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~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~~~ ADVENTIST LAYMEN'S FOUNDATION OF CANADA (ALF) Publisher
of the All the Specials and Commentaries are in the last file of the year. There are 4 files for each year: jm=Jan-Mar; aj=Apr-Jun; js-=Jul-Sep; od=Oct-Dec WWN is a thought paper that was published monthly continuously from Jan, 1968 to the end of Dec. 2006 . by the Adventist Laymen's Foundation of Mississippi, Inc.(ALF), with William H. Grotheer as the Editor of Research & Publication. The Nov. 1977 issue discusses "What is the "Watchman, What of the Night?"
SHORT STUDIES - William H. Grotheer - top Interpretative
History of the Doctrine of the Incarnation as Taught by the Seventh-day
Adventist Church, An Bible
Study Guides End Time Line Re-Surveyed Parts 1 & 2 - Adventist Layman's Foundation Excerpts
- Legal Documents Holy Flesh Movement 1899-1901, The - William H. Grotheer Hour and the End is Striking at You, The - William H. Grotheer In
the Form of a Slave Jerusalem
In Bible Prophecy Key
Doctrinal Comparisons - Statements of Belief 1872-1980 Pope
Paul VI Given Gold Medallion by Adventist Church Leader Sacred Trust BETRAYED!, The - William H. Grotheer
Seal of God Seventh-day
Adventist Evangelical Conferences of 1955-1956 SIGN of the END of TIME, The - William H. Grotheer STEPS
to ROME Times
of the Gentiles Fulfilled, The - A Study in Depth of Luke 21:24 Remembering ~~~~~ OTHER BOOKS, MANUSCRIPTS & ARTICLES: Additional
Various Studies -- Bible As History - Werner Keller Place of the Bible In Education, The - Alonzo T. Jones Facts of Faith - Christian Edwardson Individuality in Religion - Alonzo T. Jones Letters to the Churches - M. L. Andreasen "Is the Bible Inspired or Expired?" - J. J. Williamson Sabbath, The - M. L. Andreasen Sanctuary
Service, The So Much In Common - WCC/SDA Daniel and the Revelation - Uriah Smith Spiritual Gifts. The Great Controversy, between Christ and His Angels, and Satan and his Angels - Ellen G. White Canons of the Bible, The - Raymond A. Cutts Under
Which Banner? - Jon A. Vannoy TOP
Due to his failing health, Elder Grotheer requested that ALF of Canada continue publishing thoughts through its website www.AdventistAlet.com which developed into frequent Blog Thought articles plus all of the Foundation's historical published works written and audio. As of 2010, with the official closing of the ALF of USA , The Adventist Laymen's Foundation of Canada with its website www.Adventist Alert.com is the only officially operating ALF branch established by Elder Grotheer worldwide. We are thankful for the historical legacy that is now available through The Adventist Laymen's Foundation of Canada, info@AdventistAlert.com The MISSION of this site -- is to make available the articles from the thought paper "Watchman, What of the Night?" It is not our purpose to copy WWN in whole. Any portion of the thought paper may be reproduced without further permission by adding the credit line - "Reprinted from WWN, Adventist Laymen's Foundation of Canada." top {~~~} |
Letters to the Churches
Part 2 of 2 by
M. L. Andreasen p
51 -- SERIES A - NO. 4 - A RESUME
p
52 -- In the documents and letters I have
sent out from time to
time concerning what I consider a serious departure from the faith on
the part of the leaders, I have adhered strictly to the advice which
Christ gives in Matthew 18:15-17. There He says that if differences
arise among brethren, "tell him his fault between thee and him
alone." If he will not hear, "take with thee one or two more,
that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established.
And if he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church."
This principle I have followed as will appear from the record. In
the month of May, 1957, there was placed in my hand, providentially
I believe, a copy of the minutes of the White Board of Trustees for
May 1 and 2, 1957, recording a meeting of two brethren with the Trustees
concerning a statement they had found in Mrs. White's writings regarding
the atonement. They sought counsel in this matter, inasmuch as what
they had found did not harmonize with the new view which the leaders
were advocating. What attitude should these researchers take in view
of Mrs. White's statement? For
a number of months, even for years, our leaders had been studying with
some evangelical ministers with a view to eventual recognition of the
Adventists as an evangelical Christian body. The studies were concerning
the doctrines of the Adventists, particularly the Atonement, the Investigative
judgment, and Christ's work in the heavenly sanctuary since 1844. These
doctrines the evangelicals had called "the most colossal, psychological,
face-saving phenomenon in religious history," and had so denominated
them in their journal, Eternity, for September, 1956, reprinting
the article in an Extra under the title, "Are Seventh-day Adventists
Christians?" The
evangelical ministers appear to have made a pronounced impression upon
the Adventist leaders, so much so that Dr. Barnhouse, one of the participating
evangelical ministers, reports that the Adventist leaders "totally
repudiated" some of their most important doctrines. It may be best
to let Dr. Barnhouse tell the story himself as he re- p
53 -- ported it in the Extra named above, for September, 1956. The
particular subject which he discusses is what is called "The Great
Disappointment," and has reference to the great disappointment
of the Adventists in 1844 when they expected the Lord to come. Here
is his account: "On
the morning after the 'Great Disappointment' two men were going through
a corn field in order to avoid the pitiless gaze of their mocking neighbors
to whom they had said an eternal good-bye the day before. To put it
in the words of Hiram Edson (the man in the corn field who first conceived
this peculiar idea), he was overwhelmed with the conviction 'that instead
of our High Priest coming out of the Most Holy of the heavenly
sanctuary to come to this earth on the tenth day of the seventh month
at the end of 2,300 days, He for the first time entered on that
day the second apartment of that sanctuary, and that He had work
to perform in the Most Holy before coming to this earth.' It is to my
mind, therefore, nothing more than a human, face-saving idea! It should
also be realized that some uninformed Seventh-day Adventists took this
idea and carried it to fantastic, literalistic extremes. Mr. Martin
and I heard the Adventist leaders say, flatly, that they repudiate all
such extremes. This they have said in no uncertain terms. Further, they
do not believe, as some of their earlier teachers taught, that Jesus'
atoning work was not completed on Calvary, but instead that He was still
carrying on a second ministering work since 1844. This idea is also
totally repudiated. They believe that since His ascension Christ has
been ministering the benefits of the atonement which He completed on
Calvary. In
explanation of this somewhat involved statement, I append the following
explanation, which may clarify some expressions. Dr.
Barnhouse first reports the well-known incident of Hiram Edson going
through the cornfield on the morning after the "Disappointment,"
and becoming convinced that "instead of our High Priest coming
out of the Most Holy . . He for the first time entered on
that day the second apartment of that sanctuary, and that He had a work
to perform in the Most Holy before coming to this earth." The work
He was to do before p
54 -- coming to this earth was the completion of the atonement which
involved the investigative judgment. This conception, says Dr. Barnhouse,
"is nothing more than a human, face-saving idea." Than he
continues, "Some uninformed Seventh-day Adventists took this idea
and carried it to fantastic, literalistic extremes." That is, they
believed that Christ really did go into the Most Holy to do a work which
had to be done before His coming to this earth, which involved the investigative
judgment and the completion of the atonement. Dr. Barnhouse reports:
"Mr. Martin and I heard the Adventist leaders say, flatly, that
they repudiate all such extremes. This they have said in no uncertain
terms." If
we are to believe Dr. Barnhouse's statement, then our 1eaders repudiated
a doctrine which we have held sacred from the beginning. This is made
clear as Dr. Barnhouse continues: "Some of their earlier teachers
taught that Jesus' atoning work was not completed on Calvary, but instead
that He was still carrying on a second ministerial work since 1844.
This idea is also totally repudiated." When
Dr. Barnhouse says that "some" of our earlier teachers taught
"that Jesus' atoning work was not completed on Calvary," he
must have gotten his information from some of the "uninformed"
authors of our new theology; for history records that all our teachers
taught this. James White, J. H. Waggoner, Uriah Smith, J. N. Andrews,
J. N. Loughborough, C. H. Watson, E. E. Andross, W. H. Branson, Camden
Lacey, R. S. Owen, 0. A. Johnson, H. R. Johnson, F. D. Nichols, (until
1955) all stoutly defended the doctrine of Christ's atoning work since
1844, and committed their convictions to writing. As I write this, I
have nearly all their books before me. James White, our first General
Conference president, when he was elected the first editor of Signs
of the Times, wrote in the first issue of that paper an article
"to correct false statements circulated against us . . . There
are many who call themselves Adventists, who hold views with which we
can have no sympathy, some of which, we think, are subversive of the
plainest and most important principles set forth in the word of God."
The second of the twenty-five articles of faith reads in part as follows:
Christ "lived p
55 -- our example, died our sacrifice, was raised for our justification,
ascended on high, to be our only mediator in the sanctuary in heaven,
where, with his own blood, he makes atonement for our sins; which atonement,
so far from being made on the cross, which was but the offering
of the sacrifice, is the vary last portion of his work as priest."
These Fundamental Beliefs, were also printad in a little tract
and circulated by the thousands. It would be interesting if the one
who wrote pages 29, 30, 31, 32, in Questions on Doctrine, would
furnish us with a list of writers who held views contrary to those of
the authors mentioned above. I have not found any proof for the incorrect
statements found on those particular pages. To
continue our study of Dr. Barnhouse's report in the Eternity Extra.
He has just affirmed that the Adventist leaders have "totally repudiated"
the idea that Christ is "still carrying on a second ministering
work since 1844," by which he means an atoning work. Instead of
this, he says, "they believe that since His ascension Christ has
been ministering the benefits of the atonement which He completed on
Calvary." This view, however, he does not consider consistent.
The Old Testament informs us that the high priest killed the sacrifice
in the court outside the tabernacle. But the killing was not the
atonement. "It is the blood that maketh atonement."
Leviticus 17:11. Therefore the high priest shall "bring his blood
within the vail...and sprinkle it upon the mercy seat and before
the mercy seat, and he shall make an atonement for the holy place."
Leviticus 16:15, 16. "He goeth in to make an atonement."
