By Arthur L. White
"I saw that we should strive at all times to be free from
unhealthy and unnecessary excitement. I saw that there was great danger of
leaving the Word of God and resting down and trusting in exercises. . . .
"I saw that the burden of the message now was the truth. The
Word of God should be strictly followed and held up to the people of God. And
it would be beautiful and lovely if God's people should be brought into a
straight [place], to see the workings of God through exercises of
visions."--Ellen G. White Manuscript 11, 1850.
A Reprint of Twelve Articles Published in the
Review
and Herald, August 10, 17, 24, 1972;
March 15, 22, 29, April 5, 12, 19,
26, and August 2, 9, 1973
Page 2
WHY THIS REPRINT
In her message to General Conference leaders, read at the
session of 1893, Ellen G. White pointed up the importance of sacred history.
"We have nothing to fear for the future," she said, "except as we shall forget
the way the Lord has led us, and His teaching in our past history."--Life
Sketches, p. 196.
The 12 articles that appear in this reprint were written as
the result of a deep conviction on the part of church leaders and the author
that current events in the religious world--particularly the neopentecostal or
charismatic movement--can be evaluated properly only in the light of God's Word
and the lessons of ancient and modern sacred history. The articles were written
originally for the Review and Herald, the general church paper of
Seventh-day Adventists, and were published in three groupings during 1972 and
1973.
First to appear was a series of three articles entitled "The
Ralph Mackin Story." These articles provide interesting and helpful guidelines
by which to evaluate the glossolalia feature of the contemporary charismatic
movement, for speaking in tongues was a feature of the 1908 Mackin experience.
Much may be learned from observing the way in which Ellen White related to this
situation. She listened carefully as the Mackins told their story, then
analyzed the various phases of their experience. The vision given to her a few
days after her conversations with the Mackins and the counsel she wrote to this
couple and sent out to the churches are included in these articles.
Next was a seven-article series on ecstatic experiences in
early Seventh-day Adventist history. Four tongues experiences were reviewed,
and careful attention was given to the warnings and guiding counsels of 1850
that set the course in relationship to what Ellen White referred to as
"spiritual exercises." The series concluded with counsels that clearly
establish the criteria by which to judge all such experiences.
The third group was a two-article series presenting two
notable experiences in which there were deep movings of the Spirit of the Lord,
but not altogether fully understood or accepted, and labeled by some as
fanaticism. This series included cautions against turning away lightly from
sound evidence of the work of the Spirit of God.
Church leaders felt that all Seventh-day Adventists should
have the 12 articles readily available, so that in the light of denominational
history they could judge the validity of various types of contemporary
religious exercises. This reprint offers these materials in convenient and
inexpensive form for wide distribution.
KENNETH H. WOOD
Editor, Review and Herald
Washington, D.C.
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
ECSTATIC EXPERIENCES
IN EARLY SDA HISTORY
Revivals-the Time When God and Satan Work - 2
Page 3
SDA's and Ecstatic Experiences--1
By ARTHUR L. WHITE
Ecstatic experiences were not uncommon among sincere Christians
in the 1830's and the 1840's. Some who later became our spiritual forefathers
were involved in them. These experiences may be noted as: (1) Physical
prostration; (2) shouting the praises of God; (3) speaking in unknown tongues;
(4) divine healing. As we look back from our position today there appears to be
convincing evidence that some of these experiences were genuine. There is also
evidence that some were counterfeit or wereself-induced in periods of
excitement. In a series of articles we will explore these experiences in their
historical setting and trace Ellen White's relationship to them. As Ellen White
recounts her early experience in the Advent Awakening before the visions were
given to her, she reports a number of occasions when she was left prostrate by
the overwhelming presence of the Spirit of God. One such experience is believed
to have taken place in 1843:
"I bowed trembling during the prayers that were offered. After a
few had prayed, I lifted up my voice in prayer before I was aware of it .... I
praised God from
Page 4
the depths of my heart. Everything seemed shut out from me but
Jesus and His glory, and I lost consciousness of what was passing around me.
The Spirit of God rested upon me with such power that I was unable to go home
that night. "When I did return, on the following day, a great change had taken
place in my mind. It seemed to me that I could hardly be the same person that
left my father's house the previous evening. This passage was continually in my
thoughts: 'The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.' My heart was full of
happiness as I softly repeated these words."--Testimonies, vol. 1, p.
31.
In relating another incident during her early Christian
experience as a young Millerite, she tells of how she, with others, was
involved in a meeting about six months after the one described above. The
chapter presenting this information is entitled "Opposition of Formal
Brethren." She recounts:
"At times the Spirit of the Lord rested upon me with such power
that my strength was taken from me. This was a trial to some who had come out
from the formal churches. . . . Many could not believe that one could be so
overpowered by the Spirit of God as to lose all strength. . . .
"We had
appointed evening prayer meetings in different localities of the city to
accommodate all who wished to attend them. The family that had been most
forward in opposing me attended one of these. Upon this occasion, while those
assembled were engaged in prayer, the Spirit of the Lord came upon the meeting,
and one of the members of this family was prostrated as one dead. His relatives
stood weeping around him, rubbing his hands and applying restoratives. At
length he gained sufficient strength to praise God, and quieted their fears by
shouting with triumph over the marked evidence he had received of the power of
the Lord upon him. The young man was unable to return home that
night."--Ibid., pp. 44, 45.
While the family involved accepted this as a manifestation of
the power of the Spirit of God, there was still unwillingness to believe that
it was divine power that at times had rested upon Ellen, robbing her of her
natural strength and filling her soul with the peace and love of Jesus. They
considered her as self-deceived and influenced by overwrought feelings. This
left Ellen in great perplexity, and she earnestly sought the Lord. She reports
that some days after this:
"While we were bowed before the Lord, my heart was drawn out in
prayer and filled with a peace that only Christ can give. My soul rejoiced in
the love of the Saviour, and physical strength left me. With childlike faith I
could only say: 'Heaven is my home, and Christ my Redeemer."
"One of the family before mentioned as being opposed to the
manifestations of the power of God upon me, on this occasion stated his belief
that I was under an excitement which he thought it my duty to resist, but
instead of doing so, he thought I encouraged it as a mark of God's favor. His
doubts and opposition did not affect me at this time, for I seemed shut in with
the Lord, and lifted above all outward influence; but he had scarcely stopped
speaking when a strong man, a devoted and humble Christian, was struck down
before his eyes by the power of God, and the room was filled with the Holy
Spirit.
"Upon recovering, I was very happy in bearing my testimony for
Jesus and in telling of His love for me ....
"The brother who had opposed me then rose, and with tears
confessed that his feelings in regard to me had been all wrong. He humbly asked
my forgiveness, and said: 'Sister Ellen, I will never again lay a straw in your
way. God has shown me the coldness and stubbornness of my heart, which He has
broken by the evidence of His power. I have been very wrong.' . . . 'My heart
is convinced that I have been warring against the Holy Spirit.'"--Ibid.,
pp. 45-47.
When presenting, in 1860, the story of her life in
Spiritual Gifts, volume 2, she looked back to 1843 and wrote:
"The Spirit of the Lord often rested upon me in great measure. My
frail body could not endure the weight of glory which the mind grasped and
feasted upon, and my strength was frequently gone."Page 29.
In a vision given to her, probably very early in 1845, and
soon after her first vision, which was given in December, 1844, she states:
"My strength was taken away, and I fell to the floor. I seemed to
be in the presence of the angels."--Life Sketches, p. 71.
Such experiences were repeated again and again. And there were
times when others under the influence of the Spirit of God were prostrated.
Writing of an experience shortly after her marriage in 1846 when she was very
ill and the neighbors had given her up to die, she said,
"Many prayers had been offered to God in my behalf, yet it pleased the Lord
to try our faith. After others had prayed, Brother Henry [Nichols] commenced
praying, and seemed much burdened, and with the power of God resting upon him,
rose from his knees, came across the room, and laid his hands upon my head,
saying, 'Sister Ellen, Jesus Christ maketh thee whole,' and fell back
prostrated by the power of God. I believed that the work was of God, and the
pain left me."--Spiritual Gifts, vol. 2, p. 84.
Shortly after this Mr. and Mrs. Ralph were prostrated:
"Last Sunday we were at Brother Ralph's and we engaged in prayer
for the special teachings of God how to move, whether to go to New York or stay
in Connecticut. The spirit came and we had a powerful season. Brother and
Sister Ralph were both laid prostrate and remained helpless for some
time."--Letter 1, 1848.
In early 1850, six-month-old James Edson, the second son of
James and Ellen White, was very ill. Here is the account as given by James
White:
"The babe was sick and Ellen anointed and prayed for him. The
power came down more and more, and we all shouted and praised the Lord as much
as we were a mind to. In this state of feelings among us Ellen was taken off in
vision."--James White Letter to Leonard Hastings, Jan. 10, 1850.
Later in the year, at a conference held in Paris, Maine, the
believers manifested their rejoicing in loud praises to God. Ellen White
recounts the experience in a letter written November 7:
"Our conference at Topsham was one of deep interest. Twenty-eight
were present; all took part in the meeting. "Sunday the power of God came upon
us like a mighty rushing wind. All arose upon their feet and praised God with a
loud voice; it was something as it was when the foundation of the house of God
was laid. The voice of weeping could not be told from the voice of shouting. It
was a triumphant time; all were strengthened and refreshed. I never witnessed
such a powerful time before."--Letter 28, 1850.
The records, published and unpublished, in subsequent years
indicate that on certain occasions of the special outpouring of the
Spirit
Page 5
of God the saints united in shouts of praise to God.
There are in our early history four recorded experiences of
speaking in tongues. The first took place in 1847 apparently to guide a young
man to the ministry. The second, in 1848, involves a doctrinal point. The
third, in 1849, gave guidance to missionary endeavor, and the fourth, in 1851,
is a report describing the witness of the Holy Spirit as He manifested "the
presence and power of God."
Significantly, the second experience confirmed what was later
discovered to be an unbiblical position, an error, which in time was corrected
by Bible study. In this case the experience, involving persons of unquestioned
integrity, proved unreliable and gave false guidance. But this is a story in
itself.
Two names figure prominently in the early tongues
experiences--Ralph and Chamberlain. The earliest tongues experience of which we
have record is reported in an affidavit signed by early believers of
unquestioned integrity who were well known as dependable, burden-bearing church
members.
"We also, can testify to the manifestation of the gift of tongues.
While at a meeting in North Paris, Maine, we think in the year of 1847 or 1848.
It was a general meeting. Brother and Sister White were present, also Brother
Ralph and Chamberlain, from Connecticut, and others. While the meeting was in
progress, the Spirit of God was manifest in a special manner. Brother Ralph
spoke in an unknown tongue. His message was directed to Brother J. N.
Andrews;--that the Lord had called him to the work of the gospel ministry, and
he must prepare himself for it. Brother E. L. H. Chamberlain immediately arose
to his feet and interpreted what he had said."--Mrs. S. Howland, Mrs. Frances
Howland Lunt, Mrs. Rebeckah Howland Winslow, N. N. Lunt, Battle Creek,
Michigan. (In E.G. White Estate document file, #311.)
The third tongues experience, in 1849, involved personal
missionary endeavor. Hiram Edson related his experience with S. W. Rhodes in
the Present Truth (December, 1849) a few days after the incidence.
S. W. Rhodes had worked diligently in the great Advent
Awakening under William Miller's leadership. He was a man of means, but had
dedicated his material resources to the spreading of the message. When the time
of the expected advent of Christ passed by, Rhodes was humiliated. He withdrew
from public contact, secluding himself in the forests of upper New York State.
He sustained himself by hunting and fishing, augmented by a little garden.
Hiram Edson was aware of his whereabouts and on two different occasions
journeyed by foot to the hideout and attempted to persuade Rhodes to join his
brethren. Both attempts were unsuccessful.
On November 7, 1849, Edson began a third time to rescue
Brother Rhodes. After walking 14 miles he felt constrained to turn back as he
was impressed that the time had not come. With this matter uppermost in Elder
Edson's mind, he attended a conference held at Centerport, New York, on Sabbath
and Sunday, November 17 and 18, 1849. There he met Brethren Ralph and Belden
from Conneticut and James and Ellen White from Maine. The report is that the
meeting was "a refreshing season."
At the close of the conference Edson introduced Rhodes's case
to Ralph, and he discovered that both he and Ralph were individually impressed
that they had work to do together. That evening about six persons joined in a
season of prayer over Rhodes's case. Elder Edson reported:
"Brother Ralph asked the Lord, in secret, to pour out His Spirit
upon us if it was His will that we should go after Brother Rhodes.
"The Spirit was poured out, and it settled upon us, so that
the place was awful, and glorious. While I was inquiring of the Lord if He had
sent His servant so far to go with me to hunt up Brother Rhodes, at that moment
Brother Ralph broke out in a new tongue, unknown to us all. Then came the
interpretation--'Yes to go with thee.'"--Present Truth, Dec. 1849, p.
35.
Now, it was well known to the group that neither James nor
Ellen White had faith in the interest that was felt for Rhodes; furthermore
Ellen White had been explicit with her caution to Ralph "to be sure to get a
clear duty from the Lord." She told him that she thought Edson's feelings for
Rhodes were mere sympathy. Edson continues:
"The next morning we had a season of prayer, and the Spirit was
richly poured out, and the Lord gave Sister White the following vision, which
was contrary to her former opinion and feeling relating to our going after
Brother Rhodes, up to the time that the Spirit took her off in
vision."--Ibid.
In the account almost an entire column is taken to present the
vision. We quote a few lines:
"While in vision the angel pointed to the earth, where I saw
Brother Rhodes in thick darkness; but he still bore the image of Jesus. I saw
that it was the will of God that Brethren Edson and Ralph should go after him.
. . . I saw that Brethren Edson and Ralph should make him believe there was
hope, and mercy for him, and tear him away, then he would come among the flock;
and that angels would attend them on their journey."--Ellen G. White, in
Present Truth, December, 1849.
Shortly after the vision Brethren Edson and Ralph started on
their journey to find Rhodes. They found him at work in a field by the Black
River. They told him that they had come in the name of the Lord, seeking his
fellowship with them once more, that together they would go into the
kingdom.
Again there was a speaking in a new tongue. Hiram Edson, an
eye-witness, reports:
"God displayed His convincing power, and Brother Ralph spoke in a
new tongue, and gave the interpretation in power, and in the demonstration of
the Holy Ghost."--Ibid., p. 36.
Triumphantly Hiram Edson reported:
"Brother Rhodes finally consented to come with us, and went about
arranging his business in order to leave. . . . Friday, November 23, we
returned as far as Brother Arnold's, of Volney. . . . They were all rejoiced to
see Brother Rhodes."
And the interesting account closes with these words:
"He stands firm in all the present truth; and we heartily bid him
godspeed, as he goes to search out and feed the precious, scattered flock of
Jesus."--Ibid.
With this eyewitness account of this experience published in
the Present Truth, a journal that has been read widely, there is general
knowledge within and without the Seventh-day Adventist Church of this tongues
experience. Its authenticity is not questioned. Whether the "new tongue" spoken
by Brother Ralph was a known language is not disclosed to us.
One point in connection with this experience is of particular
interest, and that is the coolness of Ellen White toward the experience. Even
after the demonstration of the unknown tongue, Mrs. White was unconvinced that
the venture to attempt to rescue Brother Rhodes was in God's providence and was
justified. Not until a vision was given to her directly by God did she place
her endorsement on the ef-
Page 6
forts to recover Brother Rhodes. Brother Rhodes became a strong
worker in God's cause, and the next year his name appeared on the masthead of
the Review and Herald as a member of the publishing committee.
A fourth tongues experience took place in Vermont in the
summer of 1851 and is reported in the Review and Heraldthrough a letter
written to James White by (Sister) F. M. Shimper. She speaks of the deep
experience of the church at East Bethel, Vermont, and reports that the Lord had
recently sent "and abundantly blessed the labors of His servant, Brother Holt,
among us. After baptizing six of our number, our dear Brother Morse was set
apart by the laying on of hands, to the administration of the ordinances of
God's house. The Holy Ghost witnessed by the gift of tongues, and solemn
manifestations of the presence and power of God. The place was awful, yet
glorious. We truly felt that 'we never saw it on this fashion.'"--Review and
Herald, Aug. 19, 1851.
OF THE FOUR recorded experiences of speaking in tongues in the
early Seventh-day Adventist history referred to in last week's article, the
second touched on the development of doctrine. The whole account of the way in
which the Lord led His people in a doctrinal matter is worthy of detailed
study. As we proceed, we must remember that the Lord leads His truth-loving
people only as fast as they can follow without undermining their confidence in
what seems to be important in their experience. He will never lead His people
in a way that would minimize the importance of Bible study.
Among the early Adventists Joseph Bates was the apostle of the
Sabbath truth. In August, 1846, he published a 48-page pamphlet on the binding
claims of the seventh-day Sabbath.
Through the careful study of the irrefutable scriptural
evidence presented in this pamphlet, James and Ellen White accepted the
seventh-day Sabbath, joining a group of about 50 Sabbathkeeping Adventists.
They began Sabbath observance on Friday evening. Not until six or seven months
after they began to keep the Sabbath was a vision given to Ellen White
confirming the Sabbath truth and bringing forcibly to her attention its very
great importance. (See Early Writings, pp. 32-35.)
