ELLEN G. WHITE’S PORTRAYAL
OF THE GREAT CONTROVERSY STORY
By 
    ARTHUR L. WHITE
Former 
    Secretary of the Ellen G. White Estate
The 
    four-volume Spirit of Prophecy series by Ellen White, of which this 
    book is a part, was but one step in the full and final portrayal of the controversy 
    between Christ and Satan. As these volumes are again published, providing 
    a historic link of interest in the writing and rewriting of the story, it 
    is appropriate to recount Ellen White’s experience in receiving the visions 
    that form the basis of this work, to portray the involvements in writing and 
    publishing these materials, and to consider the reliability and authority 
    of such historical works emanating from a pen of inspiration.
            
    The presentation of the Great Controversy theme came to be a major task, and 
    it constituted an important pan of Mrs. White’s ministry from early years 
    to the close of her life. The concepts of the conflict story permeated her 
    entire lifework and placed a distinctive mold on the doctrinal positions and 
    activities of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Certain segments of paramount 
    importance were given to her in early years and these she promptly published 
    in such articles as “My First Vision,” “Subsequent Visions,” et cetera, to 
    be found in Early Writings. Then in 1848, in a vision to which Mrs. 
    White gives but scant reference, the over-all picture was opened to her in 
    one grand panoramic sweep. The opportunities and facilities for writing and 
    publishing were just then extremely limited. Certain segments of the depiction 
    she presented in chapters of her first book, A Sketch of the Christian 
    Experience and Views of Ellen G. White (1851). These are now a part of 
    the first section of Early Writings. But it is to the basic Great Controversy 
    vision of 1858 that we now look.
The 
    Great Controversy Vision of 1858
The 
    weekend of March 13 and 14, 1858, Elder James White and his wife, Ellen G. 
    White, attended meetings at Lovett’s Grove, near Bowling Green, Ohio. On Sunday 
    afternoon, the fourteenth, a funeral service was conducted by James White 
    in the schoolhouse where the Sabbath meetings had been held. Following her 
    husband’s discourse, Mrs. White arose and began to speak words of comfort 
    to the mourners. While thus speaking, she was taken off in vision, and for 
    two hours, during which time the congregation remained in the building, the 
    Lord through divine revelation opened up to her many matters of importance 
    to the church. Of this she wrote:
 
In the vision at Lovett’s Grove, most of the matter which 
    I had seen ten years before concerning the great controversy of the ages between 
    Christ and Satan, was repeated, and I was instructed to write it out. I was 
    shown that while I should have to contend with the powers of darkness, for 
    Satan would make strong efforts to hinder me, yet I must put my trust in God, 
    and angels would not leave me in the conflict.—Life Sketches of Ellen G. 
    White, p. 162.
The 
    day following, James and Ellen White began their homeward journey. On the 
    train, they reviewed their recent experiences and discussed plans for writing 
    out the vision, and for publishing that portion relating to the great controversy. 
    This, it was decided, should be Mrs. White’s first work after reaching home.
Little 
    did they realize the anger of Satan because of this revelation of his character 
    and wiles, or the intensity of his determination to defeat the plans for the 
    writing and publishing of the proposed book.
Arriving 
    at Jackson, Michigan, en route to Battle Creek, they visited their old friends 
    at the home of Daniel R. Palmer. At this time Mrs. White was in usual health, 
    and the following experience, as given in her own words, came as a complete 
    surprise:
 
As 
    I was conversing with Sister Palmer, my tongue refused to utter what I wished 
    to say, and seemed large and numb. A strange, cold sensation struck my heart, 
    passed over my head, and down my right side. For a time I was insensible, 
    but was aroused by the voice of earnest prayer. I tried to use my left limbs, 
    but they were perfectly useless—Ibid.
As 
    she realized that this was the third shock of paralysis that she had experienced, 
    Mrs. White for a time lost hope of recovery; but in response to the continued 
    earnest prayers of the brethren, her strength was partially restored and the 
    next day she was able to continue the journey to her home.
Writing 
    and Publishing the Vision
Although 
    suffering intensely, Ellen White began to delineate the scenes of the great 
    controversy as they had been revealed to her. Of this she wrote:
 