Verse 17. Dr. Barnhouse argues, that as we base our doctrine of atonement
largely on the figure given us in Leviticus, and use that in our teaching
on the atonement, we must believe that as the high priest on earth took
the blood into the sanctuary and there made atonement, so Christ must
do likewise, He must go in to complete the atonement. Else we
have an atonement without blood. If we do not take the last step, then
we are compelled to believe that the atonement was made in the court
and not in the sanctuary, which completely destroys all typology. If
this last service with the blood is omitted, then our theory p
56 -- of the atonement is sadly incomplete, and "is most certainly
exegetically untenable, and theological speculation of a highly imaginative
order." If Christ does not go in with the blood to complete
the atonement, then what we have left "is stale, flat, and
unprofitable." He has a good argument. IS
IT TRUE? When
I first read in the Extra that our leaders had repudiated the
doctrine of Christ's atoning work in the sanctuary since 1844, and had
substituted for this "the application of the benefits of the sacrificial
atonement He made on the cross," I could not believe it, and did
not believe it. When I was told that even if I read in "the writings
of Ellen G. White, that Christ is making atonement now,"
I am not to believe it, I wondered, "What are we coming to?"
The atonement was made 1800 years ago, our leaders say Sr. White says
the atonement is going on now. Questions on Doctrine says
it was made 1800 years ago. The Ministry says the atonement on
the cross was final. Who or what am I to believe? To me, to repudiate
Christ's ministry in the second apartment, now, is to repudiate
Adventism. That is one of the foundation pillars of Adventism. If we
reject the atonement in the sanctuary now, we may as well repudiate
all Adventism. For this, God's people are not ready. They will not follow
the leaders in apostasy. At
this juncture it occurred to me that perhaps the Eternity men
had regretted what they had written and had retracted, or would retract,
all they had written. So I wrote to Eternity, asking if they
still published the Extra. They answered that they did. The article
being copyrighted, I than asked for permission to quote them. I received
this answer: "We are glad to give you permission to quote from
the article, 'Are Seventh-day Adventists Christians?' and would appreciate
you giving credit to Eternity when you do this." This letter
was dated Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, May 2, 1958, and signed by the
editor. This
was twenty months after the article had first appeared in Eternity.
If at any time during those twenty months our leaders had protested,
if they had made a demurrer, p
57 -- in honesty the editor would have warned me not to use the
material, and not to quote these statements. But the editor did no such
thing. He was glad and willing for me to use the material, willing to
stand by what the Extra had published, willing for me to quote
them. It is fully five years since the discussions began, and three
years since the ,Extra was published. For this long time I have
been waiting for our men to deny the charges, and rebuke the evangelicals
for publishing such defamation of our entire leadarship. But I have
heard no protest. On the contrary, I have read several references in
our papers to these evangelicals as being fine, Christian gentlemen,
which I believe is true. Such man do not tell falsehoods. In the absence
of any denial or protest from our men, I have reluctantly drawn my own
conclusions. But if our men will make a straightforward declaration
that Dr. Barnhouse and Mr. Martin never heard them make such statements
as Eternity avers, I will immediately get in contact with the
evangelicals and ask them to make apologies for such serious and grave
accusations. This matter is too serious to go by default. Thousands
of our people have read the Eternity article and are seriously
concerned . One of the main pillars of our faith has, according to Eternity,
been removed. Shall we stand idly by and permit tha sanctuary to be
trodden under foot, and that by its supposed supporters? We
shall now return to the two men who entered the White vault in May,
1957, to counsel with the White Trustees. They had finished their research
work, and reported to the board that they had found "indications"
that Sr. White taught that "the atoning work of Christ is now (1880)
in progress in the heavenly sanctuary." This discovery was a death-blow
to their new theology. It was evidently impossible to believe that the
work of atonement was completed on the cross and was final, and also
to teach that it was still in progress in heaven. Both statements could
not be true. However, the denomination had already committed itself
on this point, and had in l957 published in tha Ministry that
the great act on p
58 -- the cross was "a complete, perfect, and final atonement
for man's sin." Ministry, February, 1957. The article said
that this is now "the Adventist understanding of the atonemont,
confirmed, and illuminated and clarified by the Spirit of Prophecy."
Ibid. This statement has never been retracted, or modified, or changed,
and neither the writer nor editor has been reproved. It stands. In
view of the situation, what were the researchers to do? They were faced
with the statement of Mrs. White's, that the atonement is now in progress
in heaven. They were face to face with the other statement of the leaders
that the atonement was made and finished on the cross. They must accept
one or the other. They chose to go with the leaders. But
what about Sister White's statements, for there are many of them? It
was clear that in some way her influence must be weakened and her statements
watered down. But that was a delicate piece of work; and whatever was
to be done had to be done in secret. If it were found out in time, the
plan would not succeed. If, however, they could work in secret, and
work rapidly, that matter would be a "fait accompli" - done
before any one found out about it. It
was at this time that a copy of the White minutes were handed me. I
shall now present the minutes, so that all may see for themselves what
was done. The
Minutes, as of May 1, 1957, page 1483. "At
this juncture in our work, Elders X and Y were invited to join the Trustees
in discussing further a matter that had been given study in January.
Elder X and his group who have been studying with certain ministers
have become acutely aware of E. G. White statements which indicate that
the atoning work of Christ is now in progress in the heavenly sanctuary.
In one statement in Fundamentals of Christian Education, the
word "sacrifice" is used. To non-Adventists, unfamiliar with
our understanding of the sanctuary question, references to a continuation
of the atoning work of Christ, are difficult to grasp, and it was suggested
to the Trustees that some footnotes or Appendix notes might appear in
certain of the E. G. White books clarifying very largely in the words
of Ellen 'White our understanding of the various phases of the atoning
work of Christ. It was felt by the brethren who joined the Trustees
in the discussion that this is a matter which will come prominently
to the front in the near future, and that we would do well to move forward
with the preparation and inclusion of such notes in future printings
of p
59 -- the E. G. White's writings. The matter was discussed carefully
and earnestly, but at the time that the meeting broke up to accommodate
other committees, no action was taken."
Meeting, May 2. page 1488. E.
G. White Statements on the Atoning Work of Christ "The meeting
of the Trustees held May 1 closed with no action taken on the question
which was discussed at length - suitable footnotes or explanations regarding
the E. G. White statements on the atoning work of Christ which indicate
a continuing work at the present time in heaven. Inasmuch as the Chairman
of our board will be away from Washington for the next four months,
and the involvements in this question are such that it must have the
most careful consideration and counsel, "It was VOTED, That we
defer consideration until a later time of the matters that were brought
to our attention by Elders X and Y involving the E. G. White statements
concerning the continuing atoning work of Christ." After
the chairman of the board had returned from his four month's trip, the
matter was further discussed, and it was decided not to grant the request.
This action is worthy of commendation, but the praise is somewhat dimmed
by the fact that it took eight months to come to this decision, and
that they did not arrive at this conclusion until the plan had become
known. This
report stunned me. How did anyone dare to suggest inclusions in Sister
White's writings to bolster the new view? I pondered long, and prayed
much. Did I have any responsibility in this matter? If I did, it would
be my duty to speak to one man, and one only. As the transgression was
not against me but against the church and our most holy faith, it was
my duty to speak to our highest officer. This I did. In
my letter of February 27, 1957, 1 had voiced my fear of publishing the
proposed book, Questions on Doctrine, as it had been prepared
altogether too hurriedly and after only a short time of study. Books
of this kind cannot be written on short notice and should be prepared
by men who have given a life-time of study to the subject and spent
years in research of the Testimonies. March
7, 1957, 1 received this answer: "I notice your observation: 'I
fear greatly for the contents of the book that is being published setting
forth our belief.' I do not p
60 -- believe, Brothar Andreasen, that you need to fear for what
will appaar in the book. It is being carefully gone over by a group
of capable men in whom we have the utmost confidence. I feel quite confident
you will be happy with the results." In
my answer of March 11, I again expressed my fear of the contents of
the book. Referring to an article that appeared in the Ministry,
February, 1957, I said: "if the committee agrees with his published
views, I must most earnestly protest. For the views are most certainly
not Adventist doctrine, but views derived from a superficial study of
certain portions of the writings of Sr. White, and do not represent
the general teachings." I finished with these words: "I
hereby lodge my protest against the publication at this time of any
doctrine of the atonement, and wish my protest to be duly recorded.
I can but feel that some of the brethren have been led into the present
predicament by a desire to be like the nations around us (churches)and
that we will yet rue the day when we began making concessions because
of pressure from outside sources." Receiving
no answer, I wrote again May 10, 1957: "I
trust that you get the idea that I am in earnest. I have the utmost
confidence in you. In my more than sixty years of official connection
with the denomination, one of my chief aims has been to inspire confidence
in the Spirit of Prophecy. The last two years I have spoken on the subject
204 times. I have felt that our people needed help, and I have tried
to help them. I am heartbroken of what the future seems to hold unless
God helps us. May the Lord give you both wisdom and courage to do what
the situation demands." After
I had come into possession of the confidential minutes of the White
Estate board, I followed Christ's instruction to "speak to him
alone," and sent four letters to our chief officer. January 26,
1957, I received this answer: "I
am certain we can trust the brethren of the White Estate to move cautiously
in this direction and not to take positions that might be embarrassing
in the future. Certainly, Brother Andreasen, there is no intention here
whatever to tamper with the writings of Sister White. We value them
most highly. "Referring
to the book on Questions and Answers, let me assure you here,
too, that this is not the work of the brethren whose names you mention.
It is true that they did certain original work, but it was taken out
of their hands and is the product of a large group of men rather than
a few." p
61 -- July 4, 1957, I answered. Here is part of this answwr: "I
fear the day may come when this matter will become known to the people.