However, though the scriptural evidence clearly indicates that
the Sabbath begins on Friday evening, the time of evening was not clear to our
pioneers. Joseph Bates, the old sea captain, knowing the problems of
timekeeping in different parts of the world, concluded that in the matter of
the observance of the Sabbath "equatorial time" should be followed. He
therefore advocated that the Sabbath should begin at six o'clock on Friday
afternoon and close at six o'clock on Saturday afternoon. (This was in marked
contrast to the normal way of figuring the beginning and ending of the day at
midnight.) While there were some differences of opinion among the believers as
to just when the Sabbath should begin, the six o'clock time prevailed.
In 1848 a few of the Sabbathkeeping Adventists in Maine, from
their reading of Matthew 28:1, "in the end of the sabbath, as it began to dawn
toward the first day of the week," took the position that the Sabbath began and
ended at sunrise. Ellen White was given a vision in which she heard the angel
repeating Leviticus 23:32, "From even unto even, shall ye celebrate your
sabbath." This settled the point as far as the fallacy of the sunrise time was
concerned.
About this time at a meeting in Connecticut, while the
Adventists were discussing the problem of when to begin the Sabbath, a tongues
experience occurred. James White wrote:
"There has been some division as to the time of beginning the
Sabbath. Some commenced at sundown. Most, however, at 6 P.M. A week ago Sabbath
we made this a subject of prayer. The Holy Ghost came down, Brother Chamberlain
was filled with the power. In this state he cried out in an unknown tongue. The
interpretation followed which was this: 'Give me the chalk, Give me the
chalk.'
"Well, thought I, if there is none in the house then I shall doubt
this, but in a moment a brother took down a good piece of chalk. Brother
Chamberlain took it and in the power he drew a figure on the
floor.
"This represents Jesus' words, 'Are there not twelve hours in the
day?' This figure represents the day or the last half of the day. Daylight is
half gone when the sun is south or halfway from each horizon, at 12 o'clock.
Now go each way six hours
Page 7
and you will get the twelve-hour day. At any time of year the day ends at 6
P.M. Here is where the Sabbath begins at 6 P.M. Satan would get us from this
time. But let us stand fast in the Sabbath as God has given it to us and
Brother Bates."--James White Letter to "My Dear Brother," July 2, 1848, written
from Berlin, Connecticut.
This experience carried weight with the believers. They
continued to observe the beginning of the Sabbath at six o'clock. It was in
this general setting that God provided some far-reaching guidance to His
people.
In December, 1850, while at Paris, Maine, attending a
conference where all present sensed the deep need of the outpouring of the
Spirit of God, Ellen White was given a vision:
"We were united in praying last evening for the Spirit of the Lord
to fall upon us. God heard our earnest cries. I was taken off in vision. I saw
how great and holy God was. Said the angel, 'Walk carefully before Him, for He
is high and lifted up and the train of His glory fills the temple.' I saw that
everything in heaven was in perfect order. . . . [The matter deleted is
unrelated to the present topic.]
"Said the angel, 'Behold ye, and know how perfect, how beautiful the order
in heaven; follow it.'. . .
"I saw that the exercises were in great danger of being
adulterated, and their former opinion and knowledge governing in a measure
their exercise, therefore implicit confidence could not be placed in these
exercises. But if anyone was lost to everything around him, and he should be in
the state that Paul was in, whether in the body or out of the body, he could
not tell, and God communicate to him through His angels, there would be then no
danger of mistake.
"I saw that we should strive at all times to be free from
unhealthy and unnecessary excitement. I saw that there was great danger of
leaving the word of God and resting down and trusting in exercises. I saw that
God had moved by His Spirit upon your company in some of their exercises and
their promptings; but I saw danger ahead. . . .
"I saw that the burden of the message now was the truth. The Word
of God should be strictly followed and held up to the people of God. And it
would be beautiful and lovely if God's people should be brought into a strait
[place], to see the workings of God through exercises of visions."--Manuscript
11, 1850.
The paragraph that follows reiterated the baleful effect of
depending upon ecstatic experiences or exercises, especially when searching out
sound doctrine:
"I saw in our conference meeting, some laid out the work that God
was to give exercises, and rebels were to be purged out in the meeting. Then
the honest, conscientious ones began to tremble. 'I am afraid [that] I shall be
purged out,' and they take their minds from Jesus, and fix them upon themselves
and others, and the meeting leaves them lower than it found them. I saw that we
must try to lift our minds above self and have them dwell upon God, the high
and lofty One."--Ibid.
The significance of this vision given on December 24, 1850,
cannot be overrated. It is a key document. The believers were praying for an
outpouring of the Holy Spirit, possibly hoping for some physically observed
demonstration. The records of the time show an acceleration in ecstatic
experiences.
Coming to the point, she was shown that in the ecstatic
experiences (or exercises) there was grave danger of adulteration, the former
opinion of the individual involved "governing in a measure their exercise."
This being the case, implicit confidence could not be placed in such
experiences.
But there was one means of communication upon which dependence
could be firmly grounded, and that was the visions that God gave to the
prophets--here "there would be . . . no danger or mistake."
She was shown the possible negative effects of "unnecessary"
excitement and that there was a grave danger of disregarding the Word of God
and "trusting in exercises." She was shown that there were genuine experiences
in which there were charismatic exercises, but that there was danger ahead.
In this vision the Word of God was magnified. When God's
people found themselves in a difficult place He would give guidance and
instruction through the visions.
Probably the restlessness on the part of some members
concerning the time to begin the Sabbath, and the repeated instruction through
the prophetic gift directing them to the Bible, led James White* in 1855, to urge J. N. Andrews, a young minister residing in
Paris, Maine, to undertake a careful investigation of the Scriptures to gain
evidence from God's Word as to when the Sabbath should begin. In the summer,
after several weeks in a careful investigation of the Scriptures, he
demonstrated from nine texts in the Old Testament and two texts in the New that
the Sabbath began at sundown.
Andrews' conclusions were read at the conference in Battle
Creek, November, 1855, and, from the scriptural evidence set forth, those
present accepted the responsibility of shifting from six o'clock to sundown as
the time to begin the Sabbath. But the decision was not entirely unanimous.
Joseph Bates, the older member of the pioneer group and the apostle of the
Sabbath truth, held out. He was unwilling to surrender his well-established
views. And Ellen White reasoned that, since they had kept the Sabbath this way
for ten years, why should they change now? A rift developed.
However, at the close of the conference Ellen White was given
a vision in which she was shown that the Sabbath began at sundown. Her
conversation with the angel in this vision is enlightening:
"I saw that it is even so: 'From even unto even, shall ye
celebrate your Sabbath.' Said the angel: 'Take the word of God, read it,
understand, and ye cannot err. Read carefully, and ye shall there find
what even is, and when it is.' I asked the angel if the frown of
God had been upon His people for commencing the Sabbath as they had. I was
directed back to the first rise of the Sabbath, and followed the people of God
up to this time, but did not see that the Lord was displeased, or frowned upon
them. I inquired why it had been thus, that at this late day we must change the
time of commencing the Sabbath. Said the angel: 'Ye shall understand, but not
yet, not yet.' Said the angel: 'If light comes, and that light is set aside or
rejected, then comes condemnation and the frown of God; but before the light
comes, there is no sin, for there is no light for them to reject.' I saw that
it was in the minds of some that the Lord had shown that the Sabbath commenced
at six o'clock, when I had only seen that it commenced at 'even,' and it was
inferred that even was at six. I saw that the servants of God must draw
together, press together."--Testimonies, vol. 1, p. 116.
Two points are paramount. First, the believers were to go to
the Word of God for their guidance in doctrinal matters. Second, they were to
press together in unity. In subse-
Page 8
quent years James White used this experience to illustrate the
place of the gift of prophecy in the church. The gift was not to run ahead of
Bible study, but had its place in guarding the church and in confirming truth.
The Bible was ever to be held paramount, its authority never subordinated to
feelings or ecstatic exercises.
There is no record of Ellen White's giving explicit support
to, or placing her endorsement upon, these ecstatic experiences with unknown
tongues, although she was an eyewitness to three of the four. She probably was
silent as she watched with interest the developments in the instance of Brother
Rhodes. Even the speaking in tongues by Brother Ralph failed to convince her.
She was later shown that a person's thinking and his feelings have a large
influence on such experiences.
In tracing the events that led to the Bible-based position on
the time to begin the Sabbath, we jumped five years beyond the 1850 vision that
warned of dangers to come when ecstatic manifestations were relied on
inordinately. Other visions followed that forcibly revealed that a spirit other
than that of the Holy Ghost could in a large measure affect the feelings. In an
1851 vision she depicted the experience of certain persons who, unknown to
them, were under the influence of "an unholy spirit," and she declares that
"the spirit moved strongly on the feelings, and these feelings, many of them,
are yet cherished as sacred, as [indited by] the Holy Ghost."--Letter 2,
1851.
* James White in the REVIEW of
December 4, 1855, declared that "We have never been fully satisfied with the
testimony presented in favor of six o'clock. . . . The subject has troubled us,
yet we have never found time to thoroughly investigate it."
"I saw that Satan was working through agents in a number of ways.
He was at work through ministers who have rejected the truth and are given over
to strong delusions to believe a lie that they might be damned. While they were
preaching or praying, some would fall prostrate and helpless, not by the power
of the Holy Ghost, but by the power of Satan breathed upon these agents, and
through them to the people."--Early Writings, pp. 43, 44
(1849).
In later years Ellen White warned about counterfeit ecstatic
experiences:
"Whenever and wherever the Lord works in giving a genuine
blessing, a counterfeit is also revealed, in order to make of none effect the
true work of God. Therefore we need to be exceedingly careful, and walk humbly
before God, that we may have spiritual eyesalve that we may distinguish the
working of the Holy Spirit of God from the working of that spirit that would
bring in wild license and fanaticism. 'By their fruits ye shall know them'
(Matt. 7:20). Those who are really beholding Christ will be changed into His
image, even by the Spirit of the Lord, and will grow up to the full stature of
men and women in Christ Jesus. The Holy Spirit of God will inspire men with
love and purity; and refinement will be manifest in their
characters."--Selected Messages, book 1, p. 142.
FACE TO FACE encounters with spurious ecstatic experiences had
a strong molding influence on our forefathers. Elder Loughborough recorded an
incident that occurred during the Whites' first visit to Michigan in 1853.
With Elder Loughborough they were to hold meetings in four or
five places such as Tyrone, Jackson, Bedford, Battle Creek, and Vergennes,
where there were groups of believers. In a vision soon after arriving in
Michigan, Ellen White was shown certain persons and certain companies that they
would meet in connection with their itinerary. When she had written this out
she asked Elder Loughborough to make a copy for her.
The copying of the material made a deep impression on Elder
Loughborough's mind. He read of a woman who exerted considerable influence
among the Sabbathkeeping Adventists in her community, but who was an impostor,
and who, when reproved, would stand and say, "God--knows--my--heart."
Arriving at Vergennes some days later, Ellen White recognized
the place as the one where she would meet the impostor. She also recognized the
believers as they arrived in their wagons for the Sabbath morning services. She
pointed out to those who were close to her that those in the first wagon were
not in sympathy with the woman, while another group was, and another group was
divided, and so forth. While James White was speaking, a woman of impressive
bearing entered with two men. The two men walked up to the front, and the woman
took a seat near the door. Ellen White soon followed her husband in
speaking.
She introduced her remarks by exhorting ministers to be
careful lest they mar the work of God. She said God would not call a woman to
travel about the country with a man other than her husband. Finally she said
(as reported by Elder Loughborough):
"'That woman who just sat down near the door claims that God has
called her to preach. She is traveling with this young man who just sat down in
front of the desk, while this old man, her husband--
Page 9
God pity him!--is toiling at home to earn means which they are
using to carry on their iniquity. She professes to be very holy--to be
sanctified. With all her pretensions and talk about holiness, God has shown me
that she and this young man have violated the seventh commandment.'"--Review
and Herald, May 6, 1884.
Everyone turned toward the woman, wondering what her response
would be. After about a minute she arose, and with a very sanctimonious look,
said, "God--knows--my--heart." These were the precise words the vision two
weeks before had predicted her response would be.
During the noon intermission at the home where the Whites and
Elder Loughborough were entertained, Mrs. White was given another vision.
Coming out of the vision, she related still further what the Lord had shown her
regarding the woman on whom attention had been focused:
"'This woman professes to talk with tongues, [Ellen White said,]
but she is deceived. She does not talk the language she claims to speak. In
fact, she does not talk any language. If all the nations of the earth were
together, and should hear her talk, no one of them would know what she says;
for she merely goes over a lot of meaningless gibberish.'"--Ibid., June
10, 1884.
Imagine Elder Loughborough's surprise, on returning to the
place of meeting to find this woman speaking in what she claimed was the
language of the nearby Garlic Indian tribe. She said the Lord was sending her
to them as a missionary.
Here is what Loughborough heard: "Kene keni, kene keno, kene
kene," et cetera.--Ibid.
At a meeting she held the next day, this woman spoke on the
subject of holiness, and during her talk broke out again in the unknown tongue.
An Indian who had been invited to come in to hear her speak his language jumped
to his feet, declaring: "Very bad Indian that! Very bad Indian that!" When
asked what the woman said, he declared: "Nothing; she talk no Indian."
A few days later in the presence of an Indian interpreter who
knew 17 of the languages, she spoke and prayed in her gibberish, and he
declared that she had not uttered a single Indian word. Her influence was short
lived, not only because of this experience, but because of the disclosure that
the man with whom she traveled and lived was not her husband. This in time was
confessed.
The second experience involving spurious ecstatic exercises
took place in central Wisconsin in 1860 and 1861. Involved were T. M. Steward
and his wife, early believers in that State, who had come to some position of
leadership, and a certain Solomon Wellcome family.
The Wellcome family, first-day Adventists from Maine, had
settled in Wisconsin in the late 1840's. In the mid-1850's two sons accepted
the Sabbath truth and began preaching their new convictions. Solomon Well-come
soon made the acquaintance of T. M. Steward. From the beginning it was clear
that Wellcome entertained spurious views in regard to sanctification:
"I was shown that Elder K [Solomon Wellcome] was upon dangerous
ground. He is not in union with the third angel. . . . He has brought along
with him a theory of Methodist sanctification, and presents that in front,
making it of the highest importance. And the sacred truths applicable to this
time are by him made of little consequence. . . . Satan has controlled his
mind, and he has done great injury to the cause of truth in northern
Wisconsin."--Testimonies, vol. 1, p. 335.
Precisely what was involved in this false sanctification Ellen
White did not disclose. There is an interesting historical record describing
exercises taking place in a Methodist church in that area at about that
time:
"Someone begins to sigh here, now there--an 'AH!'--an 'Oh, oh!'
escaped many a breast. Ever more numerously and louder became these "Ah's!' and
'Oh's!' till finally all quiet and order seemed to be broken up. I must have
had least 30 eyes and ears in order to see all these gestures and to hear all
these pious groans. . . . A woman tore her hat from her head, threw it away,
and rumpled her hair. . . . Here a woman gazed heavenward, clutched her bosom
as if nothing less than spiritual emotion would be found in it and uttered the
words: 'Come, my Jesus, come my dear Jesus, my dear lover,' etc. Here and there
again one uttered merely the syllable 'Ji! Ji!' springing up from his seat each
time as if a wasp had stung him. . . . One ran forward and fell on the floor
and several danced about him as if they were possessed and cried out: 'The
Spirit has overcome him! He has received the Holy Spirit,' etc."--Wisconsin
Magazine of History, June, 1942, pp. 463-465.*
After learning of the growing fanatical spirit in Wisconsin,
James White left his wife with a newborn son, John Herbert, in Battle Creek to
visit Mauston and other church groups. He was not well received; his report of
his misgivings for the future of the church in Wisconsin is significant:
"We think it our duty to state something of the appearance of this
work here, which is called by some 'The Reformation,' but to us it looks more
like a deformation. . . .
"While we were preaching, a sister broke out in an opposition
shout, so we waited some time for her to get through. It was with difficulty
that we finished the discourse. . . .
"This reformation, as it is called, has passed some very important
decrees. It is said that one or more have the spirit of prophecy, and that they
have seen things of the deepest interest. For instance, the body of
Sabbathkeepers sustaining the REVIEW have been seen branded as
follows--'Advent,' 'Babylon,' 'Fallen,' 'Organization.' This is too significant
to need comment. Also that Sister White's writings, excepting the first tract,
were all wrong. . . . We leave these dear, mistaken friends with our pity and
our prayers."--Review and Herald, Nov. 13, 1860.
At first Steward and his close associates responded only
partially to James White's reasoning and appeals. But before long it became
clear that what had been attributed to God originated with the great adversary.
The Review and Herald of January 22, 1861, (Page # ?)
carried a statement entitled "A Delusion Confessed" written by T. M.
Steward:
"To all the dear saints scattered abroad: "As the question
has often been asked by my correspondents, 'What is the nature of the work at
Maus-
Page 10
ton?’ I would now like to give you my views in regard to it.
Further, I feel it my duty to do so; I feel I am fully prepared to do it; and
my prayer is that the Lord will save us from all the delusions of Satan in
these last days.
"You are well aware that the work had just begun when Brother
White was here, and of course I was not decided. I begged of them to let me
alone until we had investigated the subject to our satisfaction. I had reasons
for doubting, but I wanted to give it a thorough testing.
"The reason I advocated it, was not because I was established in
it, but because I could not see anything trampled under foot regardless of
feelings. So I watched it with intense anxiety. At times I detected faults, but
then I was answered with, 'It shall all be made plain by and by,' which made me
look for plainer demonstrations.'"
