beginning to be thought of as having book possibilities-a
definitive statement of contemporary Adventist theology, in convenient
reference book form." (ibid., AH, p. 41, emphasis
supplied).
"In another dimension," the manuscript of the forthcoming book,
Questions on Doctrine would be sent to leading Adventists around the
World proving to the Evangelicals that there was a "consensus" among the
contemporary Seventh-day Adventist Church Notice also that the forthcoming book
Questions on Doctrine would be "a definitive statement of
contemporary Adventist theology." Adventists who are awake and studying
recognize this "contemporary Adventist theology" to be the "new"
theology.
"A committee of fourteen members with General Conference approval,
was to prepare the document for distribution to church leaders, and to analyze
and evaluate the feedback," Unruh stated. "Figuhr, president of the General
Conference, was chairman of this committee." (ibid., AH, p. 41). Unruh
then disclosed the names of the others who were on this committee, "Also on the
committee were, A. V. Olson [secretary, White Estate]; W. B. Ochs; L. K.
Dickson; H. L. Rudy; A. L. Ham; J. I. Robison; W. R. Beach [father of B.
B. Beach, who gave the gold medallion to the pope, [See below, Chapter #18, "The
Invaders"]; C. L. Torrey; F. D. Nichol [editor, Review and Herald]; T. E.
Unruh, chairman of conferees, President, East Pennsylvania Conference]; R. A.
Anderson [Ministerial Secretary, General Conference, editor, Ministry];
L. E. Froom, [History Department, Andrews University]; W. E. Read [Field
Secretary General Conference]." (ibid., AH, p, 41, emphasis supplied).
"Correspondence relating to the project was entrusted to J. L.
Robison, the president’s secretary," Unruh related. (ibid., AH, p. 41).
David Bauer recalled how his father, Clifford L. Bauer, at that
time president of the Pacific Union, received one of these 250 copies to
evaluate. As his father was preparing to return the "sixty question" document by
mail, David scolded his father because he had not read the document. Clifford
Bauer replied that he had complete faith and confidence in the brethren and did
not need to evaluate the document. How many times this scenario was repeated
around the world will only be revealed when the Master of the vineyard returns
for the final accounting.
"The response was good, the consensus was demonstrated, and the
decision to publish was made," Unruh concluded. "Thus Questions on
Doctrine came into being." (ibid., AH, p.
41).
Triumphal Adventist Objective Attained In the Evangelical
Conferences
"Martin, in November 1955, reported talks with Pat Zondervan who
was to publish The Truth About Seventh-day Adventism and who was
interested in the new direction the book was taking," Unruh stated. "A
month later, Martin reported going over the questions and answers in their
entirety in a five-hour session with Dr. Barnhouse, and stated that Barnhouse
was satisfied that Adventists were fundamentally Evangelical in matters
concerning salvation." (ibid., AH, p. 41, emphasis supplied). Ecumenism!
This, obviously, was the bottom-line objective of the Seventh-day Adventist
Church leadership of 1955. Indeed, ecumenism has ever been the motive of all
historical Seventh-day Adventist apostasy since the death of the pioneers and
Ellen White.
"Martin also reported that Frank E. Gaebelein had written to James
DeForest Murch, stating his opinion that the Seventh-day Adventist Church
would qualify for membership in the Evangelical group, if they so desired,"
Unruh stated. (ibid., AH, p. 42, emphasis supplied).
Notice that with their "new" Statement of Fundamental Beliefs the
Seventh-day Adventist Church could qualify for membership in the National
Association of Evangelicals "if they so desired." The Adventist leadership did
so desire in 1955. That was the initial objective of the dialog with the
Evangelicals. If the blind Adventist leadership could have seen into the future,
they would see the time when the contemporary Seventh-day Adventist Church
could now also qualify for membership in the World Council of Churches!
"Dr. Gaebelein was the founder and director of the famed Stony
Brook School (of which Martin was a graduate), a member of the Reformed
Episcopal church, and an official in the National Association of Evangelicals,"
Unruh added further. "Dr. Murch, prolific author of religious works,
publications director and later president of the National Association of
Evangelicals and the editor of United Evangelical Action, was a member of
the Disciples of Christ." (ibid., AH, p.