It will shake the faith of the whole denomination. Of course, some will
rejoice that at last Sr. White has been disposed of. Others will weep
and cry to the Lord for consolation, 'Spare thy people, and give not
thine heritage to reproach.' And when we are caught in our own net,
will the churches of the world gloat? Please, brother, see to it that
the proposed book is not published. It will be fatal. . If there is
no atoning work now going on in the sanctuary above, then the denomination
may as well admit their mistake openly and fairly, and abide by the
consequences. Let us throw Sr. White aside, and no longer hypocritically
defend her writings, but behind the scenes edit them and still claim
that they are her work. . I close with an expression of high regard
for you. You have an almost overwhelming task before you, facing the
greatest apostasy the church has ever faced." September
18, 1957, I received this communication. "I
have considered
the matter to which you referred closed. "I
do not believe that you have the right to use the board minutes of the
White Estate as you have done. The minutes are confidential and not
intended for public use. I hope the time will never come when we take
the position that men are to be condemned and disciplined because they
come before properly constituted church boards to discuss questions
that they may have pertaining to the work and belief of the church." September
27, 1957, I answered: "I
thank you for your letter of September 18, wherein you state that 'the
matter to which you refer is closed.' I called for an investigation.
This you denied. You have condoned the men involved, and you have also
said 1 had no right to use the information which has come to me, and
then you closed the door. May I explain that the only way I have used
my information is to inform you, and no one else. What else could
1 do? You state that if such information had come to you, you would
not have used it. Quite an admission. I consider the present instance
the greatest apostasy that has ever occurred in this denomination, and
this you would have kept under cover! And now you have closed the door.
...I do not believe, Brother Figuhr, that you have considered the seriousness
of the situation. Our people will not stand for any tampering with,
or attempt to tamper with the Testimonies. It will give them an uneasy
feeling that all is not well at headquarters. "Read
again my letter of September 12. You can save the situation, but only
as you are willing to open up the matter. You are about to ruin the
denomination. I am praying for you." p
62 -- activities." Three
days later I received this additional word: "This will place you
in plain opposition to your church, and will undoubtedly bring up the
matter of your relationship to the church. In view of all this, the
officers, as I have previously written, earnestly ask you to cease your
activities." Up
till this time there had been no suggestion of a hearirig. I was simply
ordered to cease my activity, and the implied threat that if I did not
do this, "it will undoubtedly bring up the matter of your relationship
to the church." There was no suggestion of a hearing, I was simply
ordered to stop my activity. I would be condemned without recourse.
The threat that my name would come up for consideration could mean anything.
There was no question raised as to the justice of my complaint. I was
condemned already; the only question was what my punishment would be. This
brought to mind what had been published in the Eternity Extra,
that our men had "explained to Mr. Martin that they (the Adventists)
had among their number certain members of their "lunatic fringe
even as there are similar wild-eyed irresponsibles in every field of
fundamental Christianity." In contrast to this lunatic fringe they
had a "sane leadership," meaning themselves. I do not know
how our leaders conducted themselves while with the evangelicals, but
they left the impression upon these men that "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." Eternity Extra, September, 1956, page
2. Let
the reader ponder this. We have a sane leadership according to their
own estimation. We have also a lunatic fringe of wild-eyed irresponsibles.
This sane leadership is determined to put the brakes on "any members
who seek to hold views divergent from that of the responsible leadership
of the denomination." 1
could not believe this when I first read it. Here I was, for fifty years
an honored member of the church, having held responsible positions.
But if I dared hold "views divergent from that of the responsible
leadership of the p
63 -- denomination," I became a member of the "wild-eyed
irresponsibles" who constituted the "lunatic fringe"
of the denomination; and without a hearing I was ordered to cease my
activity or feel the "brakes" applied. If I did not now have
the documents before me, I would have difficulty in believing that any
"sane leadership" would attempt to stifle criticism and make
threats against any members who seek to hold views divergent from that
of the responsible leadership of the church. Had it come to this? Rome
went but little further. Some
will object that this is only what the evangelicals say of our leaders.
The fact remains that our men have never protested against these accusations.
My own case makes clear that without any trial or hearing I was to be
brought before the tribunal, not for a hearing, but to be condemned
without a hearing by the men who had appointed themselves as judges.
It is to be had in mind that this was before the General Conference
of 1958, before the new theology had been officially accepted, and before
the denomination had an opportunity to express itself on the subject.
All public criticism must cease. If I did not cease, it will "undoubtedly
bring up the matter of your relationship to the church." This was
an ultimatum. How
did I react to this? As any man would. Here was a usurpation of authority.
I wrote that I was a man of peace, and that I could be reasoned with,
but not threatened. I felt, and I now feel, that this denomination is
facing the apostasy foretold long ago, that our leaders are following
the exact procedure which the Spirit of prophecy outlined they would
follow, and that I have a duty which I must not shirk. I regret very
much that our leaders by their actions have made it possible for our
enemies to bring deserved reproach to God's cause. In my early letters
I mentioned again and again that our enemies would sooner or later discover
our weakness and make capital of it. I pleaded with our leaders to make
amends for what had bean done; but without results. We are now reaping
what we have sown. p
64 -- but one that would be recorded and of which I would get a
copy. In this I have failed. I shall give the documented reasons for
my failure to get a recorded hearing. I
have been asked what I expect to accomplish. I have received hundreds
of letters pledging support if I will only do certain things. I answer
very few letters, as it is physically impossible for me to enter into
correspondence. I have received many offers of advice and direction,
but I don't want to involve others. I have had all manner of motives
attributed to me, some good people apparently failing to understand
that to attribute motives is judging. Also, it seems impossible for
some to understand that doctrine in itself is important enough to furnish
motive to protest. In this crisis we are now in, it would be cowardice
for me to fail to come up to the help of the Lord against the mighty. I
have had three delegations come to me to plead with me to do something
"practical." In effect they said. "We are with you, but
you are not going at the matter in a practical way. The moment we take
our stand with you, we may, and probably will, lose our position. (They
were ministers.) If you had something to offer us, if you would start
another movement which we could join, we would go with you. But to be
left stranded without any prospect, is unrealistic. You will never get
anywhere unless you have something to offer." To
that I answer that I am a Seventh-day Adventist, that I am not interested
in starting any movement, and that I do not care for the support of
any who hold such views. They are not the kind of material that will
stand in the coming crisis. I
am a Seventh-day Adventist, rejoicing in the truth. Right and truth
will triumph in the end. I am hoping that as the truth of the present
situation becomes known, there will be men and women who will protest
and exert influence enough to effect certain changes in our organization
that will ensure men in holy office that are faithful to the truth once
delivered to the saints. I
end this with hearty greeting to all. My next letter on the matter of
a hearing should be an interesting one. p
65 -- Till then, may the dear Lord be with you. (Signed, M. L. Andreasen) p
66 -- blank - TOP p
67 -- SERIES A - No. 5 -- WHY
NOT A HEARING? - INHERITED PASSIONS p
68 -- In a previous letter I have related how in the month of May,
1957, 1 came into possession of some official minutes of the White Board
of Trustees - supposed to be secret - which revealed an attempt to tamper
with the Testimonies by having inserted in some of the volumes
notes and explanations that would make it appear that Sr. White was
in harmony with, or at least not opposed to, the new theology advocated
in the Ministry and the book Questions on Doctrine. I
was dumfounded when I read this official document, and doubly perplexed
when I learned that this plan had the sanction of the leadership, and
was approved procedure. This would mean that men could freely attempt
to have insertions made in the writings of the Spirit of Prophecy that
would vitiate or change the intended meaning of what Sr. White had written.
What assurance could we then have that the books being published were
the unadulterated teachings of the author, and that they were not "remedied
and corrected" as were other books, according to the account in
the Eternity Extra of September, 1956? While
I felt uneasy at what the men had attempted to do, my real concern was
the realization that this had been approved by the administration, and
was henceforth to be accepted policy. Men could now go to the White
Board, and with its approval, have inserted explanations and notes secretly
and privately before any one would find out what was happening. And
they could do this with the assurance that if any one learned of this
and revealed what was being done, the administration would deal with
such and threaten them unless they ceased their "activity." In
my case, I was told that the minutes were confidential, that I had no
right to have them or even read them. Though I had quoted directly and
correctly from the official minutes, I was told, "You are doing
all this upon hearsay and upon confidential minutes which you have no
right even to read." Letter, December, 1957. While the men
wished to insert "notes," "explanations," "appendix
notes," "foot notes," "suitable notes," "in
future printings of the E. G. White writings," (note that all these
statements are in the p
69 -- plural) the chairman minimized the matter by declaring in
a letter of September 20, 1957 that all it involved was a "cross
reference inserted at the bottom of a certain page;" that is, one
cross reference, at the bottom of one page, in one
of Sr. White's books. This is altogether at variance with the official
record. How can this discrepancy be explained? My
first thought and hope was that I would be called to account immediately,
and be asked to prove my charges or retract them; that an impartial
group of men would be asked to conduct a hearing. But in this I was
disappointed. The
first reaction to my "activity" came in a letter of December
16, 1957. There I was told: "The question of your activity was
discussed by the officers of the General Conference and they deeply
deplore what you are doing. They therefore request you to cease your
present activities." Before
I had an opportunity to answer, I received the following on December
19: "I
wish to repeat what I wrote you before, that men have a perfect right
to go to boards, including the White Estate group, and make their suggestions
without the fear of being disciplined or dealt with as heretics. When
we recall that you are doing all this upon hearsay, and upon confidential
minutes which you had no right even to read, it certainly impresses
one as not the Adventist way of doing things. You were not present at
this board meeting, and all you know about it is hearsay and the brief
notes recorded by the secretary of that meeting... Now for you to go
forward and broadcast a matter like this, certainly puts you in an unenviable
light. If you do this, we shall have to do some broadcasting, too. This
will again place you in plain opposition to your church, and will undoubtedly
bring up the matter of your relationship to the church. In view of all
this, the Officers as I have previously written, earnestly ask you to
cease your activities." As
will be noted, there was no suggestion of a hearing to ascertain the
truth or falsity of my charges. I was simply asked to cease my "activities,"
or else . . . How
did I react to this? As any man would under threat. I answered that
I was a man of peace, that I could be reasoned with, but not threatened.