* This
historical item was furnished by one of our ministers in Wisconsin, Adriel
Chilson. While we do not positively identify this particular experience with
Solomon Wellcome's work, there is strong evidence that many similarities
existed. Adriel Chilson's article, "False Sanctification a Century Ago in
Wisconsin," will be published in a future issue of theReview.
"At times I would express doubts and the answer would come, 'Doubt
not.' So I would have to give it up for the time. Then I would try to reason
with, and advise them to let judgment decide. But then it would be shown that I
was in a dreadful trial or under a temptation. So I finally thought that I
would let it develop itself."
Then Steward discussed some of those who were involved in
these experiences, the visions they alleged to have had, and how these visions
seemed to be in harmony with the message: "We had as we supposed many of the
gifts. But I was not satisfied with the development of these gifts. But on the
night of January 2, while at Portage, it did begin to develop a new feature,
and all that were together and under its influence completely lost control of
themselves (or gave up to be controlled by the unseen power), and the scenes
that followed I cannot describe. I was away at Cascade holding meetings, having
left the day before.
"These scenes commenced at Brother Billings', where there were
present my wife, Sister Kelley, and Brother and Sister Billings. These scenes
continued until the evening after the Sabbath, when they became convinced that
it was a delusion. And now we are unanimous in pronouncing it the work of the
enemy. We fully and freely denounce it. I love the truths of the third angel's
message as ever, and I intend to advocate it to the world.
"Brethren, beware of the strong delusions of these last days! This
sketch will give you our views in regard to the nature of
it."--Ibid.
When James White received this report he was pleased that the
fanaticism had been broken, or at least seemingly so, and he followed the
confession with his own observations:
"Remarks: It is no small thing to fall under the strong delusions
of Satan, especially when persons have exercises controlling body and mind,
which they regard as the power of the Holy Spirit. Such lose their balance.
They lose their judgment in spiritual things, which they seldom ever recover.
For the past fifteen years we have watched the course of such, and in no
instance have we seen them pursue an even course so as to exert a good
influence, unless they have chosen a humble place in the church, relying more
upon the judgment of those who have had a good experience than upon their own.
"God does not leave His people to the deceptive power of Satan for
nothing. There is a cause. That cause should be sought for with the deepest
feelings of humiliation, lest a second delusion follow worse than the first.
Satan's great object in this delusion in northern Wisconsin has doubtless been
to bring the subject of the perpetuity of spiritual gifts into disgrace and
doubt. One extreme is usually followed by another. And we shall be greatly
disappointed [surprised] if we do not find those who have been under the spirit
of error and fanaticism, giving up the subject of spiritual gifts altogether,
which error would be more fatal than the first."--Ibid.
Although the fanaticism was broken, the church suffered for a
number of years. The Stewards, who required some time to make a full recovery,
eventually became again trusted workers. Their daughter Mary served many years
as a proofreader in the Review and Herald and for several years as one of Mrs.
White's secretaries.
THE THIRD EXPERIENCE of the early years and one that Ellen
White comments on at considerable length took place in Portland, Maine, in the
years 1864 and 1865. It seems that Portland, the place where the first vision
was given to Ellen White, became a special target of the enemy. For years the
work was weakened by the fanatical elements. One of these in the middle 1860's
was carried on by an S.C. Hancock, who was a Sabbathkeeper but deeply immersed
in ecstatic experiences, particularly that of tongues. The Review and
Herald of March 14, 1865, carries a short item from a Mrs. D. A. Parker of
Portland, Maine, in which she describes her experience. She goes back to 1854
and a time-setting movement. It was at that time that she heard the doctrine of
the Advent, and, as she said, "gladly embraced the view that Jesus would come
in the fall of 1854." But this time movement proved to be unreliable and false.
Mrs. Parker tells the story:
"Just at this time a class arose who claimed that they had the
true light on 'rising and trimming their lamps,' 'the latter rain,' and 'the
gifts being restored in the church.' I searched the Scriptures and found that
the gifts were for the church, and believing that we were the people of God, I
went fully with that movement and received in a short time what I then really
believed to be the 'gift of tongues,' and sincerely followed
Page 11
in this way until about six months ago, when my mind became
unsettled in regard to their genuineness, as there were some things which
seemed very strange to me at times. I heard things in the 'tongues' which I had
no confidence in, and after seeing results, was still more shaken in my
position.
"At our conference in Portland, about three months ago, I became
completely disgusted with our position. . . .
"I will specify a few exercises: Talking with tongues, dancing in
the Spirit, and swimming in the Spirit. With the tongues I was in full
sympathy, but not with the dancing and swimming, which were exercises peculiar
to Eld. Hancock.
"More I might speak of, but let this suffice. I can say now that I
am thankful that my eyes have been opened to see these delusions which I have
sympathized with in part since '54; for I partook of the same views and spirit
with those with whom I was united. "--Pages 116, 117.
Now with this background we will turn to Testimonies for
the Church, volume 1, and hear from Ellen White as she comments on this
experience in Portland, Maine:
"Some of these persons have exercises which they call gifts and
say that the Lord has placed them in the church. They have an unmeaning
gibberish which they call the unknown tongue, which is unknown not only by man
but by the Lord and all heaven. Such gifts are manufactured by men and women,
aided by the great deceiver. Fanaticism, false excitement, false talking in
tongues, and noisy exercises have been considered gifts which God has placed in
the church. Some have been deceived here. The fruits of all this have not been
good. 'Ye shall know them by their fruits.'
"Fanaticism and noise have been considered special evidences of
faith. Some are not satisfied with a meeting unless they have a powerful and
happy time. They work for this and get up an excitement of feeling. But the
influence of such meetings is not beneficial. When the happy flight of
feeling is gone, they sink lower than before the meeting because their
happiness did not come from the right source. The most profitable meetings
for spiritual advancement are those which are characterized with solemnity and
deep searching of heart; each seeking to know himself, and earnestly, and
in deep humility, seeking to learn of Christ. . . .
"According to the light which God has given me, there will yet be a
large company raised up in the East to consistently obey the truth. Those
who follow in the distracted course they have chosen will be left to
embrace errors which will finally cause their overthrow; but they will for a
time be stumbling blocks to those who would receive the truth. Ministers who
labor in word and doctrine should be thorough workmen, and should present the
truth in its purity, yet with simplicity. They should feed the flock with clean
provender, thoroughly winnowed.
"There are wandering stars professing to be ministers sent
of God who are preaching the Sabbath from place to place, but who have truth
mixed up with error and are throwing out their mass of discordant views to
the people. Satan has pushed them in to disgust intelligent and sensible
unbelievers. Some of these have much to say upon the gifts and are often
especially exercised. They give themselves up to wild, excitable feelings
and make unintelligible sounds which they call the gift of tongues, and a
certain class seem to be charmed with these strange manifestations. A
strange spirit rules with this class, which would bear down and run over anyone
who would reprove them.
"God's Spirit is not in the work and does not attend such
workmen. They have another spirit. Still, such preachers have success among
a certain class. But this will greatly increase the labor of those servants
whom God shall send, who are qualified to present before the people the Sabbath
and the gifts in their proper light, and whose influence and example are worthy
of imitation."--Pages 412-414. (Emphasis supplied.)
And then Ellen White comments:
"Some rejoice and exult that they have the gifts, which others
have not. May God deliver His people from such gifts."--Ibid., pp. 418,
419.
And she asks whether the people involved who exercise these
gifts are "brought into the unity of the faith? And do they convince the
unbeliever that God is with them of a truth?"
And her further observation is significant:
"When these discordant ones, holding their different views, come
together and there is considerable excitement and the unknown tongue, they let
their light so shine that unbelievers would say: These people are not sane;
they are carried away with a false excitement, and we know that they do not
have the truth. Such stand directly in the way of sinners; their influence is
effectual to keep others from accepting the Sabbath. Such will be rewarded
according to their works. Would to God they would be reformed or give up the
Sabbath! They would not then stand in the way of unbelievers."--lbid.,
p. 419.
With this firm counsel given by Ellen White, based on the
visions God gave her, the fanatical element among the Sabbathkeepers in
Portland, Maine, was soon quenched. It is little wonder that as she came face
to face with ecstatic experiences in the years to follow that she should
approach them guardedly, cautiously, probing to discern the true elements
involved.
This she did in the experience in 1908 as Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Mackin called on her to learn whether their experience of talking in tongues
and singing in the spirit was of divine leading. It was in this connection that
Ralph Mackin pressed Ellen White for an answer to the question of the propriety
of looking for and expecting some physical demonstration in connection with the
work of the outpouring of the Spirit of God. We quote his question and
statement and Ellen White's reply:
"R. Mackin: In connection with the receiving of power from
on high there is a question, it seems to me, just as pertinent now as in the
days of the apostles--What is the evidence? If we receive it, will it not have
the same physiological effect on us as it did back there? It can be expected
that we shall speak as the Spirit gives us utterance.
Page 12
"Ellen G. White: In the future we shall have special tokens
of the influence of the Spirit of God'especially at times when our enemies are
the strongest against us. The time will come when we shall see some strange
things; but just in what way--whether similar to some of the experiences of the
disciples after they received the Holy Spirit following the ascension of
Christ--I cannot say."--Manuscript 115, 1908, published in Review and
Herald, Aug. 17, 1972.
Shortly after this she was shown in vision that the Mackin
experience was spurious.
It is interesting to observe that Ellen White, with the many,
many visions given her down through the years, and facing many, many
experiences, felt unable to declare unequivocally that there would be an
ecstatic experience, such as speaking in unknown tongues, in connection with
the outpouring of the Spirit of God. In fact, at no time did she link the
evidences of the outpouring of the Spirit--sometimes spoken of as the baptism
of the Holy Spirit--with ecstatic experiences. She taught that the experience
of Pentecost enabled the disciples to speak fluently in known languages. This
was true also of the experience at Ephesus recorded in Acts 19:6.
WHEN CHRIST sent forth His disciples "to preach the kingdom of
God, and to heal the sick" (Luke 9:2), He assured them that in His name they
would cast out devils, speak with new tongues, lay hands on the sick, and they
would recover (see Mark 16:17, 18).
Early Adventist sources frequently referred to healing
miracles. Incidents in the church today indicate that the gift of healing is
still with us.
When we review the early records we must keep in mind that
during the mid-nineteenth century there was great ignorance in regard to the
cause and cure of disease. The concept of germs was unknown. Night air was
thought to be poisonous. Poisonous drugs were prescribed freely, inflicting a
large death toll. If one had a fever, the physician probably would drain a pint
or a quart of blood from the patient's veins and pour it down the drain, for
the fever supposedly indicated that he had too much blood. Anesthetics were
unknown. Surgery was of the crudest type and when major was usually fatal. When
an epidemic swept through the land it decimated the population. Almost any kind
of sickness was an occasion for terror. As the disease progressed it was often
said that the sufferer was "marked for the grave."
How precious, then, seemed the promise of James 5, which
called for the anointing with oil and the prayer for healing that "the prayer
of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall raise him up" (verse 15).
Records of the late 1840's abound in narratives of how God
answered prayer during the desperation, sufferings, and illnesses of that
period.
For example, there was that spring day when a number of
believers were assembled in Topsham, Maine, at the home of Stockbridge Howland.
His daughter, Frances, in an upstairs bedroom suffering from rheumatic fever,
was under the care of a physician. Her hands were so badly swollen that the
joints could not be distinguished. Ellen White reported:
"As we sat together speaking of her case, Brother Howland was asked
if he had faith that his daughter could be healed in answer to prayer. He
answered that he would try to believe that she might, and presently declared
that he did believe it possible. We all knelt in earnest prayer to God in her
behalf. . . . One of the brethren present cried out, 'Is there a sister here
who has the faith to go and take her by the hand, and bid her arise in the name
of the Lord?' . . . Before he ceased speaking Sister Curtis was on her way to
the stairs. She entered the sickroom with the Spirit of God upon her, and
taking the invalid by the hand, said, 'Sister Frances, in the name of the Lord
arise, and be whole.' New life shot through the veins of the sick girl, a holy
faith took possession of her, and obeying its impulse, she rose from her bed,
stood upon her feet, and walked the room, praising God for her
recovery."--Life Sketches, p. 74.
Frances dressed and came down to where the group was, "her
countenance lighted up with unspeakable joy and gratitude. "The next day she
rode three miles in rainy weather, sustained no injury, and continued to
improve."
In the same report, Ellen White spoke of William Hyde, who was
gravely ill with dysentery. She wrote:
"His symptoms were alarming, and the physician pronounced
Page 13
his-case almost hopeless."--Ibid., p. 75.
Shortly thereafter those of faith united around his bedside
pleading with God for his healing. Ellen White continued:
"I have seldom known such a reaching out to claim the promises of
God. The salvation of the Holy Spirit was revealed, and power from on high
rested upon our sick brother and upon all present. Brother Hyde immediately
dressed and walked out of the room, praising God, and with the light of heaven
shining upon his countenance."--Ibid., p. 76.
He joined the family at the dinner table, ate heartily, and
Ellen White reported that "his recovery was complete and permanent."
In 1848 Ellen White recounted the healing of Sister Penfield,
right after the first of the Sabbath conferences in Rocky Hill,
Connecticut:
"Last Wednesday about six o'clock P.M., a brother came from
Portland, 11 miles from here and wanted we should go and pray for his wife for
she was just alive, and that was all. She was taken so violent that they called
in a physician. He tried to help her, but could do her no good, and said she
must die. Another physician was consulted who said he could do nothing. The
last was the most celebrated physician in Middletown, Ct.
"Sister Penfield told her husband to go for God's people, she sent
for us. It was rather of a trial for me to start, it was rainy and I had been
very weak all day, but I concluded to go. James felt he must go too. Brother
and Sister Ralph also went according to her request. We prayed for her at ten
o'clock that night and the spirit began to settle. She had been in very great
agony but we anointed her with oil in the name of the Lord and then our earnest
cries went up to God for healing power.
"God began to work, the pain ceased, but we did not get the full
victory we wanted that night. She rested well that night, was free from pain.
In the morn we united in prayer for her again. The power came down like a
mighty, rushing wind, the room was filled with the glory of God, and I was
swallowed up in the glory and was taken off in vision. I saw the willingness of
God to heal the afflicted and distressed. . . .
"The work of healing was done up well. She grew stronger in body
and mind. . . . Sister Penfield is strong. Praise the Lord."--Letter 1,
1848.
These particular examples (of which there are many more)
illustrate the close link that early believers saw between physical healing and
the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. The propriety of asking God to work a
miracle in healing the sick has been kept before us in many messages from Ellen
G. White. In 1890 she counseled:
"As to praying for the sick, it is too important a matter to be
handled carelessly. I believe we should take everything to the Lord, and make
known to God all our weaknesses, and specify all our perplexities. . . . If we
are under infirmities of body, it is certainly consistent to trust in the Lord,
making supplications to our God in our own case, and if we feel inclined to ask
others in whom we have confidence to unite with us in prayer to Jesus who is
the Mighty Healer, help will surely come if we ask in faith. I think we are
altogether too faithless, too cold and lukewarm.
"I understand the text in James is to be carried out when a person
is sick upon his bed, if he calls for the elders of the church, and they carry
out the directions in James, anointing the sick with oil in the name of the
Lord, praying over him the prayer of faith. We read, 'The prayer of faith shall
save the sick, and the Lord shall raise him up; and if he have committed sins,
they shall be forgiven him.'. . .
"Oh, how grateful we should be that Jesus is willing and able to
bear all our infirmities and strengthen and heal all our diseases if it will be
for our good and for His glory.
"Some died in the days of Christ and in the days of the apostles
because the Lord knew just what was best for them."--Medical Ministry,
pp. 16, 17.
And in her popular book The Ministry of Healing, Ellen
White devotes an entire chapter to "Prayer for the Sick," in which she
encouragingly wrote:
"And he saveth them out of their distresses. He sendeth his word,
and healeth them, and delivereth them from their destructions" (Ps. 107:19, 20,
R.V.).
"God is just as willing to restore the sick to health now as when the Holy
Spirit spoke these words through the psalmist. And Christ is the same
compassionate physician now that He was during His earthly ministry. In Him
there is healing balm for every disease, restoring power for every
infirmity."--Page 226.
Broad counsel included the preparation required by the sick
person and those who are to pray, the importance of praying in harmony with
God's will, and the wisdom of using the best remedial agencies at hand. To do
so would be no denial of our faith.
We have been warned that we are not to depend entirely upon
miraculous healing when there is sickness. We must do everything that we can
for ourselves. We are to study the nature of the disease, find its cause, and
deal with it intelligently, using all the facilities at hand. If God were to
heal all sickness when requests are made of Him, this would lead to
presumption. Very few would change their way of life that had brought on the
sickness. For this reason health institutions were to be established among us
where people might not only regain their health through proper treatment but
also could be taught how to prevent sickness.
However, just as other special blessings made possible through
the Holy Spirit have been counterfeited, so have miraculous healings been
counterfeited. Ellen White warned:
"Let none cherish the idea that special providences or miraculous
manifestations are to be the proof of the genuineness of their work or of the
ideas they advocate. . . .
"Satan will work in a most subtle manner to introduce human
inventions clothed with angel garments. But the light from the Word is shining
amid the moral darkness; and the Bible will never be superseded by miraculous
manifestations. The truth must be studied, it must be searched for as hidden
treasure. Wonderful illuminations will not be given aside from the Word, or to
take the place of it. Cling to the Word, receive the ingrafted Word, which will
make men wise unto salvation. . . .
"The wonderful, the marvelous, will be represented and presented.
Through satanic delusions, wonderful miracles, the claims of human agents will
be urged. Beware of all this.
"Christ has given warning, so that none need accept falsehood for
truth. The only channel through which the Spirit operates is that of the truth.