42).
The nauseating adulation of man, position and education, by
contemporary Adventist leadership cannot be overlooked. Indeed, strict warnings
have come from the pen of inspiration about this new system of Church
leadership.
"A system of intellectual philosophy would be introduced. . .
," Ellen White prophesied, "they would place their dependence on human
power, which, without God, is worthless. . .." (Selected Messages, Bk. 1,
pp. 204, 205, emphasis supplied).
"It is unsafe for any church to lean upon some favorite minister,
to trust in an arm of flesh," Ellen White warned. "God’s arm alone is
able to uphold all who lean upon it." (Testimonies for the Church, Vol.
4, page 594, emphasis supplied).
"Meanwhile, correspondence between Froom and E. Schuyler English,
editor of Our Hope and chairman of the revision committee of the Scofield
Reference Bible, resulted in an editorial statement by Dr. English in February
1956," Unruh continued, "correcting misconceptions about Adventist doctrine
as to the nature of Christ in the incarnation, the Trinity, and
the completed atonement on the cross, followed by an article by Walter
Martin in November 1956, the earliest affirmation of the essential Christianity
of the theology of Adventism on matters relating to salvation to appear
in a non-Adventist journal of note." (ibid., AH, p. 42, emphasis
supplied).
The earliest affirmation of the "new theology" of Adventism to
appear "in a non-Adventist journal of note." This erroneous "new theology" is
stated in three points according to Froom, (1) the sinless human nature of
Christ in the incarnation, (2) the Trinity, (3) and the completed atonement on
the cross. As documented above in Chapters #11 and #12, these three doctrines
were not taught or believed by pioneer Seventh-day Adventists, neither were they
taught in the Spirit of Prophecy. These three erroneous Evangelical doctrines
had to be compromised into Adventist doctrine for the contemporary Seventh-day
Adventist Church to qualify for membership in the National Association of
Evangelicals, and later as official "observers" in the World Council of
Churches.
The distinctive truths proclaimed by Seventh-day Adventists for
more than a century have never been popular in theological circles,
and it is futile to expect that they ever will be. . .. Were Seventh-day
Adventists to yield their distinctive teachings in order to win and wear the
robe of theological respectability, they would doubtless be accepted by other
Christian bodies. But in so doing they would be traitor to the truths
that have made them a people. . .. They would no longer be Seventh-day
Adventists.
Raymond F. Cottrell, Associate Editor, Review and Herald,
"Can Truth Be Popular?" May 15, 1958. (emphasis supplied).
This observation by Raymond Cottrell has come to pass. The
leadership of the Church has "yielded their distinctive teachings in order to
win and wear the robe of theological respectability." The leadership was
successful in their quest to "be accepted by other Christian bodies." "But in so
doing" the leadership has become a "traitor to the truths that have made them a
people." Because the leadership has betrayed their trust, they are no longer
Seventh-day Adventists!
"In August 1956, Russell Hitt, the managing editor of
Eternity, came to Washington to go over with us the long-awaited
Barnhouse articles repudiating his former position on Adventism," Unruh
recalled. "Support articles by Martin, to follow in Eternity, were
also gone over. We were given permission to quote or otherwise refer to
these articles." (ibid., AH, p. 42, emphasis supplied).
This document by T. E. Unruh discloses that the Adventist
leadership approved of the statements written by Donald Grey Barnhouse, "Are
Seventh-day Adventists Christians?" and Walter Martin’s series of articles in
Eternity magazine titled, "The Truth About Seventh-day Adventists." The
following are a few choice excerpts from those Eternity
articles.
The position of the Adventists seems to some of us in certain
cases to be a new position: to them it may be merely the position of the
majority group of sane leadership which is determined to put the brakes on
any members who seek to hold view divergent from that of the responsible
leadership of the denomination.
Donald Grey Barnhouse, "Are Seventh-day Adventists Christians?"
Eternity, October, 1956 (emphasis
supplied).