I asked them to go ahead with their plans. I was ready for whatever
might come. What
would come? I did not know what was meant by p
70 -- considering my "relationship to the church." It
might mean anything. I know what impression they had left upon Dr. Barnhouse
if any should object to their usurped authourity. Here is what he recorded: "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 views divergent from that of the responsible
leadership of the denomination." Eternity Extra, September
1, 1956. It
seems unfortunate that our leaders should have left such an impression
upon the evangelicals. This statement has now been in print three years.
The attention of our leaders has been called to it and requests made
that they disavow any such intention. But they have made no such disavowal
or protest, and our people have somewhat reluctantly come to the conclusion
that Mr. Barnhouse is correct in his extimate of our leaders. Add to
this what Mr. Martin reports the leaders told him, that "they (the
Adventists) have among their number certain members of their 'lunitic
fringe' even as there are similar 'wild-eyed irresponsibiles' in every
field of fundamental Christianity." This is what our leaders told
the evangelicals in discussing the important topic of the nature of
Christ while in the flesh. These statements I consider an insult. It
shows the contempt our leaders have for those who disagree with them.
I think these statements are ample ground for impeachment. Our people
are long-suf A
SHORT MEETING The
only meeting I have ever had with our leaders was one day in February,
1958, when two officers asked me to meet with them for the few minutes
they had to spare between sessions of their business meetings. The chief
thing seemed to be their desire to know if I intended to continue my
"activity." I told them I would. A remark was made as to why
I had not asked for a hearing. It had never occurred to me that I should
ask for a hearing. I expected to be summon- p
71 -- ed, But thinking it over, the next day I wrote: "I
did not know that you wanted me to come to Washington for a hearing
or discussion as you never mentioned such a thing. If that is your desire,
I am ready to come.. . I have only one request, that the hearing be
public, or that a stenographer be present, and that I receive a copy
of the minutes." Letter, February 5, 1957. In
response to this I received this, dated February10, inviting me to come,
saying: "In
compliance with your wish, the brethren see no objection whatever in
recording our conversation. It is suggested that a tape-recording would
likely be the most practical way of doing this." This
was satisfactory to me. I noted, however, that nothing was said of my
receiving a copy of the minutes. But perhaps, I thought, this was taken
for granted, as I had made this a condition, and they had accepted my
proposition. But I felt uneasy. If I should write for further confirmation
it might appear that I was questioning their sincerity. But when by
February 21, 1 had received no further word, I wrote: "Whether
by oversight or intent, you did not answer my request that I be given
a copy of the minutes. This is necessary; for in any discussion of what
is said or not said, it will be my word against that of twelve. I cannot
afford to put myself in that position. This is the condition upon which
I come." To
this I received a reply dated February 27:
"In the matter of record, I think I indicated in my letter of February
10 that the brethren had in mind recording on tape the proceedings of
the meeting. This would provide a full record of what is said and done.
We assume that such a complete record would be agreeable to you." I
had asked for a copy of the minutes, and this letter assured me that
a tape recording would be made which would "provide a full record
of what is said and done." It was assumed "that such a complete
record would be agreeable to you." It would be. At last I was assured
that a full and complete record would be made, and that according to
their own suggestion it would be tape-recorded. I could ask for no more. But
having read Questions on Doctrine carefully, I had noticed that
certain things would be said on one page, and a few pages further on
this would be ignored. I had made note of certain double-tongued expressions,
and it gave me a P
72 -- sense of uncertainty. I could not avoid the conviction that
some of these expressions were used for the purpose of confusion and
were intended to mislead. I
therefore reread the letters I had written, and also those I had received,
especially the portions dealing with my request for a copy of the minutes.
I found that nowhere had my request been acknowledged, but the issue
had been avoided. This made me wonder. Had there throughout been a studied
purpose not to give me a copy of the minutes, while the letters
were so worded as to give the impression that I would get a copy? The
evidence seemed to substantiate my suspicion. To make sure of my ground,
I wrote on March 4 that I wanted absolute assurance, plainly stated,
that I would get a "full and complete copy of the minutes"
such as had been mentioned. I closed by saying: "On this point
I must have absolute assurance." As
by March 12 I had received no answer, I wrote again, "I am still
waiting for definite word that not only will a tape recording be made,
but that I will get a copy. As I stated in my first letter, this is
a necessary condition." March
18 this answer came: "You
have referred to a desire to have minutes kept, and also a copy of the
minutes. In discussing this with the officers, it occurs to the brethren
that we do this,which would seem fair to all concerned: a secretary
be appointed from the group to write out the conclusions we arrive at,
and these be submitted to the whole group for approval, after which
each will be given a copy. We believe, Brother Andreasen, that this
suggestion will be agreeable to you." This
was a wholly new and entirely different suggestion. After I had been
told in the February 27th letter, that a tape-recording would be made,
a "full" record of "what was said and done," and
hope expressed that such "a complete record would be agreeable
" to me, I was now presented with a new and previously unheard
of proposal, a complete face-about. There would be no stenographer,
no tape-recording, no minutes at all, but one of the men
would write down the conclusions arrived at. And that was supposed
to be agreeable to me! It certainly was not agreeable to me. It was
a complete breach of faith. It was like substituting Leah P
73 -- for Rachel, a dishonarable transaction. I felt as did Jacob
that I had been beguiled. Three weeks earlier, I had been promised "a
complete copy" of the minutes which it was hoped would be
agreeable to me. Now I was offered a copy of the conclusions,
which it was also hoped would be agreeable to me. This
March 18 letter reveals the fact that it was never the intention
to give me a copy of the minutes, and yet they had played me along,
thinking I would accept their suggestion, coming to a hearing or discussion,
and having no record whatever of the discussion, but only of the
conclusions. In the dark ages heretics were taken and convicted
in secret. There was no habeas corpus act in existence then. And now
the officers suggested an unrecorded session, where only a few would
be present and no record of any kind be made! I consider this an immoral
suggestion. Of what were they afraid? Moreover, before coming to such
a hearing the condition was made "that you agree, in submitting
your case to the General Conference committee, to abide by the decision
of the committee." (Letter of May 13, 1958.) This clearly reveals
the intent of the committee. A hearing is to be held, a secret hearing,
and a discussion entered into, but before the hearing or discussion
is held, I am to agree to accept their conclusion and verdict. Under
these conditions, how could they help winning their case? It
appears that the officers had in mind appointing themselves accusers,
jurors, judges, and executors. In a case involving points of doctrine
where of necessity there must be discussion to arrive at sound conclusions,
a neutral committee of men not directly involved in the controversy
must hear the case. No judge ever hears a case where he is personally
interested. He refuses to sit on a case where he is even remotely concerned.
But our officers appoint themselves to hear the case and act as arbiters
in a dispute involving points of theology, with powers to act, and ask
that one side agree beforehand to accept whatever decision might be
made. This, of course, is tantamount to accept the dictum of men elevated
as administrators, executives, promoters, financiers, organizers and
counsellors to have jurisdiction P
74 -- over doctrine, for which work they are not educated. I have
heard every one of them say, "I am no theologian." March
26, 1958, I answered the letter which stated that there would be no
record of any kind, but that I would get a copy of the conclusions.
I did not need this. I knew beforehand what they would be, for I had
already been judged and threatened. I had purposely been kept in ignorance
of the intent not to give me a copy of the minutes, but to try me secretly.
Apparently it was the intention to keep the matter from becoming known,
and if I agreed beforehand to accept their conclusions, I could be accused
of breaking my promise if I made any further comment. If I could be
induced to come to Washington under these conditions, I surely would
be "sunk." With the whole case in mind, with the repeated
evasions of my request for a copy of the minutes, I felt I had been
deceived and ended my letter by saying, "Your broken promise cancels
the agreement." My faith in men had been severely shaken. April
3 I received an answer stating that my letter "had been received
and its content presented to the officers." There was no mention
whatever of my statement,"Your broken promise cancels the agreement,"
the most important part. Also, this statement was not read to the officers,
for a month later I received a letter saying, "Through others
I have learned that you feel we have broken our promise to you."
This perversion of my words has gone out to the field, who would naturally
believe that I had written to others and not to the person concerned.
I don't do that kind of work. In
this same letter of April 3, the writer states: "It
is true, as you state, that a tape recording was suggested at first,
without a promise, however, of giving you a copy. Since making this
suggestion, we have thought further about the matter and believe that
such recording would not be a wise plan to follow. . . A tape recording
of every little remark would not be fair to the participants. In such
discussions it is not uncommon for earnest men to make a slip which
they later regret and correct. Mortal man is subject to such errors;
but why preserve them? The sincere purpose of the meeting would be to
arrive at conclusions together. . . As I look over your letters, this
would appear to be in accord with your original suggestion." P
75 -- This makes clear several matters. It admits that a tape-recording
was suggested at first. It also makes clear that it was never the intention
of giving me a copy, though the letters were written to hide this fact.
It also states that the officers changed their mind and decided that
it would not be a wise plan to record anything, as it "would
not be fair to the participants," a most astounding reason, and
revealing a most decided weakness. And then the last untrue statement:
"As I look over your letters, this would appear to be in accord
with your original suggestion," Greater
untruth was never uttered. I challenge the writer who says he looked
over my letters to find any place where I say or intimate any such thing.
And yet, this impression has gone to the field from Washington. Never
suspecting that Washington would tell anything but the absolute truth,
the men in the field who were admonished to "hold the line,"
naturally would believe that this was my "original WHY
THIS SUDDEN CHANGE? There
must have been some weighty reasons why it was suddenly decided not
to have any record at all, after it was first decided to have a complete
and full record "of all that was said and done?" The records
of the 1888 crisis, the Alpha of apostasy, have largely disappeared,
and the existing records are safely hidden and not available. We do
not want a like situation in the time of the Omega. Let there I
do not know why the change came about. I can only surmise. It was understood
that my "activity" would be considered as well as my relationship
to the church. The brethren also suggested that perhaps I had some matters
also that should be discussed. I had. I made a list of these subjects.
Here it is: p
76 -- 1.
Elder Froom's articles, particularly those in the Februay number of
the Ministry, 1957, downgrading Mrs. White. 2.
The vault visits of Elders Anderson and Reed in regard to having insertions
made in the writings of Mrs. White, and the general policies now prevailing. 3.