. . . Our faith and hope are founded, not in feeling, but in God."
--Selected Messages, book 2, pp. 48, 49.
She explained why we cannot depend on miracles today, though
Christ often worked through miracles:
"The way in which Christ worked was to preach the Word, and to
relieve suffering by miraculous works of healing. But I am instructed that
we cannot now work in this way, for Satan will exercise his power by working
miracles. God's servants today could not work by means of miracles, because
spurious works of healing, claiming to be divine, will be
wrought.
"For this reason the Lord has
Page 14
marked out a way in which His people are to carry forward a work of
physical healing, combined with the teaching of the Word. Sanitariums are to be
established, and with these institutions are to be connected workers who will
carry forward genuine medical missionary work. Thus a guarding influence is
thrown around those who come to the sanitariums for treatment."--Ibid.,
p. 54. (Emphasis supplied.)
Many warnings are sounded such as these:
"The man who makes the working of miracles the test of his faith
will find that Satan can, through a species of deceptions, perform wonders that
will appear to be genuine miracles. . . .
"Let not the days pass by and precious opportunities be lost of
seeking the Lord with all the heart and mind and soul. If we accept not the
truth in the love of it, we may be among the number who will see the miracles
wrought by Satan in these last days, and believe them. Many strange things will
appear as wonderful miracles, which should be regarded as deceptions
manufactured by the father of lies. . . . Men under the influence of evil
spirits will work miracles. They will make people sick by casting their spell
upon them, and will then remove the spell, leading others to say that those who
were sick have been miraculously healed. This Satan has done again and
again."--Ibid., pp. 52, 53. (Emphasis supplied.)
But none need be deceived. We have these assuring words that,
while the deceptions and temptations will be strong, those who cling to God's
Word will be safe:
"The voice of a stranger' is the voice of one who neither
respects nor obeys God's holy, just, and good law. Many make great pretensions
to holiness, and boast of the wonders they perform in healing the sick, when
they do not regard this great standard of righteousness. But through whose
power are these cures wrought? Are the eyes of either party opened to their
transgressions of the law? and do they take their stand as humble, obedient
children, ready to obey all of God's requirements? John testifies of the
professed children of God: 'He that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his
commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him' (1 John
2:4).
"None need be deceived. The law of God is as sacred as His throne,
and by it every man who cometh into the world is to be judged. . .
.
"If those through whom cures are performed, are disposed, on
account of these manifestations, to excuse their neglect of the law of God, and
continue in disobedience, though they have power to any and every extent, it
does not follow that they have the great power of God. On the contrary, it is
the miracle-working power of the great deceiver. He is a transgressor of the
moral law, and employs every device that he can muster to blind men to its true
character. We are warned that in the last days he will work with signs and
lying wonders. And he will continue these wonders until the close of probation,
that he may point to them as evidence that he is an angel of light and not of
darkness.
"Brethren, we must beware of the pretended holiness that permits
transgression of the law of God. Those cannot be sanctified who trample that
law under their feet, and judge themselves by a standard of their own
devising."--Ibid., pp. 50, 51.
How could this matter be placed before us more plainly? How up
to date is this counsel! What security it gives God's people!
THROUGH THE 70 YEARS of her ministry to the Adventist Church
and the world, Ellen White closely tied in to the work of the Holy Spirit--so
closely that the Spirit gave her 2,000 visions. She could declare, for
example:
"While I was praying at the family altar, the Holy Ghost fell upon
me." --Early Writings, p. 14; and, half a century later, "The Holy Ghost
is the author of the Scriptures and of the Spirit of Prophecy."--Letter 92,
1900 (Notes and Papers, p. 94a).
She repeatedly spoke of being abundantly imbued by the Spirit,
but there is no record of her ever speaking in an unknown tongue, or in any
tongue but English. In a previous article, in which we examined four recorded
experiences in the early history of the church in which speaking in tongues
occurred, we found no word of commendation from Ellen White, but neither do we
have any knowledge of her repudiating the demonstrations.
In connection with the experience of certain Sabbathkeepers in
Portland, Maine, who were exercising what they called the "gift of tongues,"
Ellen White characterized the utterances as "unmeaning gibberish . . .
Page 15
unknown not only by man but by the Lord and all heaven," and as
being a false talking in tongues (see Testimonies, vol. 1, p. 412). She
wrote of certain Sabbathkeepers who seemed to be charmed as they gave
"themselves up to wild, excitable feelings and make unintelligible sounds which
they call the gift of tongues." In this connection she wrote:
"Impressions and feelings are no sure evidence that a person is
led by the Lord. Satan will, if he is unsuspected, give feelings and
impressions."--Ibid., p. 413.
At the same time through the years Ellen White made scores of
references to the need of the Holy Spirit, the baptism of the Holy Spirit, and
experiences in which the Spirit was poured out. The Comprehensive Index to
the Writings of Ellen G. White carries 31 specific references to baptism of
the Holy Spirit. In not one instance does she link the ecstatic speaking in
tongues with the baptism of the Spirit, either historically or prophetically.
In the statements referred to in the 29 pages of the Index devoted
exclusively to the Holy Spirit she does not make one reference to ecstatic
experiences as a sign that God has favored His people with His Spirit.
Evidence of the true baptism of the Spirit, she said often,
would manifest itself in increased unity among believers and in new motivation
and empowerment to spread the gospel message.
Referring to an incident in 1893 at Battle Creek College, in
which there occurred a special outpouring of the Spirit of God, she wrote from
Australia,
"I rejoiced when I heard that the Holy Ghost had been poured out
upon our people in America, and I have been anxiously waiting new developments
in America as was seen after the Holy Spirit descended on the day of Pentecost.
I thought similar fruits would be seen, that the missionary spirit of God would
burn in the hearts of all upon whom the Spirit of God was manifestly
moving."--Letter B-9a, 1893.
Ellen White clearly indicates the results of the Holy Spirit's
baptism. Note this, written in 1887: "Baptized with the Spirit of Jesus, there
will be a love, a harmony, a meekness, a hiding of the self in Jesus that the
wisdom of Christ will be given, the understanding enlightened; that which seems
dark will be made clear. The faculties will be enlarged and sanctified. He can
lead those He is fitting for translation to heaven to loftier heights of
knowledge and broader views of truth.
"The reason that the Lord can do so little for those who are
handling weighty truths is that so many hold these truths apart from their
life. They hold them in unrighteousness. Their hands are not clean, their
hearts are defiled with sin, and should the Lord work for them in the power of
His Spirit corresponding with the magnitude of the truth which He has opened to
the understanding, it would be as though the Lord sanctioned sin."--Counsels
to Writers and Editors, p. 81.
Beautiful statements appear in the Testimonies:
"Impress upon all the necessity of the baptism of the Holy Spirit,
the sanctification of the members of the church, so that they will be living,
growing, fruit-bearing trees of the Lord's planting."--Volume 6, p.
86.
"God desires to refresh His people by the gift of the Holy Spirit,
baptizing them anew in His love. There is no need for a dearth of the Spirit in
the church. After Christ's ascension the Holy Spirit came upon the waiting,
praying, believing disciples with a fullness and power that reached every
heart. In the future the earth is to be lightened with the glory of God. A holy
influence is to go forth to the world from those who are sanctified through the
truth. The earth is to be encircled with an atmosphere of grace. The Holy
Spirit is to work on human hearts, taking the things of God and showing them to
men."--Volume 9, p. 40.
Ellen White describes what the baptism of the Spirit
accomplishes:
"The baptism of the Holy Spirit will dispel human imaginings, will
break down self-erected barriers, and will cause to cease the feeling that 'I
am holier than thou.' There will be a humble spirit with all, more faith and
love; self will not be exalted. . . . Christ's spirit, Christ's example, will
be exemplified in His people. We shall follow more closely the ways and works
of Jesus. . . . The love of Jesus will pervade our hearts."--That I May Know
Him, p. 114.
In reporting on an 1875 camp meeting Ellen White said:
"Our camp meeting from its commencement to the present time has
been most solemn and the Spirit of the Lord in a most signal manner has been
manifested in the social and preaching meetings. . . .
"I made a practical application of these words [Luke 19:41, 42] to
the people of God. The solemn power of God was upon me and upon the hearers.
The tearful eye and earnest looks revealed the true state of feelings."--Letter
B-16, 1875.
Describing a meeting in 1889 she wrote:
"Friday was a precious day. . . . Everything has been without
excitement or extravagance. The leaven of Christ's righteousness has been
introduced into the experience and has energized the soul. Oh, that it may
continue to work in its mysterious power until its diffusive influence quickens
the lukewarm souls with whom it is brought in contact.
"Softly and silently the power of the divine Spirit does its work,
wakening the dulled senses, quickening the soul and arousing its sensibilities,
until each member of the church shall indeed be the light of the world.
"--Letter 85, 1889.
While in Australia, Ellen White referred to an earlier special outpouring
of the Spirit of God at South Lancaster Academy.?? why not :
"One place we were laboring in America [South Lancaster,
Massachusetts], and there was every youth in our college, . . . converted as we
were telling them the simple story of the cross, to come to Jesus just as they
were. Such an experience. . . .
"It seemed at times at the commencement of the meeting that the
glory of God was about to drop upon us, but it did not come only to a few, but
at this time like a tidal wave it swept through that congregation, and what a
time of rejoicing.
"There were no wild demonstrations, for the praise of God does not
lead to that. We never hear of any
Page 16
such things as that in the life of Christ, as jumping up and down and
around, and screaming and hollering. No; God's work appeals to the senses and
reason of men and women.
"There are no such outward demonstrations. But the Spirit of God
has an influence upon the human heart that shows itself in the countenance, and
the shining of the very face reveals Jesus within. Now it was a miracle of
God's mercy that took every student in that school and transformed them in
character, and sent them out as missionaries. Two of the teachers are now in
Tahiti as missionaries that were in that meeting. The light of the glory of God
was there."--Ms. 49, 1894.
In 1900 Ellen White compared the spurious with the genuine
experience, pointing out that spurious experiences generate feelings of
enthusiasm that soon give out:
"Every influence will be set in operation by satanic agencies, to
divert minds from the genuine work that will place men as laborers together
with God. All who do not aggressively labor in the warfare where Christ, the
mighty general of armies, leads, will be in the opposite party, composing the
armies of the prince of darkness. They will lead the people away from the
living issues that should occupy their minds and hearts and prepare them to
distinguish between the voice of the world and the voice of Jesus Christ. We
must ourselves be very watchful and prayerful, that we may be able to
understand the voice of the deceiver from the voice of Him who always speaks
the truth. Those who are worked by the Holy Spirit are not led by a feeling of
enthusiasm, which soon goes out in darkness. The spell of Christ's influence is
abiding. 'Be still and know that I am God.' This is a solemn, abiding quietude
in God.
"There is danger that all of us will have too much zeal, and too
little of Christ's sound wisdom and unquestionable prudence. Every one must
stand individually as an active, working agency for the Master, beholding His
work as it is given in His word for our practice. Individually, they must think
for themselves. With an open Bible before them, they must study under the
influence and presence of Jesus Christ, inquiring and knowing for their
individual selves what is the way of the Lord."--Letter 77,
1900.
In the records of the 1901 General Conference session at
Battle Creek we find an interesting statement from Ellen White made at a time
when serious, far-reaching decisions had to be made. Having been in Australia
for nine years, she was in Battle Creek for her first General Conference
session in ten years. Just before the conference opened she spoke of the
important decisions that must be made and how the Lord wanted everyone to stand
in right relation to Him. She spoke of how there should be more praying and
less talking. And she gave the assurance "that God would let His light shine
into the heart of everyone who at this meeting will stand in right relation to
Him."
Then she declared:
"Some have said that they thought that at this meeting several
days ought to be spent in prayer to God for the Holy Spirit, as at the day of
Pentecost. I wish to say to you that the business which may be carried on at
this meeting is just as much a part of the service of God as is prayer. The
business meeting is to be just as much under the dictation of the Spirit as the
prayer meeting. There is danger of us getting a sentimental, impulsive
religion.
"Let the business transacted at this meeting stand forth in such
sacredness that the heavenly host can approve of it. We are to guard most
sacredly the business lines of our work. Every line of business carried on here
is to be in accordance with the principles of heaven.
"God wants you to stand in a position where He can breathe upon you
the Holy Spirit, where Christ can abide in the heart. He wants you at the
beginning of this meeting to lay off whatever of controversy, of strife, of
dissension, of murmuring, you have been carrying. What we need is a great deal
more of Christ and none of self. The Saviour says, 'Without me ye can do
nothing.' . . .
"We have come to a point where God is going to work for His people.
He wishes them to be a representative people, distinct from all other peoples
in our world. He wants them to stand on vantage ground, because He gave His
life that they might stand there. Do not disappoint the Lord."--Ms. 29, 1901,
March 28, 1901.
This incident should be pondered often. The occasion urgently
called for the guidance and blessing of the Spirit of God. But Ellen White gave
no encouragement to turn away from the work at hand to spend a period in just
seeking the Spirit of God. She makes it clear that this experience of seeking
the Spirit was one that should permeate our dedicated activities in God's
service.
We may be led to ask, Was there in the hearts of some the
feeling that they should be seeking for a demonstration? Ellen White's counsel
directed them to a better way.
Ellen White has made several statements concerning the Holy
Spirit's work in preparing men and women to spread the message among those who
speak other tongues:
"God dispenses His gifts as it pleases Him. He bestows one gift
upon one, and another gift upon another, but all for the good of the whole
body. It is in God's order that some shall be of service in one line of work,
and others in other lines,--all working under the self-same spirit. . . .
"If in the opening providence of God, it becomes necessary to erect
a meeting house in some locality, the Lord . . . has given wisdom and skill to
perform the necessary work.
"He sends men to carry His truth to people of a strange tongue, and
He has sometimes opened the minds of His missionaries, enabling them quickly to
learn the language. The very ones whom they have come to help spiritually, will
be a help to them in learning the language. By this relation the natives are
prepared to hear the gospel message when it is given in their own
tongue."--Special Testimonies, Series B, No. 11, p. 26.
On another occasion, while on her two-year sojourn to Europe,
during which she was often among the churches, speaking through translators,
she reported to the Review and Herald one of her itineraries and then
declared: "It is with an earnest longing that I look forward to the time when
the events of the day of Pentecost shall be repeated with even greater power
than on that occasion. John says, 'I saw another angel come down from heaven,
having great power; and the earth was lightened with his glory.' Then, as at
the Pentecostal season, the people will hear the truth spoken to them, every
man in his own tongue. God can breathe new life into every soul that sincerely
desires to serve Him, and can touch the lips with a live coal from off the
altar, and cause them to become eloquent with his praise.
"Thousands of voices will be imbued with the power to speak forth
the wonderful truths of God's Word. The stammering tongue will be unloosed, and
the timid will be made strong to bear courageous testimony to the
truth."--The SDA Bible Commentary, Ellen G. White Comments, on Acts
2:1-4, p. 1055.
Page 17
HOW CAN WE distinguish between the genuine and the
counterfeit? We may rest assured that God has not left us to flounder in a time
when the issues are so acute that if it were possible the very elect would be
deceived.
Again and again Ellen White has directed us to God's Word as
our security. In God's Word we find the criteria by which we are to judge
between the true and the counterfeit, the genuine and the spurious. If there is
one point above another on which God has sounded the most solemn and repeated
warnings, it is on this point. None need be deceived, although many will be.
Referring to the time of the latter rain in her chapter
"Modern Revivals" in The Great Controversy, Ellen White said:
"The Spirit and power of God will be poured out upon His children.
At that time many will separate themselves from those churches in which the
love of this world has supplanted love for God and His word. Many, both of
ministers and people, will gladly accept those great truths which God has
caused to be proclaimed at this time to prepare a people for the Lord's second
coming."--Page 464.
Then, in prophetic words she describes how the enemy will
intrude himself:
"The enemy of souls desires to hinder this work; and before the
time for such a movement shall come, he will endeavor to prevent it by
introducing a counterfeit. In those churches which he can bring under his
deceptive power he will make it appear that God's special blessing is poured
out; there will be manifest what is thought to be great religious interest.
Multitudes will exult that God is working marvelously for them, when the work
is that of another spirit."--Ibid.
Elsewhere she emphasized the subtlety of the conflict:
"Satan has come down in these last days, to work with all
deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish. His satanic majesty
works miracles in the sight of false prophets, in the sight of men, claiming
that he is indeed Christ Himself. Satan gives his power to those who are aiding
him in his deceptions; therefore those who claim to have the great power of God
can only be discerned by the great detector, the law of Jehovah.
"The Lord tells us if it were possible they would deceive the very elect.
The sheep's clothing seems so real, so genuine, that the wolf cannot be
discerned only as we go to God's great moral standard and there find that they
are transgressors of the law of Jehovah."--Review and Herald, Aug. 25,
1885.
In this statement we find the key to the criteria that will
give security to Seventh-day Adventists and others seeking the truth--the law
of God. Those who claim salvation and the gifts of the Spirit while
disregarding the claims of God's law are not in harmony with the Bible. There
is an important balance between faith and works that the Bible maintains. We
hear the cry "Only believe in Jesus and be saved." But salvation is not that
simple. Warns Ellen White:
"The faith in Christ which saves the soul is not what it is
represented to be by many. 'Believe, believe,' is their cry; 'only believe in
Christ and you will be saved. It is all you have to do.'
"While true faith trusts wholly in Christ for salvation, it will lead to
perfect conformity to the law of God. Faith is manifested by works. And the
apostle John declares, 'He that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his
commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him.'