Inside Editorial Box Of the Barnhouse
Article:
Have the Seventh-day Adventists been proselytizers? During the
course of our dealings with Adventist leaders we brought up the complaints,
common to the mission field, that Adventist missionaries and workers have
been proselytizers. The leaders affirmed vehemently that they have been
doing everything possible to prevent such proselytizing, and, while there
may have been such cases in the past, they hold that such methods are not now
in use. In cooperation with them we will gladly receive from any
missionaries in the world fully documented instances of such proselytization
that have taken place during the past two years. Such documentation, if any,
sent to the Rev. Mr. Walter R. Martin, in care of Eternity, will be
forwarded to Adventist leaders, who have promised a thorough
investigation.
ibid.,
Donald Grey Barnhouse, "Are Seventh-day Adventists Christians?" Eternity,
October, 1956 (emphasis supplied).
The word "proselytize" means to make an Adventist out of Baptist,
Lutheran or other Christians. With this kind of a policy on "proselytizing" how
is it possible for Seventh-day Adventist missionaries or evangelists to call
God’s people out of Babylon and into the present truth of the Advent movement?
It is not possible. The new position is that we should simply be Christian
brethren with the Evangelical Sunday-keeping churches of Babylon. We should not
"proselytize" their members and make Seventh-day Adventists out of them. After
all, one current Adventist leader goes so far as to state that the Pope of Rome
is his Christian brother. (Mitchell A. Tyner, The Columbian Union
Visitor, June 1, 1995, p. 6).
Again, this policy which was told to the Evangelicals is in
perfect harmony with the policy adopted at the 1926 General Conference which
stated that, "In the desire to avoid occasion for misunderstanding or friction
in the matter of relationship to the work of other societies, the following
statement of principles are set forth as a guidance to our workers in mission
fields in their contacts with other religious
organizations":
#1. We recognize every agency that lifts up Christ before man
as a part of the divine plan for the evangelization of the world, and we
hold in high esteem the Christian men and women in other communions who are
engaged in winning souls to Christ.
"Relationship To Other Societies," General Conference Executive
Committee, 1926. (emphasis supplied).
It must be remembered that this policy was voted sixteen years
after the death of Ellen White. Testimony would have been given immediately
against this betrayal of the three angel’s messages.
"There is as great a difference in our faith and that of nominal
professors, as the heavens are higher than the earth," Ellen White
stated. "True brotherhood can never be maintained by compromising principle."
(Spiritual Gifts, Vol. 2, p. 300; Manuscript 23b, 7/25/96,
emphasis supplied).
"God has committed to us," Ellen White wrote, "the special truths
for this time to make known to the world." (Testimonies for the Church,
Vol, 5, p. 236).
In Chapter #11, "A warning, and Its Rejection," and Chapter #13,
"The Final Atonement," we discovered that the leadership of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church accepted a new Christ and changed the time of the final
Atonement in the first angel’s message from the heavenly sanctuary to the cross.
In the Evangelical conferences of 1955-56 the leadership admitted those changes
to the Evangelical church leaders of Babylon. In 1957 the Church leadership
published those changes to the world in the "official" book, Seventh-day
Adventists Answer, Questions on Doctrine.
In
Chapter #1, "The Invaders," we learned that the Seventh-day Adventist Church
leadership rejected the third angel’s message when they stated to the world in a
Supreme Court Brief that "it is not good Seventh-day Adventism to express, as
Mrs. Tobler has done, an aversion to Roman Catholicism as such."
(United
States District Court, Northern District of California. Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission vs. Pacific Press Publishing Association, Civ. No.
74-2025 CBR. Reply Brief for Defendants in Support of Their Motion for Summary
Judgment. (emphasis supplied).
Now we have learned in the past three Chapters that the Church
leadership has rejected the first and second angel’s messages as taught by
pioneer Adventists. Again we ask, has the Seventh-day Adventist Church been
faithful to the message of trust given to her? Can the Church give up the three
angel’s messages and still be considered faithful? To these two most important
questions we must sadly answer, no, no. Has the contemporary Seventh-day
Adventist Church joined hands with the enemy? Oh, how sadly we must answer, yes!
"How is the faithful city [Church] become an harlot!" an angel
said to Ellen White in vision. "My Father’s house is made a house of
merchandise, a place whence the divine presence and glory have departed!
For this cause there is weakness, and strength is lacking." (Testimonies for
the Church, Vol. 8, p. 250, emphasis supplied).
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