A list of the topics discussed with the evangelicals which had taken
"hundreds of hours," and the main conclusions reached. 4.
A detailed list of the books "remedied and corrected" at the
recommendation of Mr. Martin, and a further list of books yet to be
remedied. 5.
The $3,000 law suit. 6.
Proselytization. What was agreed to? 7.
The meaning of "putting the brakes on" and "lunatic fringe"
and "wild-eyed irresponsibles." 8.
The new university and the languishing foreign fields. 9.
"Exchange monies." 10.
A complete audit by a responsible firm of public accountants. This
list I did not send to Washington, for I well knew that it would be
a matter of months to compass such a program. I suggested only a few
subjects, and of course, I did know what the results would be. But,
curiously enough, at just this time the brethren decided that it would
not be wise to have any recording made. Under the circumstances I agree
with their decision. The pusillanimous reason given for not having a
record made - that the brethren might make remarks of which they later
would repent - is simply inane. But let there be no misunderstanding.
An accounting will yet have to be made. To
top it all comes this in the April 3 letter: "You never asked for
a hearing." I will let the reader decide this question for himself.
I answered: "Make no mistake on that point. I not only want
a hearing, but such a hearing must be held if this sorry matter is ever
to be settled. You say that vou wonder if I am really sincere in wanting
a hearing. Yes, I want a hearing. I demand one. Not a secret hearing.
An open one, or else with a full and complete record of all that is p
77 -- said and done. This has been my desire from the beginning.
No star chamber proceedings." My
last communication to headquarters was dated June 28, 1958. 1 asked
if it was still the determination to give me a hearing with a tape-recording
for me. A secretary ananswered: "With reference to a tape~recording
of the meeting, I am instructed to say that our correspondence reveals
no promise of a tape recording for you. If desired, one can be made,
but it will be kept in this office for a permanent record as previously
stated." This
leaves me free. I have exhausted all means of corresponding with the
men I should address. I can now speak to the church, as Christ said
might be done if other means fail. This I shall do. But I still hold
myself ready to come to a hearing or trial, properly conducted and properly
recorded. Let the light in. INHERITED
PASSIONS On
page 383 of the book Questions on Doctrine occurs the statement
that Christ "was exempt from the inherited passions and pollutions
that corrupt the natural descendants of Adam." This
is not a quotation from the Spirit of Prophecy. It is a new doctrine
that has never appeared in any Statement of Belief of the Seventh-day
Adventist denomination, and is in direct conflict with our former statements
of doctrine. It has not been "adopted by the General Conference
in quadrennial session when accredited delegates from the whole field
are present," as Questions on Doctrine says must be done
if it is to be official. See page 9. It is therefore not approved or
accepted doctrine. TWO
STATEMENTS There
are two statements in the Testimonies which tire referred to
as proving that Christ was exempt from inherited passions. The first
says that Christ "is our example in all things. He is a brother
in our infirmities, but not in possessing like passions." Testimonies,
V. 2, p. 202. The other states, "He was a mighty petitioner,
not possessing p
78 -- the passions of our human, fallen natures, but compassed with
like infirmities, tempted in all points even as we are." Ibid.
p. 509. Both of these statements mention passions, neither mentions
pollutions. The word exempt is not found. Does
Sr. White's statement that Christ did not have or possess passions mean
that He was exempt from them? No, for not to have passions is
not equivalent to being exempt from them. They are two entirely
different concepts. Exempt is defined "to free or excuse from some
burdensome obligation; to take out, deliver, set free as from a rule
which others must observe, which binds others; to be immune from."
Was
Christ excused from "'a rule which others must observe, which binds
others?" No, "God permitted His Son to come, a helpless babe,
subject to (not exempt from) the weakness of humanity. He permitted
Him to meet life's peril in common with every human soul, to fight the
battle as every child of humanity must fight it, at the risk of failure
and eternal loss." Desire of Ages, p. 49. "While He
was a child, He thought and spoke as a child, but no trace of sin marred
the image of God within Him. Yet He was not exempt from temptation.
He,was subject to (not exempt from) all the conflicts which we have
to meet." Ibid. p. 71. "God spared not His own Son."
Romans 8:32. "No child of humanity will ever be called to live
a holy life amid so fierce a conflict with temptation as was our Savior."
Desire of Ages, p. 71. "It was necessary for Him to be constantly
on guard to preserve His purity." Ibid. A man may not have
cancer, but does that mean that he is immune from it, exempt
from it? Not at all. Next year he may be afflicted with it. Sr. White
does not say that Christ was exempt from passions. She says He
did not have passions, did not possess passions, not that
He was immune from them. Why
did Christ not have passions? Because "the soul must purpose
the sinful act before passion can dominate over reason, or iniquity
triumph over conscience." Testimonies, V. 5, p. 177. And
Christ did not purpose any sinful act. Not for a moment was there
in Him a sinful propensity. He was pure, holy, undefiled. But this did
not mean that He was exempt from temptation or sin. "He could have
sinned, He could p
79 -- have fallen." Bible Commentary, V. 5, p. 1128.
1 am still puzzled how any one can make Sr. White say that Christ was
exempt, when she says just the opposite, and does not use the word exempt. IS
TEMPTATION SIN? Temptation
is not sin; but it may become so if we yield to it. "When impure
thoughts are chershed, they need not be expressed in word or
act to consummate the sin and bring the soul into condemnation."
Testimonies, V. 4, p. 623. "An impure thought tolerated,
an unholy desire cherished, and the soul is contaminated . . . Every
unholy thought must be instantly repelled." Testimonies, V.
5, p. 177. Satan
tempts us to get us to sin. God uses controlled temptation to
strengthen us and teach us to resist. Satan tempted Adam in the garden;
ha tempted Abraham and all the prophets; he tempted Christ; he tempts
all men, but God will "'not suffer you to be tempted above that
ye are able." 1 Corinthians 10:13. "Christ
was a free moral agent who could have sinned had He so desired. He was
at liberty to yield to Satan's temptations and work at cross purposes
with God. If this were not so, if it had not been possible for Him to
fall, He could not have been tempted in all points as the human family
is tempted." Youths' Instructor, October 26, 1899. THE
GREAT LAW OF HEREDITY Questions
on Doctrine says, page 383, that Christ was "exempt from the
inherited passions and pollutions that corrupt the natural descendants
of Adam." Every child that is born into this world, inherits varying
traits from his ancestors. Did Christ likewise inherit such traits?
Or was He exempt? Here is the answer: "Like
every child of Adam He accepted the results of the working of the great
law of heredity." Desire of Ages, p. 48. "What these
results were is shown in the history of His earthly ancestors."
Ibid. Some of these ancestors were good people; some were not
so good; some were bad; some were very bad. There were thieves, murderers,
adulterers, deceivers, among them. He had the same ancestors that all
of us p
80 -- have. "He came with such a heredity to share our
sorrows and temptations." Ibid. "Jesus acceipted
humanity when the race had been weakened by four thousand years of sin."
Ibid. In
view of these and many other statements, how can any say that He was
exempt? Far from being exempt or reluctantly submitting
to these conditions, He accepted them. Twice this is stated in
the quotations here made. He accepted the results of the working of
the great law of heredity, and with such heredity He came to share our
sorrows and temptations." The
choice of the devout Adventist is therefore between Questions on
Doctrine and Desire of Ages, between falsehood and
truth. "God permitted His Son to come, a helpless babe, subject
to the weakness of humanity. He permitted Him to meet life's peril in
common with every human soul, to fight the battle as every child of
humanity must fight it, at the risk of failure and eternal loss."
Desire of Ages, p, 49. "Christ knew that the enemy would
come to every human being to take advantage of hereditary weakness
. . . and by passing over the ground which man must travel, our Lord
has prepared the way for us to overcome." Desire of Ages,
p. 122, 123. "Upon Him who had laid off His glory, and accepted
the weakness of humanity, the redemption of the world must rest."
Ibid. p. 11. Few,
even of our ministers, know anything of what Sr. White calls the great
law of heredity. Yet this is the law which made the incarnation effective
and made Christ a real man, like one of us in all things. That Christ
should be like one of us in all things, Paul considered a moral necessity
on the part of' God, and makes bold so to state. Says he: "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; for in that
he himself hath suffered, being tempted, he is able to succor them that
are tempted." Hebrews 2:17,18. Behoved here means "ought
to," a moral duty devolving upon God. The
great law of heredity was decreed by God to make salvation possible,
and is one of the elemental laws that p
81 -- has never been abrogated. Take that law away, and we have
no Savior that can be of help or example to us. Graciously Christ "accepted"
this law, and thus made salvation possible. To teach that Christ was
exempt from this law negates Christianity and makes the incarnation
a pious hoax. May God deliver Seventh-day Adventists from such teaching
and teachers! POLLUTION I
have not touched upon the subject of pollution, though it is mentioned
in Questions on Doctrine in connection with passions. Christ
was subject to the great law of heredity, but that has nothing to do
with pollution. Impure thoughts tolerated, unholy desires cherished,
evil passions indulged in, will issue in contamination, pollution, and
downright sin. but Christ was not affected by any of this. He "received
no defilement;" "Jesus, coming to dwell in humanity, received
no pollution." Desire of Ages, p. 266. Passion
and pollution are two different things, and should not be placed together
as they are in Questions on Doctrine. Passion can generally be
equated with temptation, and as such is not sin. An impure thought may
come unbidden even on a sacred occasion, but it will not defile; it
is not sin, unless it is dwelt upon and tolerated. An unholy desire
may suddenly flash to mind at Satan's instigation; but it is not sin
unless it is cherished. The
law of heredity applies to passions and not to pollutions. If pollution
is hereditary, then Christ would have been polluted when He came to
this world and could not therefore be "that holy thing." Luke
1:35. Even the children of an unbelieving husband are called holy, a
statement that should be a comfort to the wives of such husbands. 1
Corinthians 7:14. As Adventists, however, we do not believe in original
sin. Of
this matter of pollution there is much to say. But as the problem we
are facing deals only with passions, we shall not discuss pollutions
further. On occasion I may have more to say about passions, for I consider
the statement in Questions on Doctrine deadly heresy, destructive
of the atonement. p
82 -- My next letter will be the last one in this series. But if
the reader will consult the list of ten subjects which I have enumerated
elsewhere in this letter, he will see that there is yet much to be done.