"It is unsafe to trust to feeling or
Page 18
impressions; these are unreliable guides. God's law is the only
correct standard of holiness. It is by this law that character is to be judged.
If an inquirer after salvation were to ask, 'What must I do to inherit eternal
life?' the modern teachers of sanctification would answer, 'Only 'Only believe
that Jesus saves you.' But when Christ was asked this question He said, 'What
is written in the law? How readest thou?'"--Ibid., Oct. 5,
1886.
Ellen White is not teaching salvation by works. No one was
more clear than she on this subject:
"Man can not transform himself by the exercise of his will. He
possesses no power by which this change can be effected. . . . The renewing
energy must come from God. The change can be made only by the Holy Spirit. All
who would be saved, high or low, rich or poor, must submit to the working of
this power."--Christ's Object Lessons, pp. 96, 97.
"In order to be saved, we must know by experience the meaning of
true conversion. It is a fearful mistake for men and women to go on day by day
professing to be Christians yet having no right to the name. In God's sight
profession is nothing, position is nothing. He asks, Is the life in harmony
with My precepts? There are many who suppose that they are converted but who
are not able to bear the test of character presented in the Word of God. . .
.
"Let us not forget that in his conversion and sanctification man
must cooperate with God. 'Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling,'
the Word declares. 'For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do
of his good pleasure' (Phil. 2:12, 13)."--In Heavenly Places, p. 20.
She illustrated the relationship between faith and works as
follows:
"The Lord calls upon all who think they know what faith is, to be
sure that they are not pulling with only one oar, that their little bark is not
going round and round, making no progress at all. Faith without intelligent
works is dead, being alone. Faith in the healing power of God will not save
unless it is combined with good works."--Ms. 86, 1897.
She also warned,
"If we are faithful in doing our part, in cooperating with Him, God
will work through us [to do] the good pleasure of His will. But God cannot work
through us if we make no effort. If we gain eternal life, we must work, and
work earnestly. . . .
"Let us not be deceived by the oft-repeated assertion, 'All you
have to do is to believe.' Faith and works are two oars which we must use
equally if we [would] press our way up the stream against the current of
unbelief. . . . By faith and good works he [the Christian] keeps his
spirituality strong and healthy, and his spiritual strength increases as he
strives to work the works of God."--Review and Herald, June 11,
1901.
Emphatically she declared that the genuine Spirit-filled
experience will be marked with "a conscientious regard for all the commandments
of God."
"Every day our faith should increase. While we say, 'I know that I
am a sinner,' we can say also, 'I know I have a Saviour.' Jesus died for
sinners, and He will pardon my sins, if I sincerely repent. It is of no avail
to claim to believe on Christ unless we acknowledge the claims of God's law and
daily strive to obey its precepts."--Ms. 25, 1886.
"True sanctification will be evidenced by a conscientious regard
for all the commandments of God, by a careful improvement of every talent, by a
circumspect conversation, by revealing in every act the meekness of Christ. . .
.
"While they profess to be sinless, and boast of their
righteousness, the claimants of sanctification teach that men are at liberty to
transgress the law of God, and that those who obey its precepts have fallen
from grace. A presentation of its claims arouses their opposition, and excites
anger and contempt. . . . It is by the law of God that the sinner is
convicted."--Review and Herald, Oct. 5, 1886.
Ellen White pointed out how hard it is to reach those who feel
that they have the evidences of God's acceptance while violating His law. She
tells us that even Seventh-day Adventists will be tempted on this point:
"During the meetings at Orebro, I was urged by the Spirit of the
Lord to present His law as the great standard of righteousness, and to warn our
people against the modern, counterfeit sanctification which has its origin in
will-worship rather than in submission to the will of God. This error is fast
flooding the world, and as God's witnesses we shall be called to bear a decided
testimony against it. It is one of the veriest delusions of the last days, and
will prove a temptation to all who believe present truth.
"Those who have not their faith firmly established upon the word of
God will be misled. The saddest part of it all is that so few who are deceived
by this error ever find their way to the light
again."--Ibid.
"None who have had the light of truth will enter the city of God as
commandment-breakers. His law lies at the foundation of His government in earth
and in heaven. If they have knowingly trampled upon and despised His law on the
earth, they will not be taken to heaven to do the same work there; there is no
change of character when Christ comes. . . .
"There are to be but two classes upon the earth, the obedient
children of God and the disobedient."--Ibid., Aug. 25,
1885.
How careful we must be to guard against being swept off our
feet in the modern ecumenical movement that claims to bind together all men
everywhere under the banner of love. John the apostle was confronted with this
problem and wrote out his warning in his Epistles. His love for souls permeated
his writings, yet he refused to compromise:
"The epistles of John breathe the spirit of love. It seems as if he
wrote with a pen dipped in love. But when he came in contact with those who
were breaking the law of God, yet claiming that they were living without sin,
he did not hesitate to warn them of their fearful deception. . . .
"We are authorized to hold in the same estimation as did the
beloved disciple those who claim to abide in Christ while living in
transgression of God's law. There exist in these last days evils similar to
those that threatened the prosperity of the early church; and the teachings of
the apostle John on these points should be carefully heeded. . . .
"While we are to love the souls for whom Christ died, we are to
make no compromise with evil. We are not to unite with the rebellious and call
this charity [love]. God requires His people in this age of the world to stand
for the right as unflinchingly as did John in opposition to soul-destroying
errors.
"The apostle teaches that while we should manifest Christian courtesy we are
authorized to deal in plain terms with sin and sinners; that this is not
inconsistent with true charity [love]."--The Acts of the Apostles, pp.
554, 555.
How artfully and carefully the great adversary has maneuvered
to embarrass those who would stand firm and true to God's Word. What we are
called upon to do will not be easy or make us popular. We must refrain from
judging in the wrong sense; we must ever reach out to others with love in our
hearts; but our security comes only in keeping before us the criteria that God
has established.
Page 19
by ARTHUR L. WHITE
This article is the first of a series of three that relate an
interesting chapter in Adventist history. The conversation with the Mackins was
taken down steno-graphically at the time of the interview by Clarence C.
Crisler, Ellen G. White's leading secretary. It is published here in full for
the first time.--Editors.
ON THURSDAY morning, November 12, 1908, Ellen White was at her
Elmshaven home busy in her writing room. Here her son, W. C. White, found her
and told her there were two persons in the living room below who wished to talk
with her. Joining him, she went downstairs to meet Mr. Ralph Mackin and his
wife. She found a well-dressed and seemingly very sincere couple in their
middle thirties. Mrs. White soon learned that her visitors were earnest
students of the Bible and the Testimonies and had come to California from Ohio
for the express purpose of learning whether their unusual experience of a few
months past was endorsed by the Lord.
They had called on W. C. White the day before, hence he was
alert to their mission, but had not disclosed it to his mother. As he left the
office to go over to the home, he took Clarence Crisler, Mrs. White's leading
secretary, with him to report the interview.
A newspaper story appearing in the Mansfield (Ohio) "Daily
Shield" on August 22, not yet seen by Mrs. White or her son, concerning the
Mackin experience at the Ohio camp meeting three months before, gives some
historical background. The extended bold-face heading reads:
"Gift of tongues causes trouble. Mackin claims to be master of
Chinese jargon, which he says came to him from God while his mother became an
expert in Yiddish as the result of a vision. Dissension at camp meeting results
in the arrest of Mackin, wife and daughter, and two lady companions--they hold
services behind prison bars and seem quite proud of distinction."
But now by way of the stenographic report of the interview,
let us join the group by the open fireplace in the living room of the Elmshaven
home. Most is a verbatim report. In a few instances Elder Crisler summarized,
as he did the introductory remarks. One point we will soon observe is that
although Mrs. White repeatedly warned concerning deception in religious
matters, it will be so subtle and disguised that if possible the very elect
will be deceived. In her approach to this case
Page 20
she listens patiently, asks meaningful questions, but is slow
either to accept or to condemn. As we listen attentively we observe her
carefully weighing the evidence employing certain criteria. Only as we allow
the several participants in the interview to speak at length and in detail can
we pick up the full impact.
Brother and Sister Mackin stated that they had felt impressed
by the Holy Spirit to make a special trip West in order to interview Sister
White regarding some unusual experiences through which they had been passing.
During the Week of Prayer nearly three years before they had united with their
little church at Findlay, Ohio, in a special season of seeking God for the
outpouring of the Holy Spirit.
Ralph Mackin: In the Week of Prayer reading for that
year, every article was directed to the people to seek for the Holy Spirit. We
set aside in our little church three days for fasting and prayer, and we fasted
and prayed for three days--that is, not constantly together, but we felt the
need of a deeper work and felt the necessity of coming into possession of more
of the Spirit of God. We began to study from that time on the work of the Holy
Spirit, from the Bible and the Testimonies, and especially from volume 8
and volume 7, and Early Writings, and also the little book made up of a
collection of leaflets and entitled, "Special Testimonies to Ministers and
Workers." This we found to be a most precious volume to us. It shows how in
times past men who had been called of God were treated, et cetera.
The message that the Lord gave me particularly was to follow
the life of the apostles. In the first place, in Matthew 18:1-3, when the
apostles came to the Saviour, we read:
"At the same time came the disciples unto Jesus, saying, Who is
the greatest in the kingdom of heavens? And Jesus called a little child unto
him, and set him in the midst of them, and said, Verily I say unto you, Except
ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the
kingdom of heaven."
Now, I teach that no matter what the doctrine is--that
is--that a man has, that he accepts, that he believes, even though it be the
truth itself--that does not necessarily convert him, only to that doctrine but
not to Jesus Christ; that the thing we are to do is to seek Jesus for the power
of conversion. That is, if we accept the Sabbath truth, the state of the dead,
and all those things--I may accept those things, and advocate and teach them,
and yet lose heaven, and am not a converted man, unless I have sought Jesus
for His converting power.
In the next place, I turn to John 17, and read the prayer that
Jesus offered before His crucifixion. There He prayed for sanctification.
"Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is truth."
Then I turn to Luke 24, to show when they came into possession
of that blessing termed sanctification--the apostles--and the experience of
their lives; and I read from verse 45 and onward to the end of the chapter:
"Then opened he their understanding, that they might understand
the scriptures, and said unto them, Thus it is written, and thus it behoved
Christ to suffer, and to rise from the dead the third day: and that repentance
and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all nations,
beginning at Jerusalem. And ye are witnesses of these things. And, behold, I
send the promise of my Father upon you: but tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem,
until ye be endued with power from on high. And he led them out as far as to
Bethany, and he lifted up his hands, and blessed them. And it came to pass,
while he blessed them, he was parted from them, and carried up into heaven. And
they worshipped him, and returned to Jerusalem with great joy: and were
continually in the temple, praising and blessing God. Amen."
Now, I teach that this blessing is the blessing of
sanctification that they received, that He bestowed upon them; and when we seek
God--if we are a sinner, until we are converted; if we are converted, then we
put up the prayer for the power of sanctification to live clean, wholesome
lives. Not that it is the work of an instant: not "once
sanctified, always sanctified"; that is not true. But we should so firmly and
eagerly put up our petition that we receive the blessing. It has the same
physiological effect on us--oh, we just want to praise Jesus, and it makes us
so loving and gentle and kind. But we notice that the disciples were not ready
yet to go out with that blessing to do work for the Master. He told them to
tarry until they were endued with power from on high. Then we put up our
petition and hold right on by faith, anti that which encouraged us to do this
was the chapter entitled "The Shaking Time" in Early Writings--we hung
right on by faith, until great drops of sweat stood on our brow. Believing that
the same power that the disciples had was for us today, we were encouraged to
hold on.
When that promised blessing came on us, as we put up our
petitions to God, we had the same experience as recorded here in Acts 2 in
regard to the apostles. When that promised power came upon us we spake in other
tongues as the Spirit gave us utterance.
In Toledo, when we were bearing our message on the street, a
man who was a Polish Catholic stood on the street when Mrs. Mackin was
speaking; and as the Spirit of God came upon her, and spoke to them through her
in another language that she could not understand, this Polish gentleman
exclaimed, "I know what that lady is speaking. She is speaking in my own tongue
of a calamity which is soon to be visited on this city."
In other instances, when one comes into this blessing of
speaking with tongues, the Lord may give me the same tongue, and we may hold a
conversation in the language that the Spirit of God may have given us utterance
in. Even three or four may take part in the conversation, and yet it is a
foreign tongue to them, and one waits on the other until the other is through;
and it is all in order. This is the experience we received, according to the
promised blessing.
And then, in accordance with that, Acts 10, Peter's experience
in the home of Cornelius corroborates it; and then Acts 19; and from the study
of the Word, in our experience, and the persecution, and everything that has
come with it, we have found, so far as we are able to discern, our experience
corroborates with the experience of the early apostles as recorded in the
Word.
One instance: We were shut up in the jail at Clyde, Ohio. . .
.
Ellen G. White: How long ago?
R. Mackin: Six or eight weeks ago. In Clyde there lives
a very devoted family that we knew there, and that is a credit to our people.
The little children--there are four of them--are all taught to pray every
evening and morning; and it is very interesting to see the family at the hour
of worship.
Now, we went there, and they hung on for this blessing that
we
Page 21
had received; and they put up their petition for this
blessing, and came into possession of this blessing; and as the Spirit came
upon them, some of them wept, and among others that wept was a little girl ten
or eleven years old. Well, the grandma came into the room, and she saw the
little girl weeping, and she thought I had a mesmeric influence over the child.
But a few weeks later the same Spirit came upon the child when we were in the
city of Toledo, and gave the message; and so they had evidence that it was not
the result of any control that I might have over the child. When I came back to
the town, nearly four weeks later, one of the relatives had me arrested for
having this mesmeric power, as they term it.
The trial was set, and I simply produced the evidence from the
Word of God that we were living in the last days, and, according to Acts 2, in
the last days the Lord had promised to pour out the Spirit of God upon all
flesh, and the boys and girls were to prophesy.
And by the way, it was through this little girl--the Spirit of
God coming upon this child--that we were directed to go to Toledo when we did.
When under the influence of the Spirit, she pointed her finger directly at me,
and then toward Toledo, and through the Spirit of prophecy she says, "You go to
Toledo"; and since this accorded with Acts 2: "Your sons and your daughters
shall prophesy"; and knowing the family--putting the test to the life--we dared
not hesitate to go.
We were told at the same time that we would be put in prison
in Toledo. That came to pass, and we had the evidence that we were directed by
the Spirit because that which had been prophesied came to pass. We bore our
message in the city, and they came and locked us up. . . .
If we are in a delusion, we are honestly there. But if this is
from the Spirit of God, we want to follow it. . . .
This Spirit tells us to search the Word; tells us to be
earnest; and tells us to be careful about our diet; tells us exactly what you
have said.
Now, my wife, the Spirit operates through her, and we believe
that this is the gift of prophecy that is to be poured out onto all flesh. This
Spirit leads us into kindness and purity of life, and we can't understand
it--why--only that as the Word of God has said, that these experiences come as
the result of receiving the blessing of the Spirit of God.
They circulate all manner of evil reports about us, which are
wholly untrue. We are surprised when we hear them; there is not a syllable of
truth in them. But it accords with just what the Word says. The first people to
shut us up were the Adventists, at the Ohio camp meeting.
Ellen G. White: What party? There are many
Adventists.
R. Mackin: The Seventh-day Adventists. The year before
that, we were not in possession of this blessing fully, but we had come into
possession of sufficient of the Spirit of God that we would love to get people
into our tent and pray with them--just as in volume 8, you remember, it
says:--
"The time has come for a thorough reformation to take place. When
this reformation begins, the spirit of prayer will actuate every believer and
will banish from the church the spirit of discord and strife. Those who have
not been living in Christian fellowship will draw close to one another. One
member working in right lines will lead other members to unite with him in
making intercession for the revelation of the Holy Spirit. There will be no
confusion, because all will be in harmony with the mind of the Spirit."--Page
251.
Through this blessing, and our interest in the people, we
assisted 26 people to go to the camp meeting who otherwise could not have
gone--where they might get strength. This work went on until this last
year.
Before we went onto the campground--we did not go until
Friday--my wife and two other ladies (my mother, and another lady, Sister
Edwards, a sister-in-law to the president of the conference)--before we went
upon the campground this last year, they three were seeking the Lord. I had
gone downtown on an errand; and the Spirit of God told her (Mrs. Mackin) to go
on the campground, and there sing; and there He would tell her what to
sing.
And she wept just like a child, and just seemed like she could
not stand it because that the Lord showed her the condition of our people--soon
the plagues would fall, and they were unready. There was no meeting in
progress, and the Spirit of the Lord came upon her as she went onto the
campground, and (turning to Mrs. Mackin) you may tell her what words you
sang.
Mrs. Mackin: The Lord put this burden upon me. I could
not stand it. I wanted to tell it so bad, and sing that song so bad. And I
could not get rid of it till I would do it. "Oh, pray," says I to Sister
Edwards; and so I stood on the campground, and I sang just what the Lord gave
me. The Lord--this is what I sang:--
"He is coming; He is coming; Get ready; Get ready."
And then that statement in Early Writings--
"How many I saw coming up to the falling of the plagues without a
shelter. Receive ye the Holy Ghost."
These are the words I sang. I sang them over and over again. They could hear
it all over the campground, and they came together; but before that, the Lord
showed me how they would wring their hands as the plagues were falling. The
Lord can show anything in just a moment, better than He could tell it to us.
And so He showed me how they would wring their hands, and that put on me a
greater burden than ever. Well, that is when they arrested us.
I asked one of the ministers, on the witness stand--he was a
man from Pennsylvania--"Would you consider that singing sufficient to disturb a
camp meeting?" He said, "I never heard such singing in my life. It just
thrilled me through and through." This is what everybody says. It is in a most
beautiful tone of voice, and it just seems to lift us from off the earth. It is
when the singing is extemporaneous--dictated by the Spirit--that it is the most
wonderful.
If you have any light for us . . .
Ellen G. White: I do not know that I have anything
special that I could say. There will be things that will transpire at the very
close of this earth's history, it has been presented to me, similar to some of
the things that you have represented; but I cannot say anything on these points
now.
R. Mackin: Is there any question, Brother White, or
anything now?
W. C. White: I do not know as there is anything more
than to pray that the Lord will give Mother some word, and then take time for
matters to develop. It is better, in presenting anything to her, to present the
subject briefly and clearly, and then perhaps have another interview with her
later on.
R. Mackin: We are fasting and praying. If we are in a
delusion, we want to know it, just as much as if we were in the right.
Mrs. Mackin: Our brethren certainly think that we are
in a delusion.
Page 22
[In part one of this series we found ourselves in the living
room at Elmshaven in November, 1908, before the open fireplace with Ralph
Mackin and his wife interviewing Ellen G. White concerning their experience in
which they felt the Holy Spirit had been bestowed upon them in special power
leading to the speaking in tongues, prophesying, et cetera. They had come to
the point in their interview where they were discussing Mrs. Mackin's singing
under the power of the Holy Spirit.]
Ellen G. White: What place was this that you speak of,
where this singing was?
R. Mackin: Mansfield, Ohio, at the camp meeting.
Ellen G. White: Our people--Sabbathkeeping people?
R. Mackin: Yes, our own people.
W. C. White: Was that verse that Mrs. Mackin sang last
night extemporaneous or a known hymn? [At the prayer meeting in the sanitarium
chapel Brother Mackin had given his testimony in the praise service and was
followed by Mrs. Mackin, who sang.]
Mrs. R.. Mackin: Oh, that was one of our published
hymns. It is in the new Christ in Song.
R. Mackin: From hearing that you could scarcely gain an
idea of her singing when the words are given to her by the Holy Spirit. The
most wonderful thing is when she sings "Glory!" She says when she sings it she
seems to be in the presence of Jesus, with the angels. She repeats the word
"Glory!" over and over again. She has been tested with the piano, and musicians
say it is a freak--the lowness and the highness with which she does it. She
cannot do it only as she prays in the Spirit and special power comes upon
her.
Mrs. Mackin: We don't have this power, only as we seek
Jesus.
R. Mackin: The Lord has given us power, Sister White,
to cast out demons. Many people are possessed with demons. I remember a
statement you wrote a few years ago that many were possessed with demons as
verily as they were in the days of Christ. When we are in a meeting, and these
demons are in a meeting, they may cause people to do queer things. I noticed in
the Bible when Jesus was in the Temple that demons at once came out. "Hold thy
peace, and come out of him." The Lord instructs us to lay the people down, lest
the demons throw them when they come out. We found in the beginning that when
we begin to rebuke these demons they oftentimes close the eyes of these people,
and will sometimes cause them to bark like a dog, and stick out their tongue;
but as we continue to rebuke them, why, the eyes open and they become calm, and
the demons--
Now it is through the gift of the Spirit that the Lord tells us
when the demons are gone, that they are all gone. One lady in particular had
six demons, and she said she just felt them when they came out--it just seemed
to pull her in every part of the body.
But our brethren say that they can't be in the last days; but
we find that it coincides with just what the Saviour said in the last chapter
of Mark, in that great commission: "And these signs shall follow them that
believe; In my name shall they cast out devils; they shall speak with new
tongues;" and so on.
Mrs. Mackin: We did not get this all at once,
either.
R. Mackin: Read the remaining verses of Mark: "And
these signs shall follow them that believe; In my name shall they cast out
devils; they shall speak with new tongues; they shall take up serpents; and if
they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on
the sick, and they shall recover. So then after the Lord had spoken unto them,
he was received up into heaven, and sat on the right hand of God. And they went
forth, and preached every where, the Lord working with them, and confirming the
word with signs following. Amen." Our experience, so far as we are able to
discern, corroborates with the Bible. Here is something that I would like to
read [here Brother Mackin read extracts, including the following, from an
article in the Review and Herald, by Sister White, published in the
issue for April 11, 1899, and entitled, "The Newcastle Camp-Meeting"]:
"During the night of the first Sabbath of the Newcastle meeting, I
seemed to be in meeting, presenting the necessity and importance of our
receiving the Spirit. This was the burden of my labor--the opening of our
hearts to the Holy Spirit."
[No record was made by the stenographer as to the exact place where Brother
Mackin began reading this article, and where he ceased reading; but at least a
considerable portion was read.]
R. Mackin: In connection with the receiving of power
from on high there is a question, it seems to me, just as pertinent now as in
the days of the apostles--What is the evidence? If we receive it, will it not
have the same physiological effect on us as it did back there? It can be
expected that we shall speak as the Spirit gives us utterance.
Ellen G. White: In the future we shall have special
tokens of the influence of the Spirit of God--especially at times when our
enemies are the strongest against us. The time will come when we shall see some
strange things; but just in what way--whether similar to some of the
experiences of the disciples after they received the Holy Spirit following the
ascension of Christ--I cannot say.
R. Mackin: We will continually pray to the Lord about
this, and ask Him to give you light in regard to it. So I leave you our
address, and if you have anything for us after this, we shall be glad to
receive it.
W. C. White: You will probably spend a few days here,
will you not?
R. Mackin: If the Holy Spirit tells us that our work is
done now, we will go; if He tells us to tarry, we will tarry. It leads us. As I
have presented this message to different congregations the Spirit of God has
witnessed to it, and many weep, and they say, "Oh, we need power, we need help,
and this is the power promised, and let us seek God."
Mrs. Mackin: The real test is love--1 Corinthians
13.
R. Mackin: Satan wants to hinder this work. We are
sealed by the Holy
Page 23
Spirit of promise. I present it from Early Writings
when the angels are about to loose the four winds, Jesus gazes in pity on the
remnant, and with uplifted hands cries, "My blood, Father, My blood, My blood,
My blood!" He repeats it four times; for His people are still unsealed. He
commissions an angel to fly swiftly to the four angels holding the four winds,
with the message, "Hold! Hold! Hold! Hold! until the servants of God are sealed
in their foreheads." And as I bring these things before the congregation it is
the most earnest and devoted ones that it seems to affect, mostly.
Sister White then began talking, and continued for about half
an hour. She told incident after incident connected with her early labors
shortly after the passing of the time in 1844. Her experiences with unusual
forms of error in those days in later years led her to be fearful of anything
savoring of a spirit of fanaticism.
As Sister White continued, she told of some who had strange
exercisings of the body and of others who were governed largely by their own
impressions. Some thought it wrong to work. Still others believed that the
righteous dead had been raised to eternal life. A few sought to cultivate a
spirit of humility by creeping on the floor, like little children. Some would
dance, and sing "Glory, glory, glory, glory, glory, glory," over and over
again. Sometimes a person would jump up and down on the floor, with hands
uplifted, praising God; and this would be kept up for as long as half an hour
at a time.
Among those who took part in these extraordinary forms of
fanaticism were some who had once been faithful, God-fearing brethren and
sisters. The strange exercisings of body and mind were carried to such lengths
that in a few places the officers of the law felt compelled to restrain them by
casting them into prison. The cause of God was thus brought into disrepute and
it took years to outlive the influence that these exhibitions of fanaticism had
upon the general public.
Sister White further told of how she was called upon
repeatedly to meet this fanaticism squarely and to rebuke it sternly in the
name of the Lord. She emphasized the fact that we have a great work to do in
the world, that our strength with the people lies in the power that accompanies
a clear presentation of the Word of the living God. The law of Jehovah is to be
exalted and made honorable; and the various features of the third angel's
message are to be plainly outlined before the people that all may have an
opportunity to hear the truth for this time and to decide whether to obey God
rather than man.
If we as a church were to give place to any form of
fanaticism, the minds of unbelievers would be diverted from the living Word to
the doings of mortal men, and there would appear more of the human than the
divine. Besides, many would be disgusted by that which to their minds seemed
unnatural and bordering on the fanatical. Thus the proclamation of the message
for this time would be sadly hindered. The Holy Spirit works in a manner that
commends itself to the good judgment of the people.
In the midst of Sister White's account of her early
experiences with fanaticism Brother Mackin made the following proposal:
R. Mackin: If we would now have the spirit of prayer,
and this power would come upon my wife, would you be able to discern whether
this was of the Lord or not?
Ellen G. White: I could not tell you anything about it.
But I am telling you these experiences in order that you may know what we have
passed through. We tried in every way possible to rid the church of this evil.
We declared in the name of the Lord God of Israel that God does not work
through His children in a way that brings the truth into disrepute, and that
unnecessarily creates deep-seated prejudice and bitter opposition. In our work
we must take a straightforward course and seek to reach the people where they
are.
R. Mackin: I remember reading very much of this in
volume I of Testimonies for the Church-'your experience in rebuking fanaticism,
and of the cause in the East when they set the time, in 1855, I believe.
Ellen G. White: Some would dance up and down, singing,
"Glory, glory, glory, glory, glory." Sometimes I would sit still until they got
through, and then I would rise and say: This is not the way the Lord works. He
does not make impressions in this way. We must direct the minds of the people
to the Word as the foundation of our faith.
I was but a mere child at that time; and yet I had to bear my
testimony repeatedly against these strange workings. And ever since that time I
have sought to be very, very careful lest something of this sort should come in
again among our people. Any manifestation of fanaticism takes the mind away
from the evidence of truth--the Word itself.
You might take a consistent course, but those who would be
influenced by you might take a very inconsistent course, and as a result we
should very soon have our hands full of something that would make it almost
impossible to give unbelievers the right impression of our message and work. We
must go to the people with the solid Word of God; and when they receive that
Word, the Holy Spirit may come, but it always comes, as I have stated before,
in a way that commends itself to the judgment of the people. In our speaking,
our singing, and in all our spiritual exercises, we are to reveal that calmness
and dignity and godly fear that actuates every true child of God.
There is constant danger of allowing something to come into
our midst that we may regard as the working of the Holy Spirit, but that in
reality is the fruit of a spirit of fanaticism. So long as we allow the enemy
of truth to lead us into a wrong way we cannot hope to reach the honest in
heart with the third angel's message. We are to be sanctified through obedience
to the truth.
I am afraid of anything that would have a tendency to turn the
mind away from the solid evidences of the truth as revealed in God's Word. I am
afraid of it; I am afraid of it. We must bring our minds within the bounds of
reason, lest the enemy so come in as to set everything in a disorderly way.
There are persons of an excitable temperament who are easily led into
fanaticism; and should we allow anything to come into our churches that would
lead such persons into error we would soon see these errors carried to extreme
lengths; and then because of the course of these disorderly elements a stigma
would rest upon the whole body of Seventh-day Adventists.
I have been studying how to get some of these early
experiences into print again, so that more of our people may be informed; for I
have long known that fanaticism will be manifest again, in different ways. We
are to strengthen our position by dwelling on the Word, and by avoiding all
oddities and strange exercisings that some would be very quick to catch up and
practice. If we were to allow confusion to come into our ranks, we could not
bind off our work as we should. We are trying to bind it off now, in every way
possible.
I thought I must relate these things to you.
R. Mackin: Well, now, that which you have stated does
not correspond with our experience. We have been very cautious in this matter,
and we find that the experience through
Page 24
which we have passed, and which we have endeavored to outline
briefly to you this morning, tallies exactly with the experience of God's
servants of old as given in the Word.
Ellen G. White: During the years of Christ's ministry
on earth godly women assisted in the work that the Saviour and His disciples
were carrying forward. If those who were opposing this work could have found
anything out of the regular order in the conduct of these women, it would have
closed the work at once. But while women were laboring with Christ and the
apostles, the entire work was conducted on so high a plane as to be above the
shadow of a suspicion. No occasion for any accusation could be found. The minds
of all were directed to the Scriptures rather than to individuals. The truth
was proclaimed intelligently, and so plainly that all could understand.
Now I am afraid to have anything of a fanatical nature brought
in among our people. There are many, many who must be sanctified; but they are
to be sanctified through obedience to the message of truth. I am writing on
this subject today. In this message there is a beautiful consistency that
appeals to the judgment. We cannot allow excitable elements among us to display
themselves in a way that would destroy our influence with those whom we wish to
reach with the truth. It took us years to outlive the unfavorable impression
that unbelievers gained of Adventists through their knowledge of the strange
and wicked workings of fanatical elements among us during the early years of
our existence as a separate people.
R. Mackin: Well, now, this that you are giving us,
would this be considered testimony under the Spirit, or is it simply
counsel--of relating your experience?
Ellen G. White: I am giving you history.
R. Mackin: But you do not say that that applies to our
case now, until you have further light on it?
Ellen G. White: I could not say; but it appears to be
along that line, as I am afraid of it. It appears to be along that line that I
have met again and again.
W. C. White: It is now twelve o'clock. Would you not
like to rest before dinner?
Ellen G. White: Well, I could not let you go before I
had said what I have said. I would say: Be guarded. Do not let anything appear
that savors of fanaticism, and that others would act out. There are some who
are eager to make a show, and they will act out whatever you may do--whether it
be of the same tenor or not. I have been very careful not to stir up anything
like strangeness among our people.
R. Mackin: But it is true that when the Holy Spirit
does come, as is stated in your works, that many will turn against it, and
declare that it is fanaticism?
Ellen G. White: Of course they will; and for this
reason we ought to be very guarded. It is through the Word--not feeling,
not excitement--that we want to influence the people to obey the truth. On the
platform of God's Word we can stand with safety, The living Word is replete
with evidence, and a wonderful power accompanies its proclamation in our
world.
R. Mackin: Well, we must not tire you.
Mrs. Mackin: Praise the Lord!
Ellen G. White (rising, and shaking hands): I want the
Spirit of the Lord to be with you, and you, and me. We are to be just like
God's little children. The power of His grace must not be misunderstood. We
must have it in all meekness and humility and lowliness of mind, that God may
make the impression Himself upon the minds of the people. I hope the Lord will
bless you and give you a solid foundation, which foundation is the Word of the
living God.
And thus the interview ended. But this is not the end of the
story. On Thursday night, December 11, a vision was given to Ellen White that
clearly defined the Mackin experience.
[This is the third article in a series of three telling the
story of Ralph Mackin and his wife. who believed that the Holy Spirit had been
bestowed upon them in special power, leading them to speak in tongues and to
prophesy. The first two reported an interview that the Mackins had with Ellen
White, which was stenographically recorded. In this third article Ellen White
tells what was shown her in vision concerning the Mackin case.
THE visit of Ralph Mackin and his wife with Ellen G. White
occupied the last half of Thursday morning, November 12, 1908. Plans were that
Ellen White with three members of her home and office family should drive on
Friday by team the 35 miles to Healdsburg for services on Sabbath and Sunday.
The interview over, her mind turned to the work of the weekend. Then there was
a trip the next week to Berkeley with several meetings over that weekend.
To Elder A. G. Daniells, president of the General Conference,
W. C. White wrote on that Thursday afternoon after the interview:
"This forenoon Mother and I and Brother Crisler spent a couple of
hours in an interview with Brother and Sister Mackin of Findlay, Ohio. They
came across the continent, they say, to see Mother. I had an interview with
them in my office yesterday morning and advised them to come down this morning
to see Mother. They seem to be very nice-spirited people, but their experience
is somewhat peculiar.
"They had been hoping and praying that Mother would have a message
of encouragement for them. In this they were somewhat disappointed. She told
them that their case had never been presented to her in vision, and then she
talked to them for half an hour, pointing out the necessity of caution, lest
they be led astray by their feelings, believing it to be the guidance of the
Lord. They have just returned to the Sanitarium, saying that they can not tell
what they will do next, but that they will follow the guidance of the
Lord."-'November 12, 1908.
On that Friday the Mackins went to San Jose, and seemingly
quite un-
Page 25
mindful of the counsel given and cautions sounded by Ellen
White began holding meetings there. They reported to the Clyde, Ohio, church
that they had had an interview with Sister White and had something good to
report on their return home.
Perhaps the Lord was giving the Mackins an opportunity to show
their response to Ellen White's earnest counsel and also to permit the
development of circumstances that would show everyone the real fruitage of
their work. Trouble soon began to brew in San Jose. Inquiries regarding the
interview began to come to the staff at Elmshaven.
On November 26, two weeks after the interview, Ellen White
wrote to S. N. Haskell, president of the California Conference:
"Dear Brother: Two weeks ago today, while I was writing, my son W.
C. White came into my room and stated that there were two persons below who
wished to speak with me. I went downstairs into our sitting room and there met
a man and his wife who claim to follow the Word of God and to believe the
Testimonies. They have had an unusual experience during the past two or three
years. They seemed to be honest-hearted people.
"I listened while they related some of their experiences, and then
I told them something of the work we had to do in meeting and opposing
fanaticism soon after the passing of the time when we expected to see our Lord.
During those trying days some of our most precious believers were led into
fanaticism. I said further that before the end we would see strange
manifestations by those who professed to be led by the Holy Spirit. There are
those who will treat as something of great importance these peculiar
manifestations, which are not of God, but which are calculated to divert the
minds of many away from the teachings of the Word.