And that list is not exhaustive. However, I shall give time for what
I have said to sink in, for large bodies move slowly, and it takes time
for the leaven to "leaven the whole lump." But the leaven
is working, and in due time expected results will come. But I am in
no haste. Time is with truth, and truth will make its way, and is not
dependent on any human instrument. I get many encouraging letters, and
am thankful for them, and only sorry that I must leave most of them
unanswered. One rather prominent man from Washington wrote me of the
confusion existing there, and stated: "We are watching events,
and when the time comes, we will be ready to act. Personally, I do not
believe that the time is quite ripe, but nearly so. We are with you,
and you can depend on us." I
am glad to report that my health is good, and that I am enjoying life
to the limit. It is wonderful to live in such a time as this. "I
am immortal till my work is done." That may be tomorrow, but if
so, I am satisfied and ready. Greetings
to all my friends with 1 Thessalonians 5:25. -
TOP p
83 -- SERIES A - NO. 6 - THE ATONEMENT p
84 --The serious student of the atonement is likely to be perplexed
when he consults the Spirit of Prophecy to find two sets of apparently
contradictory statements in regard to the atonement. He will find that
when Christ "offered Himself on the cross, a perfect atonement
was made for the sins of the people." Signs of the Times,
June 28, 1899. He will find that the Father bowed before the cross "in
recognition of its perfection. 'It is enough,' He said, 'the atonement
is complete:'" Review and Herald, September 24, 1901. But
in Great Controversy he will find this: "At the conclusion
of the 2300 days, in 1844, Christ entered the most holy place of the
heavenly sanctuary, to perform the closing work of the atonement."
p. 422. In Patriarchs and Prophets, p. 357, I read that sins
will "stand on record in the sanctuary until the final atonement."
(in 1844) Page 358 states that in "the final atonement the
sins of the truly penitent are to be blotted from the records of heaven."
Earlv Writings, page 253, says that "Jesus entered the most
holy of the heavenly at the end of the 2300 days of Daniel 8, to make
the final atonement." The
first set of statements says that the atonement was made on the cross;
the other says that the final atonement was made 1800 years later.
I have found seven statements that the atonement was made on the cross;
I have twenty-two statements that the final atonement was made in heaven.
Both of these figures are doubtless incomplete; for there may be others
that have escaped my attention. It is evident, however, that I may not
accept one set of statements and reject the other if I wish to arrive
at truth. The question therefore is which statements are true? Which
are false? Or, are both true? If so, how can they be harmonized? I
was perplexed when in the February number of the Ministry, 1957,
I found the statement that "the sacrificial act of the cross (was)
a complete, perfect, and final atonement." This was in distinct
contradiction to Mrs. White's p
85 -- pronouncement that the final atonement began in 1844.
I thought that this might be a misprint, and wrote to Washington calling
attention to the matter, but found it was not a misprint but an official
and approved statement. If we still hold the Spirit of Prophecy as of
authority, we therefore have two contradictory beliefs: the final atonement
was made at the cross; the final atonement began in 1844. DEFINITION
OF ATONEMENT I
have listened to several discussions of the meaning of the Hebrew word
"kaphar," which is the word used in the original for atonement,
but have received little help. The best definition I have found is a
short explanatory phrase in Patriarchs and Prophets,p. 358, which
simply states that the atonement, "the great work of Christ, or
blotting out of sin, was represented by the services on the day
of atonement." This
definition is in harmony with Leviticus 16:30 which says that "the
priest shall make an atonement for you, to cleanse you, that
ye may be clean from all your sins before the Lord." Atonement
is here equated with being "clean from all your sins."
As sin was the cause of separation between God and man, the removing
of sin would again unite God and man. And this would be at-one-ment. Christ
did not need any atonement, for He and the Father were always one. John
10:30. Christ prayed for His disciples "that they may all be one,
as thou, Father, art in me and I in thee, that they also may be one
in us." John 17:21 The
definition of atonement as consisting of three words--at-one-ment--
is by some considered obsolete, but it nevertheless represents vital
truth. Mrs. White thus uses it. Says she: "unless they accept the
atonement provided for them in the remedial sacrifice of Jesus Christ
who is our atonement at-one-ment, with God." Mss. 122, 1901. God's
plan is that in "the fulness of time he might gather together in
one all things in Christ." Ephesians 1:10., When this is
done, the family of heaven and the family of earth are one." Desire
of Ages, p. 835. Then "one pulse of harmony and gladness beats
through the vast creation." Great Contro- p
86 -- versy, p. 678. At last the atonement is complete. TWO
PHASES OF THE ATONEMENT Much
confusion in regard to the atonement arises from a neglect to recognize
the two divisions of the atonement. Note what is said of John the Baptist,
"He did not distinguish clearly the two phases of Christ's work
- as a suffering sacrifice, and a conquering king." Desire of
Ages, PP. 136,137. The book Questions on Doctrine makes the
same mistake. It does not distinguish clearly; in fact it does not distinguish
at all; it does not seem to know of the two phases; hence the
confusion. The
First Phase -- The first phase of Christ's atonement was that of
a suffering sacrifice. This began before the world was, included the
incarnation, Christ's life on earth, the temptation in the wilderness,
Gethsemane, Golgotha, and ended when God's voice called Christ from
the "stony prison house of death." The fifty third chapter
of Isaiah is a vivid picture of this. Satan
had overcome Adam in the garden of Eden, and in a snort time nearly
the whole world had come under his sway. At the time of Noah there were
only eight souls who entered the ark. Satan claimed to be prince of
this world, and no one had challenged him. But
God did not recognize Satan's claim to dominion, and when Christ came
to earth, the Father "gave the world into the hands of the Son,
that through His mediatorial work He may completely vindicate the holiness
and the binding claims of every precept of the divine law."
Bible Echo, January, 1887. This was a challenge to Satan's claim,
and thus began in earnest the great controversy between Christ and Satan. "Christ
took the place of fallen Adam. With the sins of the world laid upon
Him, He would go over the ground where Adam stumbled." Review
and Herald, February 24, 1874. "Jesus volunteered to meet the
highest claims of the law." Ibid., September 2, 1890. "Christ
made Himself responsible for every man and woman on earth." Ibid,,
February 27, 1900. p
87 -- As Satan claimed ownership of the earth, it was necessary
for Christ to overcome Satan before He could take posession of His kingdom.
Satan knew this, and hence made an attempt to kill Christ as soon as
He was born. However, as a contest between Satan and a helpless child
in a manger, would not be fair, God frustrated this. The
first real encounter between Christ and Satan took place in the wilderness.
After forty days of fasting Christ was weak and emaciated, at death's
door. At this time Satan made his attack. But Christ resisted, even
"unto b1ood," and Satan was compelled to retire defeated.
But he did not give up. Throughout Christ's ministry, Satan dogged His
footsteps, and made every moment a hard battle. Gethsemane
-- The climax of Christ's struggle with Satan, came in the garden
of Gethsemane. Hitherto Christ had been upheld by the knowledge of the
approval of the Father. But now He "was overpowered by the terrible
fear that God was removing His presence from Him." Spirit of
Prophecy, Vol. 3, P. 95. If God should forsake Him, could He still
resist Satan and die rather than yield? "Three times His humanity
shrank from the last, crowning sacrifice . . . The fate of humanity
trembled in the balance." Ibid., p. 99. "As the Father's
presence was withdrawn, they saw Him sorrowful with a bitterness of
sorrow exceeding that of the last struggle with death." Desire
of Ages, p. 759. "He fell dying to the ground," but with
His last ounce of strength murmured, 'If this cup may not pass from
me except I drink it, Thy will be done . . . 'A heavenly peace rested
upon His bloodstained face. He had borne that which no human being could
ever bear; He had tasted the sufferings of death for every man."
Desire of Ages, p. 694. In His death, He was victor. "When
Christ said, 'It is finished,' God responded, 'It is finished, the human
race shall have another trial.' the redemption price is paid, and Satan
fell like lightning from heaven." Mss. 11, 1897. "As
the Father beheld the cross He was satisfied. He said, It is enough,
the offering is complete." Signs of the Times, September
30, 1899. It was necessary, however, that p
88 -- there should be given the world a stern manifestation of the
wrath of God, and so, "in the grave Christ was the captive of divine
justice."M.V.F. February 24, 1898. It must be abundantly
attested that Christ's death was real, so He must "remain in the
grave the allotted period of time." Review and Herald,
April 26, 1898. When the time was expired, a "messenger was sent
to relieve the Son of God from the debt for which He had become responsible,
and for which He had made full atonement." Mss, 94, 1897. "In
the intercessory prayer of Jesus with His Father, He claimed that He
had fulfilled the conditions which made it obligatory upon the Father
to fulfill His part of the contract made in heaven with regard to fallen
man. He prayed, "I have finished the work which Thou gavest me
to do." Mrs. White then makes this explanation, "That is,
He had wrought out a righteous character on earth as an example for
men to follow." Spirit of Prophecy, Vol. 3, p. 260. The
"contract" between the Father and the Son made in heaven,
included the following: 1. The Son was to work out a "righteous
character on earth as an example for man to follow." 2.
Not only was Christ to work out such a character, but He was to demonstrate
that man also could do this; and thus man would become "more precious
than fine gold, even a man than the golden wedge of Ophir."
3. If Christ thus could present man as a new creature in Christ
Jesus, then God was to "receive repentant and obedient men, and
would love them even as He loves His Son." Spirit of Proiphecy,
Vol. 3, p. 260; Desire of Ages, 790. Christ
had "fulfilled one phase of His priesthood by dying on the
cross. He is now fulfilling another phase by pleading before
the Father the case of repenting, believing sinners, presenting to God
the offerings of His people." Mss. 42, 1901. "In His
incarnation He had reached the prescribed limit as a sacrifice,
but not as a redeemer." Mss. 111, 1897. On Golgotha He was
the victim, the sacrifice. That was as far as He could go as a sacrifice.