"In this stage of our history we must be very careful to guard
against everything that savors of fanaticism and disorder. We must guard
against all peculiar exercises that would be likely to stir up the minds of
unbelievers, and lead them to think that as a people we are led by impulse, and
delight in noise and confusion accompanied by eccentricities of action. In the
last days the enemy of present truth will bring in manifestations that are not
in harmony with the workings of the Spirit, but are calculated to lead astray
those who stand ready to take up with something new and strange.
"I told this brother and his wife that the experience through which
I passed in my youth, shortly after the passing of the time in 1844, had led me
to be very, very cautious about accepting anything similar to that which we
then met and rebuked in the name of the Lord.
"No greater harm could be done to the work of God at this time than
for us to allow a spirit of fanaticism to come into our churches, accompanied
by strange workings which are incorrectly supposed to be operations of the
Spirit of God.
"As this brother and his wife outlined their experiences, which
they claim have come to them as the result of receiving the Holy Ghost with
apostolic power, it seemed to be a facsimile of that which we were called to
meet and correct in our early experience.
"Toward the close of our interview Brother Mackin proposed that we
unite in prayer, with the thought that possibly while in prayer his wife would
be exercised as they had described to me, and that then I might be able to
discern whether this was of the Lord or not. To this I could not consent,
because I have been instructed that when one offers to exhibit these peculiar
manifestations, this is a decided evidence that it is not the work of
God.
"We must not permit these experiences to lead us to feel
discouraged. Such experiences will come to us from time to time. Let us give no
place to strange exercisings, which really take the mind away from the deep
movings of the Holy Spirit. God's work is ever characterized by calmness and
dignity. We cannot afford to sanction anything that would bring in confusion
and weaken our zeal in regard to the great work that God has given us to do in
the world to prepare for the second coming of Christ."'-Letter 338, 1908.
(Published in Selected Messages, book 2, pp. 41, 42.)
The next week Elder W. C. White reported to Elder Haskell
concerning the Mackins' visit. He told how they were confident that the Lord
had sent them there, and that some message had been given to Sister White
regarding them and their work.
When Ellen White met the Mackins on that Thursday morning, in
answer to inquiry as to whether Sister White had ever seen in vision or had any
message for them regarding their special work, she said she had not seen them
in vision nor had she any revelation from the Lord regarding their work.
W. C. White continues:
"In this visit I could not discern anything to encourage them
regarding their views that they were divinely called to a specific work. Here
are the facts:
"(1) They were confident that the Lord had called them to do a very
special work, and that a message would be given to Sister White vindicating and
establishing that work. In this, they were wrong. No such message has been
given.
"(2) They were confident that they had been shown to Sister White
in vision, and that when they came into her presence she would recognize
them.
"(3) They expected words of encouragement. But what they received
were words of caution. "In view of these facts, they can not with justice refer
to their visit with Mrs. Ellen G. White and her son, W. C. White, as an
encouragement in their claims to a special mission and work."-'W. C. White
letter, Dec. 2, 1908.
And then God spoke through vision giving specific light. Possibly there were
two visions, one on the night of December 10 and the other a few days before.
What was revealed to Ellen White led her to write two letters on Friday,
December 11-'one to the Mackins and one to "Our Brethren in California." We
present them in this order. The second letter was published in the Pacific
Union Recorder.
"Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Mackin:
"Dear Brother and Sister: Recently, in visions of the night, there
were opened before me some matters that I must communicate to you. I have been
shown that you are making some sad mistakes. In your study of the Scriptures
and of the Testimonies, you have come to wrong conclusions. The Lord's work
would be greatly misunderstood if you should continue to labor as you have
begun. You place a false interpretation upon the Word of God, and upon the
printed Testimonies; and then you seek to carry on a strange work in accordance
with your conception of their meaning. You suppose that all you do is for the
glory of God, but you are deceiving yourselves and deceiving
others.
"Your wife, in speech, in song, and in strange exhibitions that are
not in accordance with the genuine work of the Holy Spirit, is helping to bring
in a phase of fanaticism that would do great injury to the
cause
Page 26
of God, if allowed any place in our churches.
"You have even supposed that power is given you to cast out devils.
Through your influence over the human mind men and women are led to believe
that they are possessed of devils, and that the Lord has appointed you as His
agents for casting out these evil spirits.
"I have been shown that just such phases of error as I was
compelled to meet among Advent believers after the passing of the time in 1844,
will be repeated in these last days. In our early experience, I had to go from
place to place and bear message after message to disappointed companies of
believers. The evidences accompanying my messages were so great that the honest
in heart received as truth the words that were spoken. The power of God was
revealed in a marked manner, and men and women were freed from the baleful
influence of fanaticism and disorder, and were brought into the unity of the
faith.
"My brother and sister, I have a message for you: you are starting
on a false supposition. There is much of self woven into your exhibitions.
Satan will come in with bewitching power, through these exhibitions. It is high
time that you call a halt. If God had given you a special message for His
people, you would walk and work in all humility'-not as if you were on the
stage of a theater, but in the meekness of a follower of the lowly Jesus of
Nazareth. You would carry an influence altogether different from that which you
have been carrying. You would be anchored on the Rock, Christ
Jesus.
"My dear young friends, your souls are precious in the sight of
Heaven. Christ has bought you with His own precious blood, and I do not want
you to be indulging a false hope, and working in false lines. You are certainly
on a false track now, and I beg of you, for your souls' sake, to imperil no
longer the cause of truth for these last days. For your own souls' sake,
consider that the manner in which you are working is not the way God's cause is
to be advanced. The sincere desire to do others good will lead the Christian
worker to put away all thought of bringing into the message of present truth
any strange teachings leading men and women into fanaticism. At this period of
the world's history, we must exercise the greatest of care in this
respect.
"Some of the phases of experience through which you are passing,
not only endanger your own souls, but the souls of many others; because you
appeal to the precious words of Christ as recorded in the Scriptures, and to
the Testimonies, to vouch for the genuineness of your message. In supposing
that the precious Word, which is verity and truth, and the Testimonies that the
Lord has given for His people, are your authority, you are deceived. You are
moved by wrong impulses, and are bracing up yourselves with declarations that
mislead. You attempt to make the truth of God sustain false sentiments and
incorrect actions that are inconsistent and fanatical. This makes tenfold, yes,
twentyfold harder the work of the church in acquainting the people with the
truths of the third angel's message."'-Letter 358, 1908. (Published in part in
Selected Messages, book 2, pp. 44-46.)
"To Our Brethren in California:
"Last night instruction was given me for our people. I seemed to
be in a meeting where representations were being made of the strange work of
Brother Mackin and wife. I was instructed that it was a work similar to that
which was carried on in Orrington, in the State of Maine, and in various other
places after the passing of the time in 1844. I was bidden to speak decidedly
against this fanatical work.
Page 27
"I was shown that it was not the Spirit of the Lord that was
inspiring Brother and Sister Mackin, but the same spirit of fanaticism that is
ever seeking entrance into the remnant church. Their application of Scripture
to their peculiar exercises is Scripture misapplied. The work of declaring
persons possessed of the devil, and then praying with them and pretending to
cast out the evil spirits, is fanaticism which will bring into disrepute any
church which sanctions such work.
"I was shown that we must give no encouragement to these
demonstrations, but must guard the people with a decided testimony against that
which would bring a stain upon the name of Seventh-day Adventists, and destroy
the confidence of the people in the message of truth which they must bear to
the world. The Lord has done a great work for His people in placing them on
vantage ground. It is the duty of the church to cherish its influence. Precious
are the words, 'Search the scriptures: for in them ye think ye have eternal
life: anti they are they which testify of me' (John 5:39). The words of
inspiration carefully studied and prayerfully obeyed, will thoroughly furnish
unto all good works.
"As a denomination we need to look more continually to God for
guidance. We are living in an evil age. The perils of the last days are upon
us. Because iniquity abounds, Satan presumes to bring in all kinds of delusive
theories upon those who have tried to walk humbly with God, and who are
distrustful of self. Shall self-confident, fanatical men come to these humble
souls assuring them that they are possessed of evil spirits, and after praying
with them, affirm that the devil is cast out? Such are not the manifestations
of the Spirit of God, but of another spirit.
"I called upon every church to beware of being led to think evil of
those who, because distrustful of self, fear that they have not the Holy
Spirit. There are those who have followed their own ways instead of the ways of
God. They have not acknowledged the light that God has graciously given: and
because of this they have lost the power to distinguish between darkness and
light. There are many who have heard much in regard to the path they ought to
follow, but who ignore the requirements God makes of them. Their light does not
shine in works that reveal the principles of truth and holiness. It is this
class who in time of test will accept falsehood and erroneous theories for the
truth of God. “Great light has been given to the people of God. Let our
people awake, and go forward to perfection. You will be exposed to the
fallacies of satanic agencies. Fearful waves of fanaticism will come. But God
will deliver the people who will earnestly seek the Lord, and consecrate
themselves to His service."--Pacific Union Recorder, Dec. 31, 1908.
(Republished in Selected Messages, book 2, pp. 46, 47.)
At this point we lose sight of the Mackins. Their names
disappear from our records. Any influence they may have had with our church
members was undercut by Ellen White's statement that she had been shown that it
was not the Spirit of the Lord that was inspiring the Mackins.
In concluding this series of articles on the Mackin story, it
may be in place to observe that Ellen White has written much concerning the
baptism of the Holy Spirit. She portrays the fruitage of this baptism as calm,
practical adjuncts to Christian life and witnessing, and not in the field of
the ecstatic.
****************************************************************************************
HOW THE MACKINS GOT INTO THE SAN JOSE CHURCH
Since the publication of the three articles in the Review
& Herald the White Estate has received information from Mrs. Irene
Moon-Winn, who resided in San Jose at the time, as to how Ralph Mackin gained
access to the San Jose church.
Elder D. T. Fero, the pastor, had to be away on Sabbath,
November 14, and he arranged for one of the members to take the service. On
Sabbath morning as our brother who was to speak entered the church he met a
gentleman who had a Bible, a Christ in Song and a volume of the
Testimonies and gave his name as Ralph Mackin.
"Are you a preacher?" he was asked.
"Oh yes," was the reply." I have just come from Battle Creek." How
fortunate, it seemed, that a minister from the East was in their midst and he
was invited to preach.
In his sermon Mackin told the congregation that he had just visited
Sister White at St. Helena and that his wife had had a vision there. He
reported that Sister White was in full harmony with them, told them that theirs
was a good work, and wished them God's blessing. During the sermon he suggested
that if any of the congregation would like to have a special prayer meeting
after church he would be glad to join them. Some people stayed, and they had a
little prayer meeting.
When members who had gone home returned at three o'clock for the
young people's meeting, they were surprised to find the meeting under Mr.
Mackin's leadership still in progress. Some of the people were singing, some
were praying, some were crying. Mackin announced there would be a prayer
meeting at the church that night. Quite a crowd turned out, and he continued
every night until Wednesday when Elder Fero returned, discovered the situation,
and terminated Mackin's meetings in the church.
Mrs. Winn reports that the people "seemed to think that this was an
outpouring of the Holy Spirit." For a period of time Mackin conducted meetings
in the homes of sympathizers.
Page 28
By ARHUR L. WHITE
[In the March 15 to April 26, 1973, issues of the REVIEW.
Elder White presented Ellen White's counsel on charismatic experiences. Closely
related to this is counsel concerning revivals. In two experiences, one in
Healdsburg, California, in 1885 (dealt with in this article), and the other at
Battle Creek, Michigan, in 1892 and 1893 (to be-dealt with next week) there was
a marked outpouring of the Holy Spirit, particularly upon the students in the
two colleges. Some branded the experience "fanaticism." In a number of
communications Ellen White pointed out that the experiences were genuine, but
showed that when God works, Satan intrudes with a counterfeit.
EDITORS]
DOWN THROUGH the years there have been times of special
revival among Seventh-day Adventists as a result of which great blessings have
come to the church. In connection with some of these experiences fanaticism
intruded its ugly head, which led to misunderstandings, criticism, and
restraints. To avoid the counterfeit some rejected the genuine.
The counsels that Ellen White gave in connection with some of
these experiences are worthy of review, for she indicates that revivals similar
to some of the past must come to the church if it is to be prepared to receive
the latter rain. Clearly she depicts the manner in which Satan works to
neutralize the work of God. Two notable experiences of revival concerning which
there is ample documentation are those that took place in Healdsburg in 1885
and at Battle Creek College in 1892 and 1893.
The Healdsburg Experience. The Healdsburg church was
one of the early California churches. The establishment of the college there in
1882 made it a denominational center, which it remained until the college was
moved to Angwin in 1909. The school at Healdsburg was our second educational
institution, pioneering several important lines of educational endeavor. It was
at Healdsburg that we had our first boarding house, or dormitory. It was at
Healdsburg that Bible classes first became a part of the regular school
curriculum. It was at Healdsburg that we launched out in certain lines of
industrial training.
Ellen White purchased a home within four blocks of the school
and resided there until she went to Europe, some three years later. In the
summer of 1885, being deeply concerned for the welfare of the church, she made
earnest appeals, calling the members to a deeper religious experience. But the
response was less than what she had expected and hoped and prayed for. She
earnestly longed for the church at Healdsburg'-the church with which the one
training center on the Pacific Coast was connected-'to triumph and set an
example.
In early July, 1885, Ellen White left to begin her journey to
Europe. Six weeks later Elder E. P. Daniels (not to be confused with Elder
Arthur G. Daniells), who because of certain indebtedness had asked to be
excused from his work in the ministry and was conducting a school in
stenography in Oakland, spent the weekend in Healdsburg with his family.
Daniels was a man of somewhat unstable character, but a good speaker and an
earnest man. Prof. W. C. Grainger, the principal of our Healdsburg school,
invited him to take the Sabbath morning service in the Healdsburg church.
Reporting the meeting in a letter to Ellen White, Grainger
says:
"I noticed that the people seemed greatly moved, so I invited him
to speak again in the evening. He consented. We then appointed meetings for
Sunday and Sun-
Page 29
day day evening. Sunday a call was made for those who desired to
seek the Lord. When nearly the entire church came forward, I said to Brother
Daniels, 'It will never do to stop these meetings. What shall we do?' He said
he would go down to Oakland and make arrangements with his classes so that he
could come back and remain through the week and carry forward the interest.
That was five weeks ago. The interest still continues."--W. C. Grainger to
Ellen G. White, Sept. 17, 1885.
Earlier in his letter Grainger wrote:
"We have had a glorious revival in our church. It has not been
surface work, but I feel sure it is deep and lasting. Confessions were full and
free. The Lord has given us another opportunity and we have not slighted His
mercy. I feel sure brighter days are coming for Healdsburg church. The cloud
has lifted."'-Ibid.
In describing the meetings, he pointed out that--
"There is no excitement or noisy demonstrations, but there has been
a quiet but earnest seeking of God. I never witnessed a more earnest movement
than this has been. All old troubles have been fully settled and that without
any pressures other than the straight preaching of the Word of
God."'-Ibid
He closes his letter with the news that--
"There are better times for us at the students' home and in the
school. To God belongs the glory. I pray God we may never get under such a
cloud of darkness again. . . . There is a good interest among outsiders. Quite
a number of new converts have been made. Among those who have united with the
church are my wife's mother and cousin."--Ibid.
Another, I. L. Decker, writing to Ellen White reports: "Oh,
such an awakening as this church has had! The Spirit of the Lord has been with
him [E. P. Daniels] with might and power until everyone in the house felt the
presence until they could not resist it. Old hardened sinners that have
resisted all their lives have broken all to pieces."'-Letter to Ellen G. White,
Sept. 7, 1885.
Decker further reports that there were children's meetings,
old folks' meetings, and young people's meetings all going on at the same time.
Others gave similar reports of the revival.
But some things went wrong, and a few months later as Ellen
White was able to assess the situation and as God gave her light in regard to
it, she wrote to the church at Healdsburg:
"The Lord has wrought in your midst and Satan who is ever active
watching for a favorable opportunity, has intruded himself to mingle fanaticism
with God's work, to sow tares with the good seed."--Letter 21, 1886 to the
Healdsburg Church.
And she admonished:
"We need to live very close to Jesus in order to discern the
precious from the spurious."--Ibid.
While God was able to use Elder Daniels in an effective way,
Satan took advantage of some of his weaknesses. Ellen White speaks of these as
she writes to a conference leader dealing with the delicate situation as the
revival progressed.
Describing Elder Daniels she said:
"He is hasty; he feels strongly and acts impulsively. . . . He is
not a perfect man, but I know how God regards him,'-as a man of erring,
impulsive disposition, but one who loves and fears Him, and one who will reach
hearts if he has those in whom he can have confidence as counselors to help
him."--Letter 10, 1885, written Nov. 4, 1885.
Unfortunately, as the revival got well started Daniels was
carried away with the success for which God should have had the glory. There
are no evidences of excesses. No ecstatic experiences, such as the speaking in
tongues, were reported. But unbalanced elements came in. Under the fervor of
the new experience certain pet concepts were brought to the fore. Daniels did
not favor the taking up of Sabbath school offerings. This became a point of
excited emphasis, with resulting antiestablishment reactions. Meetings were
held, the attendance of which was confined strictly to those who enjoyed the
revival experience.
Another matter that was greatly exaggerated was the fact that
Daniels allowed the members of the Healdsburg church who were so wrapped up in
the revival experience to give him personal financial support. He was known by
his ministering brethren as one who was rather irresponsible in money
matters.
It is understandable, then, that when reports of events at
Healdsburg came to conference leaders, some of them went to Healdsburg. They
looked into the matter, met with Daniels, and decided that the meetings should
be discontinued. This brought the whole situation to a crisis. Daniels agreed
to follow the counsel of his brethren, but a large part of the church was left
very unhappy.
When Ellen White, in Europe, learned of the manner in which
the meetings had been cut short, she wrote to conference leaders:
"In regard to Elder [E.P.] Daniels, he is finite; he is not
infallible. But there is such a disposition to judge others. They do not keep
in view that God works by whom He will. Christ is to be seen as officiating
through the delegated servant. The great evil is that the mind becomes narrowed
and loses sight of the chief Worker; it gets on the instrument and decides the
people cannot be advantaged unless the manners and the habits of the worker
meet their own pattern exactly. They regard the speaker as a man, merely, not a
messenger whom God may use to deliver a message or do a certain
work.
"God has chosen man to do a certain work. His mental capacities
may be weak, but then the evidence is more apparent that God works. His speech
may not be eloquent, but that is no evidence that he has not a message from
God. His knowledge may be limited, but in many cases God can work with his
wisdom through such an agent, and the power be seen of God, more than through
one possessing natural and acquired abilities and who knows it and has
confidence in himself, in his judgment, in his knowledge, in his manner of
address."-'Letter 76, 1886.
Then Ellen White explained:
"But E. P. Daniels is an acceptable speaker and as I have been
shown a man of not the deepest judgment, one who needed a counselor; but he is
a man who could come close to the hearts of the people and one who possesses
sympathy and personal efforts that would penetrate the barriers built up about
the soul that resisted the influence of the truth. God works in and through
frail instruments, and He is not discerned."--Ibid.
At another time, writing of the revival to one of the leaders
in California, Ellen White expressed the wish that many similar revivals would
break out:
"Just such a work as I hope has been done in Healdsburg, will be
done in every church in our land, and through ways and means that we do not
look for. Let this work go forward everywhere. Let sins be confessed. Let
iniquities be revealed. Let it extend far and near. This work will be
done."'-Letter 10, 1885.
Concerning such revivals she wrote rather surprising
words--words that we may well ponder:
"Men may pronounce against it because it does not come in their
exact line. Fanaticism will also come in as it always has done when God
works. The net will gather in its meshes both bad and good, but who will
dare to cast the whole thing overboard, because all are not of the right kind
of fish. I feel deeply over this matter. I do not doubt but that Elder Daniels
has erred in some things, but has his error been of that character that it
makes him unworthy of a place among God's people?"'-Ibid. (Italics supplied.)
Page 30
As Ellen White looked back on the experience at Healdsburg, on
several occasions she wrote relative to it and the final outcome. In so doing
she has given us some counsels and clues that should be helpful in the days to
come. In an undated letter written to church leaders in California early in
1886, she said:
"I wish to say some things in reference to the revival at
Healdsburg. I wish to say I am not in harmony with your treatment of this
matter. That there were fanatical ones who pressed into that work I would not
deny. But if you move in the future as you have done in this matter, you may
be assured of one thing, you will condemn the work of the latter rain when it
shall come. For you will see at that time far greater evidences of
fanaticism.
"I believe the work at Healdsburg to be genuine. I believe there
were the deep movings of the Spirit of God. I believe unconsecrated,
unconverted ones urged themselves to the front. The enemy always works through
those of unbalanced minds and imperfect characters. I do not believe that Elder
[E.P.] Daniels moved wisely in all things, and it would be a new chapter in the
experience of workers if there was not a mistake made in some things. . . .
"When an effort shall be made in the work of God, Satan will be
on the ground to urge himself to notice, but shall it be the work of
ministers to stretch out the hand and say, This must go no farther, for it is
not the work of God? . . .
"I wish you could see what a delicate, dangerous matter it is to
meddle with the work of God unless you have light from heaven to guide you in
your decisions. . . .
"I fear you have grieved the Spirit of God. The fruits were
good in the work at Healdsburg, but the spurious was brought in as well as the
genuine. Then it needed men of discernment, of calm, well-balanced minds,
to come in when there was peril and indiscretion, to have a molding influence
upon the work. You could have done this."--Letter 76, 1886. (Italics supplied.)
At about this same time she wrote to friends in Healdsburg and
again reviewed the experience of revival that was cut short. This statement
sums up much of what she wrote to various individuals concerning the matter and
gives a good résumé: "In regard to the revival meetings
at Healdsburg, it surely bears fruit of being the work of God, but in every
such revival Satan gains advantages by coming in through unconsecrated persons
who have had little or no experience in a life of piety and godliness. These
elements will press to the front and on such occasions will be the most
forward, the most zealous and enthusiastic.
"The very ones who could not be trusted with any important
religious interest would take any burden, shoulder any responsibility, as
though they were men and women who had earned a reputation through a life of
self-denial, of self-sacrifice and devotion, that they were capable of deciding
important questions and leading the church.
"To put confidence in these would be like committing big vessels
into the hands of children to manage on the high seas. Such persons need the
transforming grace of Christ daily in order to bear fruit to the glory of God.
'Learn of me,' says Christ, 'for I am meek and lowly of heart.' Such persons
have never learned this lesson. If they would wear Christ's yoke and lift
Christ's burdens then they would understand better how they might help and
bless others.
"Now I suppose these individuals were the very ones who were the
most officious in the meetings in Healdsburg. From what I have been shown I
would suppose that they were of that number that composed the private meetings,
where only those who were 'wholly the Lord's' met. I know what I am talking
about, for these matters have been laid open before me several times; and yet I
would say to my brethren and sisters in Healdsburg, I believe the Spirit of God
has done a work for you.
"Hold fast everything that is good. Have no spirit of Phariseeism;
have no loftiness and self-confidence. The lower you lie at the foot of the
cross, the more distinct and the more precious will be your views of Christ our
Redeemer. The one grace that is so much wanted with everyone who professes to
be a follower of Christ is meekness, humility, humbleness of mind. One view of
Jesus sends self-importance to the winds. . . .
"I have a deep interest for the church in Healdsburg. Their
prosperity depends upon the right hold that they have of Jesus. The presence of
personal home piety will tell upon their own character, upon the character of
their children, and upon their behavior toward the animals which they
use."--Letter 9, 1886.
Having reviewed this experience we might well join Ellen White in her
observation that it is
"a delicate, dangerous matter . . . to meddle with the work of
God." And we are reminded of Ellen White's words: "We have nothing to fear for
the future, except as we shall forget the way the Lord has led us, and His
teaching in our past history."--Life Sketches, p. 196.
AS THE 1892-1893 school year opened at Battle Creek College,
the faculty seemed to sense that it would be a year of special significance. W.
W. Prescott, the president of the college, reports that when they first met as
faculty before the opening of the school year "we felt that the time had come
that there should be a change in our work. . . . We therefore took up the work
this year with the expectation that God would bless in a special manner and
would honor our faith for unusual power and success in the work."
The teachers in this setting approached their work with the
conviction that "every opportunity must be used to the best possible
advantage." In a short time the faculty was confronted with usual disciplinary
problems. It was in the midst of their concern as to how to deal with four
students who had disobeyed the rules of the school that the revival began. On
Tuesday evening, November 29, two students involved in the discipline at the
beginning of the study hour after considerable heart struggle, under the
influence of the Spirit of God gave themselves fully to God. One of the young
men had been at the
Page 31
school for a number of years and was an avowed infidel. The
other young man had persistently refused every invitation to a Christian life.
The two lived in different dormitories and neither knew of the experience of
the other. Nor was the experience known to the other students at the
college.
Prescott explains:
"There seemed to come upon the students in their private rooms
during the evening study hour at which time these young men made their move,
such a spirit as they could not resist. They were impelled to leave their rooms
and seek help. Some were for a time in great distress of mind. Teachers who
were at hand went to work at once to help those who desired
help."
The president further states that'-"For several hours nothing
else occupied the attention of both the teachers and the students. Without any
prearranged plans, praise meetings were held in the private rooms and in the
parlor and one after another yielded to the movings of the Spirit."
Prescott was away at the time visiting Walla Walla College, of
which he was also president. But under the guidance of the teachers on the
grounds, the revival "work went on until toward midnight, and closed in singing
in a most hearty manner, 'Praise God From Whom All Blessings Flow.'"
Interestingly enough, the mail that afternoon had brought some
articles from Sister White, who was in Australia. In the absence of the
president, they were delivered to Mrs. Prescott, who read them and sent them
over to the college to be read at the chapel the next day. These messages were
most timely, and the work of revival continued. Classes were dispensed with,
and as Prescott reports, "The power of God was present in a very marked
manner."
And he continues:
"Those who had long been held in sin seemed ready to respond to
the invitation to accept Christ and yield themselves to the service of God.
There was no excitement, but the deep movings of the Spirit of God were plainly
discerned."
For several days the work of revival took over the school
program, and as Prescott reports:
"The work was followed up with such instruction, public and
private, as the situation seemed to demand, and the results in general seem
permanent. Thus the work went forward until my return from Walla
Walla."
The chapel exercises sometimes stretched out to four hours and
the evening worship periods would continue until ten o'clock at night.
"I have never known of any similar experience," declared
Prescott. "Everyone recognized it as the work of the Spirit which while it
convinced of sin was still a comforter. No one gave up to discouragement, but
there was such a hungering and thirsting after righteousness as has not been
experienced before in our midst."
And then he declares: "The work has gone on steadily since and
there has been such a taking hold of God as we have never known before."
As the report continues it tells of regular meetings being
held in Battle Creek even during the year-end holiday. Prescott reported the
students' experiences during the vacation "visiting among the churches in the
State, endeavoring to carry to others the light and blessing which themselves
have received."
The president and his associate faculty members were
overjoyed, and he declared:
"We feel that we can now go forward in the work as never
before. Teachers are united in their work, and the teachers and students are
bound together in such ties as have never held them before. I am sure that this
will be the beginning of an experience which will grow brighter and brighter
unto the perfect day."
What Went Wrong?
Regretably Prescott's optimism was not fulfilled, and one may
well ask why. Oh, yes, the effects of revival were felt on into early 1893 and
through the General Conference session of that year and then faded out. In the
absence of other records, we turn to Ellen White's comments written in 1893 and
1894. God sent His angel to give her the information. It is summed up somewhat
in a communication written in 1893 addressed to "The Teachers and Students of
Our College in Battle Creek and in All Our Educational Institutions."
It opens with these words:
"Many prayers have been offered for the outpouring of the Holy
Spirit, and recently there have been demonstrations of gladness of heart in
those who have looked intently and undividedly to Jesus Christ, the Lamb slain
from the foundation of the world. There has been in your midst repentance and
confession of sin, with true remorse of soul. There was a sense of the
all-sufficient sacrifice, and the realizing of the fulfillment of the promise
in the pardon, in transferring the live coal from the altar of atonement and
touching the lips, which was the pledge of forgiveness. Lips defiled with sin
were expressing the loftiest praise. Hosanna! Blessed be he that cometh in the
name of the Lord! Hosanna! in the highest! . . .
"But what returns have our young people made to the Lord? Has it
beenas it was with the people of Israel on the most solemn occasion described
in Exodus? Moses had gone up into the mount to receive instruction from the
Lord, and the whole congregation should have been in humble attitude before
God; but instead of that they ate and drank and rose up to play. Has there been
a similar experience in Battle Creek? Have not many lost their hold on God? Did
the exercise in games of football bring the participants into more close
relation to God?
"In the night season messages have been given to me to give to you
in Battle Creek, and to all our schools. While it is in the order of God that
the physical powers shall be trained as well as the mental, yet the physical
exercise should in character be in complete harmony with the lessons given by
Jesus Christ to His disciples. That which is given to the world should be seen
in the lives of Christians; so that in education and in self-training the
heavenly intelligences should not record in the books that the students and the
teachers in our schools are 'lovers of pleasure more than lovers of
God.’”--Manuscript 51, 1893.
The last paragraph and the counsel that follows may be found
in Fundamentals of Christian Education, pages 220-230.
Another reference is made to the experience at Battle Creek,
one which in some respects sounds much like what was written at the time of the
Healdsburg experience. This statement opens the chapter in Selected
Messages, book 1, beginning on page 129, entitled "Safeguarding the New
Experience."
It reads:
"After the outpouring of the Spirit of God in Battle Creek it was
proved in the college that a time of great spiritual light is also a time of
corresponding spiritual darkness. Satan and his legions of satanic agencies are
on the ground, pressing their powers upon every soul to make of none effect the
showers of grace that have come from heaven to revive and quicken the dormant
energies into decided action to impart that which God has imparted. Had all the
many souls, then enlightened, gone to work at once to impart to others that
which God had given to them for that very purpose, more light would have been
given, more power bestowed. God does not give light merely for one person but
that he may diffuse light, and God be glorified.
"In every age seasons of spiritual revival and the outpouring of
the Holy Spirit have been followed by spiritual darkness and prevailing
corruptions. Taking into account that which God has done in opportunities
and privi-
Page 32
leges and blessings in Battle Creek, the church has not made
honorable progress in doing her work, and God's blessing will not rest upon the
church in advancing still more light until they use the light as God has
directed in His Word. The light that would shine in clear and distinct rays
will grow dim amid the moral darkness. The aggressive power of the truth of God
is dependent upon the cooperation of the human agent with God in piety, in
zeal, in unselfish efforts to get the light of truth before
others."--Manuscript 45, 1893. (Italics supplied.)
In a letter written in 1893 Ellen White went into detail in
opening up just what had taken place and why. Here is what she wrote:
"There have been things written to me in regard to the movings of
the Spirit of God at the last conference [1893], and at the college, which
clearly indicate that because these blessings were not lived up to, minds have
been confused, and that which was light from heaven has been called excitement.
I have been made sad to have this matter viewed in this light. We must be
very careful not to grieve the Holy Spirit of God, in pronouncing the
ministration of His Holy Spirit a species of fanaticism. How shall we
understand the working of the Spirit of God if it was not revealed in clear and
unmistakable lines, not only in Battle Creek but in many places?
"I am not surprised that anyone should be confused at the after
result. But in my experience of the past forty-nine years I have seen much of
these things, and I have known that God has wrought in a marked manner; and let
no one venture to say this is not the Spirit of God. It is just that which
we are authorized to believe and pray for, for God is more willing to give the
Holy Spirit to them that ask Him than parents are to give good gifts unto their
children.
"But the Holy Spirit is not for the human agent to work; it is to
work and use the human agent. That God did abundantly bless the students in
the school and the church, I have not one doubt; but a period of great light
and the outpouring of the Spirit is quite generally followed by a time of great
darkness. Why? Because the enemy works with all his deceiving energies to make
of none effect the deep movings of the Spirit of God on the human
subject.
"When the students at the school went into their match games and
football playing, when they became absorbed in the amusement question, Satan
saw it a good time to step in and make of none effect the Holy Spirit of God in
molding and using the human subject. Had the teachers to a man done their
duty, had they realized their accountability, had they stood in moral
independence before God, had they used the ability which God had given them
according to the sanctification of the Spirit through the love of the truth,
they would have had spiritual strength and divine enlightenment to press on and
on and upward on the ladder of progress reaching heavenward. The fact is
evident that they did not appreciate or walk in the light or follow the Light
of the world.
"It is an easy matter to idle away, talk and play away, the Holy
Spirit's influence. To walk in the light is to keep moving onward in the
direction of light. If the one blessed becomes negligent and inattentive and
does not watch unto prayer, if he does not lift the cross and bear the yoke of
Christ, if his love of amusements and strivings for the mastery absorb his
power or ability, then God is not made the first and best and last in
everything, and Satan comes in to act his part in playing the game of life for
his soul. He can play much more earnestly than they can play, and make
deep-laid plots for the ruin of the soul. . . .
"The results after the working of the Spirit of God in Battle Creek
are not because of fanaticism, but because those who were blessed did not show
forth the praises of Him who called them out of darkness into His marvelous
light; and when the earth is lightened with the glory of God, some will not
know what it is, and from whence it came, because they misapplied and
misinterpreted the Spirit shed upon them.
"God is a jealous God of His own glory. He will not honor those who
dishonor Him. Some persons living in the light ought to have instructed these
souls young in experience to walk in the light after they had received the
light. I wish I had time to write more fully, but I fear I have not."
--Selected Messages, book 1, pp. 130-132. (Italics
supplied.)
In the days that followed, Ellen White made a number of
references to the experience at Battle Creek. She did so in two articles she
prepared for the Review and Herald, one appearing in the issue of
January 30, 1894, and the other on February 6. Limited space in this article
precludes our quoting further. Those interested may read the Review
articles as published in Selected Messages, book 1, pages 133-143. She
makes clear the provisions that God has made for the outpouring of the Holy
Spirit and she points out those factors that hinder the work as God would have
it done. She depicts the appreciative child of God who wishes to retain the
experience of special blessing as one who not only walks in the light, but
works diligently for those about him.
Then she wrote:
"If there is any one thing in the world in which we may manifest
enthusiasm, it may be manifested in seeking the salvation of souls for whom
Christ died."'-Ibid, p. 139.
It should be noted that in the revival experiences both at
Healdsburg and Battle Creek, as reported in these articles and supported so
abundantly with records of the times, there was no ecstatic experiences
heralding the reception of the Holy Spirit--no speaking in unknown tongues. In
each case, both in the witness of those who were present and in Ellen White's
dealing with the matter, it is indicated that there was a calm, solemn work,
unmarked by special excitement. In both cases fanaticism intruded itself, and
Ellen White indicates that in every genuine experience we may expect that there
will be some with a fanatical nature who will join in and carry things to
extremes. But even so in these two experiences it did not manifest itself in
speaking in tongues. There may be lessons here for us to ponder.