But now His work as redeemer began. "When Christ cried 'It
is finished,' God's unseen hand rent the strong fabric which composed
the veil of the temple from top to bottom. The way into the p
89 -- holiest of all was made manifest." Ibid. With
the cross the first phase of Christ's work as the "suffering
sacrifice" ended. He had gone the "perscribed limit"
as a sacrifice. He had finished His work "thus far."
And now, with the Father's approval of the sacrifice, He was empowered
to be the Savior of mankind. At the ensuing coronation forty days later
He was given all power in heaven and earth, and officially installed
as High Priest. The
Second Phase -- "After His ascension our Savior began
His work as High Priest...In harmony with the typical service He began
His in the holy place, and at the termination of the prophetic days
in 1844...He entered the most holy to perform the last division of His
solemn work, to cleanse the sanctuary." Spirit of Prophecy,
Vol. 4, pp. 265, 266. On the same page, 266, Sr. White repeats, apparently
for emphasis, "at the termination of the 2300 days in 1844, Christ
then entered the most holy place of the heavenly sanctuary, into the
presence of God, to perform the closing work of atonement preparatory
to his coming." The reader cannot fail to note how clearly and
emphatically this is stated. John the Baptist "did not distinguish
clearly the two phases of Christ's work, as a suffering sacrifice and
a conquering king." Desire of Ages, pp. 136, 137. Our theologians
are making the same mistake today and are inexcusable. They have light
which John did not have. In
studying this part of the atonement, we are entering a f'ield that is
distinctly Adventist, and in which we differ from all other denominations.
This is our unique contribution to religion and theology, that which
"has made us a separate people, and has given character and power
to our work." Counsels to Editors and Writers, p. 54. In
the same place she warns us against making "void the truths of
the atonement, and destroy our confidence in the doct.rines which we
have held sacred since the third angel's message was first given." This
is vital counsel, and written for this very time when efforts are being
made by some among us to have others p
90 -- believe that we are like the churches about us, an evangelical
body and not a sect. Paul, in his day, had the same heresy to meet.
He was accused of being a "pestilent fellow," a "ringleader
of the sect of the Nazarenes." Acts 24:5. In his answer before
Felix, Paul confessed that after the "way which they call a
sect, so serve I the God of our Fathers believing all things which
are according to the law and which are written in the prophets."
Acts 24:14. R. V. In those days men spoke sneeringly of the true church
as a sect, as men do now. Paul was not disturbed by this. We have no
record that he attempted to have the church of the living God recognized
as an evangelical body by men who trampled the law of God in the dust.
On the contrary, whatever they might call him and his "sect,"
he confessed that he believed "all things which are written in
the law and the prophets." Verse 14. The
religious journal, Christianity Today, states in the March 3,
1958 issue., that "the Adventists today are contending vigorously
that they are truly evangelical. They appear to want to be so regarded."
Mentioning the book, Questions on Doctrine, it says that this
"is the Adventist answer to the question whether it ought to be
thought of as a sect or a fellow evangelical denomination." It
states further that "the book" is published in an effort to
convince the religious world that we are evangelical and one
of them. This
is a most interesting and dangerous situation. As one official who was
not in favor of what was being done stated to me: "We are being
sold down the river." What a sight for heaven and earth! The church
of the living God which has been given the commission to preach the
gospel to every creature under heaven and call men to come out of Babylon,
is now standing at the door of these churches asking permission to enter
and become one of them. How are the mighty fallen! Had their plan succeeded,
we might now be a member of some evangelical association and not a distinctive
Seventh-day Adventist church any more, in secrecy "sold down the
river." This is more than apostasy. This is giving up Adventism.
It is the rape of a whole people. It is denying God's leading in the
past. It is the fulfillment of what the Spirit of Prophecy said years
ago: p
91 -- "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 pillars of our faith, and engaging in a process of reorganization.
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 an error. A new organization would be established. Books
of a new order would be written. A system of intellectual philosophy
would be introduced . . . Nothing would be allowed to stand in the way
of the new movement." Series B. No. 2, pp. 54, 55. "Be
not deceived; many will depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing
spirits and doctrines of devils. We have before us the alpha of this
danger. The omega will be of a most startling nature." Ibid.
p. 16. "When
men standing in the position of leaders and teachers work under the
power of spiritualistic ideas and sophistries, shall we keep silent
for fear of injuring their influence, while souls are being beguiled?
. . . Those who feel so very peaceable in regard to the works of the
men who are spoiling the faith of the people of God, are guided by a
delusive sentiment." Ibid, pp. 9, 11. "Renewed
energy is now needed. Vigilant action is called for. Indifference and
sloth will result in the loss of personal religion and of heaven. .
. My message to you is: No longer consent to listen without protest
to the perversion of truth. We must firmly refuse to be drawn away from
the platform of eternal truth, which since 1844 has stood the test."
Ibid. pp. 14, 15, 50. "I
hesitated and delayed about the sending out of that which the Spirit
of the Lord impelled me to write. I did not want to be compelled to
present the misleading influence of these sophistries. But in the providence
of God, the errors that have been coming in must be met."
Ibid. p. 55. "What
influence is it that would lead men at this stage of our history to
work in an underhanded, powerful way to tear down the foundation
of our faith - the foundation that was laid at the beginning of our
work by prayerful study of the word and by revelation? Upon this foundation
we have been building the past fifty years. Do you wonder that when
I see the beginnining of a work that would remove some of the pillars
of our faith, I have something to say'? I must obey the command, "Meet
it." Ibid. p. 58. p
92 -- All this was written to meet the apostasy in the alpha period.
We are now in the omega period which Sr. White said would come, and
which would be of a "startling nature," And the words are
even more applicable now than then. Is the reader one of "those
who feel so very peaceable in regard to the works of the men who are
spoiling the faith of the people of God?" Ibid. p. 11. "Shall
we keep silent for fear of injuring their influence, while souls are
being beguiled?" Ibid. p. 9. It is time to stand up and
be counted. There are times when I have been tempted to think that I
stood alone as did Elijah. But God told him that there were 7000 others.
There are more than that now, thank God. They need to reveal themselves
- and they are doing it. Most heartening are the letters I am receiving.
It is with deep regret that I find I am unable to enter into extended
correspondence. I am overwhelmed with work. ---------------------- Christ's
death on the cross corresponds to the moment when on the day of atonument
the high priest had just killed the Lord's goat in the court. The death
of the goat was necessary, for without its blood there could be no atonement.
But the death in and of itself was not the atonement, though it was
the first and necessary step. Sr. White speaks of the "atonement
commenced on earth." Spirit of Prophecy, Vol. 3,
p. 261. Says Scripture: "It is the blood that maketh atonement."
Leviticus 17:11. And, of course, there could be no blood until after
the death had taken place. Without a blood ministration the people would
be in the same position as those who on the passover slew the lamb but
failed to place the blood on the door posts. "When I see the blood,"
said God, "I will pass over you." Exodus 12: 13. The death
was useless without the ministration of the blood. It was the blood
that counted. It
is the blood that is to be applied, not "an act," "a
great act," "a sacrificial act," "an atoning act,"
"the act of the cross," "the benefits of the act of the
cross," "the benefits of the atonement," all of which
expressions are used in Questions on Doctrine, but any reference
to the blood p
93 -- is carefully avoided. It is not an act of any kind that is
to be applied. It is the blood. Yet in all the 100 pages in the
book dealing with the atonement, not once is the blood spoken of as
being applied, or ministered. Can this be merely an oversight, or is
it intended? Are we teaching a bloodless atonement? Elder Nichols states
the Adventist position correctly when he says, "We believe that
Christ's work of atonement was begun rather than completed
on Calvary." Answers to Objections, p. 408. This was published
in 1952. We shall be interested to see what the new edition will say.
Many are waiting to find out what they are to believe on this important
question. BLOOD
ATONEMENT Here
are some expressions from the Spirit of Prophecy in regard to blood
atonement: "Jesus
was clothed with priestly garments. He gazed in pity on the remnant,
and with a voice of deep pity cried, 'My blood, Father; My blood;
My blood; My blood.'" Early Writings, p. 38, "He
appears in the presence of God as our great High Priest, ready to accept
the repentance, and to answer the prayers of His people, and, through
the merits of His own righteousness, to present them to the Father.
He raises His wounded hands to God, and claims their bloodbought
pardon. I have graven them on the palms of my hands, He pleads.
Those memorial wounds of my humiliation and anguish secure
to my church the best gifts of omnipotence." Spirit of Prophecy,
Vol 3, pp. 261, 262."The ark that enshrines the tables of the
law is covered with the mercy seat, before which Christ pleads His blood
in the sinner's behalf." Great Controversy, p. 415. "When
in the typical service the high priest left the holy place on the day
of atonement, He went in before God to present the blood of the
sin-offering, in behalf of all Israel who truly repented of their sins.
So Christ had only completed one part of his work as our intercessor,
to enter upon another portion of the work, and He still pleaded his
blood before the Father in behalf of sinners." Ibid.
p. 429. Christ
is "now officiating before the ark of God, pleading his blood
in behalf of sinners." Ibid. P-433. p
94 -- "Christ, the great high priest, pleading His blood
before the Father in the sinner's behalf, bears upon His heart the name
of every repentant, believing soul. Patriarchs and Prophets ..
351. "As
Christ at His ascension appeared in the presence of God to plead
His blood in behalf of penitent believers, so the priest in the
daily ministration sprinkled the blood of the sacrifice in the
holy place in the sinner's behalf." Patriarchs and Prophets,
p. 357. "The
blood of Christ, while it was to release the repentant sinner from
the condemnation of the law, was not to cancel the sin; it was to stand
on record in the sanctuary until the final atonement." Patriarchs
and Prophets, p. 357. And
with all these statements before him, not once does the author of Questions
on Doctrine mention the blood as being applied or ministered. THE
FINAL ATONEMENT "The
Father ratified the covenant made with Christ, that He would receive
repentant and obedient men, and would love them even as He loves His
Son." This, as stated above, was on the condition that "Christ
was to complete His work and fulfill His pledge to make a man more precious
than fine gold, even a man than the golden wedge of Ophir." Desire
of Ages, p. 790. "This Christ guarantees." Spirit of
Prophecy, Vol. 3, p. 250. When
Christ says in His high priestly prayer,"I have finished the work
which Thou gavest me to do," (John 17:4) Sr. White comments: "He
had wrought out a righteous character on earth as an example for man
to follow." Spirit of Prophecy, Vol. 3, p. 260. In
working out this righteous character, Christ demonstrated that it could
be done. But could others do the same? That needed to be demonstrated
also. Christ had guaranteed it could. It was now for Christ to
make good His pledge. Character
is not created. It is made; it is developed; it is built
through manifold tests and temptations and trials. God at first gives
a light test, then a little stronger, and p
95 -- still a little stronger. Little by little resistance to temptations
grows stronger, and after a while certain temptations cease to be temptations.
A man may have a great struggle with tobacco; but at last he is victorious,
and his victory may be so complete that tobacco is a temptation no longer. Thus,
ideally, it should be with every temptation. Holiness is not attained
in a day. "Redemption is that process by which the soul
is trained for heaven." Desire of Ages, p. 330. A man may
gain victories every day, but still may not have attained. Even Paul
had to admit that he had not "already attained, either were already
perfect." But undaunted he exclaims, "I follow after that
I may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended of Jesus Christ."
Philippians 3:12. Christ
had pledged to make man "finer than gold," even the golden
wedge of Ophir. In this work man must not be a submissive instrument
only; he must take an active part. Note these quotations: "The
ransom of the human race was appointed to give man another trial."
Mss. 14, 1898. "The plan of salvation was designed to redeem
the fallen race, to give man another trial." Signs of
the Times, April 26, 1899. God "looked upon the victim expiring
on the cross and said, 'It is finished; the human race shall have
another trial.'" Youth's Instructor, June 21, 1900.
"That the transgressor might have another trial . . . the
eternal Son of God interposed Himself to bear the punishment of transgression."
Review and Herald, February 8, 1898. "He suffered in our
stead that men could have another test and trial." Special
Instruction Relating to the Review and Herald Office, p. 28. "As
Jesus was accepted as our substitute and surety, every one of us will
be accepted if we stand the test and trial for ourselves."
Review and Herald, June 10, 1890. "The Savior overcame to
show man how he may overcome. " "Man must work with his
human power, aided by the divine power of Christ, to resist and
to conquer at any cost to himself. In short, he must overcome
as Christ overcame . . . Man must do his part; he must be victor
on his own account, through the strength and grace that Christ gives
him." Testimonies, Vol. 4, p. 32, 33. Christ
had pledged to make men overcomers; He had "guaranteed"
this. It was no easy task; but the work of atonement was not finished
until and unless He did it. And so p
96 -- Christ persevered till His task should be done. Out of the
last generation, out of the weakest of the weak, Christ selects a group
with which to make the demonstration that man can overcome as Christ
overcame. In the 144,000 Christ will stand justified and glorified.
They prove that it is possible for man to live a life pleasing to God
under all conditions, and that men can at last stand "in the sight
of a holy God without an intercessor." Great Controversy,
p. 614. The testimony is given them, "they have stood without an
intercessor through the final outpouring of God's judgements."
Great Controversy, p. 649. "They are the chosen ones, joint
heirs with Christ in the great firm of heaven. They overcame as He
overcame." Mss. November 28, 1897. To us comes the invitation,
"Now, while our High Priest is making atonement for us, we should
seek to become perfect in Christ." Great Controversy, p.
623. A
MYSTERY In
his epistle to the Ephesians, Paul presents us with a mystery. Says
he, "For this cause shall a man leave his father and his mother
and shall be joined unto his wife, and the two shall be one flesh. This
is a great mystery; but I speak concerning Christ and the church."
Ephesians 5: 31, 32. Marriage fitly represents the union between Christ
and the church, effected by the atonement. In harmony with this picture
of a marriage, the public announcement is made at the close of probation:
"The marriage of the Lamb is come, and His wife has made herself
ready. . . And to her it was granted that she should be arrayed in linen,
clean and white; for the linen is the righteousness of the saints."
Revelation 19:8. As husband and wife are one, so now are Christ and
the church. The at-one-ment, the true atonement, the final atonement,
the complete atonement, has been made. "The family of heaven and
the family of earth are one." Desire of Ages, p. 835. THE
144.000 Practically
all Adventists have read the last few chapters in Great Controversy,
which describe the fearful p
97 -- struggle through which God's people will pass before the end.
As Christ was tried to the utmost in the temptation in the wilderness
and in the garden of Gethsemane, so the 144,000 will likewise be tried.
They will apparently be left to perish, as their prayers remain unanswered
as were Christ's in Gethsemane when His petitions were denied. But their
faith will not fail. With Job they exclaim, ''Though He slay me, yet
will I trust Him." Job 13:15. The
final demonstration of what God can do in humanity is made in the last
generation who bears all the infirmities and weaknesses which the race
has acquired through six thousand years of sin and transgression. In
the words of Sr. White they bore "the results of the working of
the great law of heredity," Desire of Ages, p. 48.
The weakest of mankind are to be subjected to the strongest
of Satan's temptations, that the power of God might be abundantly shown.
"It was an hour of fearful, terrible agony to the saints. Day and
night they cried unto God for deliverance. To outward appearance, there
was no possibility of their escape." Early Writings, p.
283. According
to the new theology which our leaders have accepted and are now teaching,
the 144,000 will be subjected to a temptation immeasurably stronger
than any Christ ever experienced. For while the last generation will
bear the weaknesses and passions of their forefathers, they claim that
Christ was exempt from all these. Christ, we are told, did not inherit
any of the passions "that corrupt the natural descendants of Adam."
Questions on Doctrine, p. 383. He was therefore functioning on a
higher and altogether different level from men who have to battle with
inherited passions and hence He does not know and has not experienced
the real power of sin. But this is not the kind of savior I need. I
need One who has been "tempted in all points like as we are."
Hebrews 4:15. The "substitute christ" which our leaders present
to us, I must reject and do reject. Thank God, "we have not a high
priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities,
but was in all points like as we are, yet without sin." Ibid. INDICTMENT
AGAINST GOD p
98 -- But more than even this is involved in the new theology; it
places an indictment against God as the author of a scheme to deceive
both men and Satan. Herre is the situation: Satan
has consistently maintained that God is unjust in requiring men to obey
His law, which he claims is impossible. God has maintained that it can
be done, and to substantiate His claim offered to send His Son to this
world to prove His contention. The Son did come and kept the law and
challenged men to convince Him of sin. He was found to be sinless, holy
and without blame. He proved that the law could be kept, and God stood
vindicated; and His requirement that men keep His commandments, was
found to be just. God had won, and Satan was defeated. But
there was a hitch in this; for Satan claimed that God had not played
fair; He had favored His Son, had "exempted" Him from the
results of the working of the great law of heredity to which all other
men were subject; He had exempted Christ "from the inherited passions
and pollutions that corrupt the natural descendants of Adam."
Questions on Doctrine, p. 383. He had not exempted mankind in general,
but Christ only. That, of course, invalidated Christ's work on earth.
He was no longer one of us who had demonstrated the power of God to
keep men from sinning. He was a deceiver whom God had given preferred
treatment and was not afflicted with inherited passions as men are. Satan
had little difficulty in having men accept this view; the Catholic church
accepted it; in due time, the evangelics gave their consent; and in
1956 the leaders of the Adventist church also adopted this view. It
was the matter of "exemption" that caused Peter to take Christ
aside and say, "Be it far from thee, Lord; this shall not be unto
thee," which so raised the wrath of Christ that He told Peter,
"Get thee behind me, Satan." Matthew 16:22, 23. Christ did
not want to be exempt. He told Peter, "Thou savourest not the things
that be of God." So some today savour not the p
99 -- things of God. They think it merely a matter of semantics.
God pity such and open their eyes to the things that be of God. With
the surrender of the Adventist leaders to the monstrous doctrine of
an "exempt" Christ, Satan's last opposition has surrendered.
We pray again, may God save His people. I
have been asked what I expect to accomplish. I am not out to "win"
any argument. I am a Seventh-day Adventist minister whose work is to
preach the truth and combat error. The Bible is mostly a record of the
protest of God's witnesses against the prevailing sins of the church,
and also of their apparent failure. Practically all protesters sealed
their testimony with their blood, and the church went on until God intervened.
All Paul hoped was that he might "save some." 1 Corinthians
9:22. Practically all the apostles died martyrs, and Christ they hanged
on a tree. It took forty years before the destruction came. But when
God interveried He did thorough work. This
denomination needs to go back to the instruction given in 1888, which
was scorned. We need a reform in organization that will not permit a
few men to direct every move made anywhere in the world. We need a reform
that will not permit a few men to handle finances as is now being done.
We need a reform that will not permit men to spend millions on institutions
not authorized by the vote of the constituency, while mission fields
are suffering for want of the barest necessities. We need a change in
the emphasis that is given to promotion, finances and statistics. We
need to restore the Sabbath School to its rightful place in the work
of God. We need to put a stop to the entertainments and suppers that
are creeping in under the guise of raising money for good purposes.
We need to put a stop to the weekly announcements in church that are
merely disguised advertisements. This list could be greatly enlarged.
But
all these, while important, are after all only minor things. We need
a reformation and revival most of all. If our leaders will not lead
in this, "then shall there en- p
100 -- largement and deliverance arise to the Jews from another
place." Esther 4:14. I am of good cheer, praying for the peace
of Israel. (Signed
M. L. Andreasen) End
of Book.
~~~~~ Letters to the Churches Letters
to the Churches - Part 1 of 2 P 4 - THE
INCARNATION - Was Christ Exempt? P 19 - SERIES
A - NO. 2 - ATTEMPTED TAMPERING P 35 - SERIES
A - NO. 3 - DOWNGRADING MRS. WHITE Letters to the Churches
- Part 2 of 2 P 51 - SERIES
A - NO. 4 - A RESUME P 67 - SERIES
A - No. 5 -- WHY NOT A HEARING? - INHERITED PASSIONS
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