At 
    first I could write but one page a day, and then rest three days; but as I 
    progressed, my strength increased. The numbness in my head did not seem to 
    becloud my mind, and before I closed that work [Spiritual Gifts, vol. 
    1] the effect of the shock had entirely left me—Ibid., p. 163.
As 
    she was completing her work on the manuscript for the book in June, 1858, 
    Mrs. White received light on her experience at the home of Brother Palmer, 
    and of this she says:
 
I 
    was shown in vision that in the sudden attack at Jackson, Satan intended to 
    take my life, in order to hinder the work I was about to write; but angels 
    of God were sent to my rescue—Ibid.
            
    In September, announcement was made to the Sabbathkeeping Adventists, who 
    then numbered less than 3,000, that Spiritual Gifts—The Great Controversy 
    Between Christ and His Angels, and Satan and His Angels was ready for 
    distribution. Its 219 pages touched only briefly the high points of the conflict 
    story with three brief chapters devoted to “The Fall of Satan,” the “Fall 
    of Man,” and “The Plan of Salvation.” Then the narrative skips to the “First 
    Advent of Christ,” with thirteen chapters devoted to the life and ministry 
    of our Lord and the apostles. Then in the last of twenty-five chapters she 
    deals with the events from “The Great Apostasy” through “The Reformation” 
    to the Advent Movement and earth’s closing scenes, ending the volume with 
    a chapter entitled, “The Second Death,” which terminates the great controversy.
As 
    James and Ellen White planned the publication of this material, they turned 
    to Elder Roswell F. Cottrell, a scholarly minister residing in western New 
    York State, to prepare an introductory chapter on the manifestation of the 
    gift of prophecy. The book opens with a 12-page presentation entitled “Spiritual 
    Gifts,” signed “R.F.C.”
This 
    early work, Spiritual Gifts, Volume 1, was well received. There was 
    more than one printing. Then in 1882 a new edition was published, first as 
    a single volume, and then the same year embodied as the third section of the 
    book, fittingly entitled Early Writings.
Given 
    by Revelation
The 
    first sentence in this little work declares, “The Lord has shown me that Satan 
    was once an honored angel in heaven.” The words “I saw” or their equivalent 
    appear in this little work on an average of more than once for each page of 
    the book. (As prepared for republication in 1882, the phrase “I saw” and its 
    equivalent were many times omitted.)  It is clear to the reader that at times 
    the scenes passed before the writer in great panoramic views. (See Early 
    Writings, p. 289.) At other times, certain events and their significance 
    were presented symbolically. (See Early Writings, pp. 211, 213.)
In 
    brief but concise general statements, important periods of history were summed 
    up, revealing the background of the invisible contending forces of good and 
    evil. (See Early Writings, pp. 222-226.)
“Spiritual 
    Gifts,” Volume 2, a Biographical Work
The 
    reception of the Great Controversy vision in March, 1858, with the commission 
    to write it out, interrupted work Mrs. White had already undertaken in preparing 
    an account of her experience and the visions. With Spiritual Gifts 
    (Vol. 1) now in the field, she returned to the task of preparing the autobiographical 
    work. This was published in 1860 as Spiritual Gifts, Volume 2, with 
    the title, “My Christian Experience, Views and Labors in Connection With the 
    Rise and Progress of the Third Angel’s Message.”
It 
    is a work of 304 pages currently available in a facsimile reprint, bound with 
    Volume 1.
Old 
    Testament History Recounted and Illuminated
The 
    Spiritual Gifts presentation of the Great Controversy story in 1858 had devoted 
    only three chapters to Old Testament history. The basic Great Controversy 
    vision and subsequent visions had opened to Ellen White views of the high 
    points of this important history. In 1864 Spiritual Gifts, Volumes 
    3 and 4, were published, dealing more comprehensively with the fall of Lucifer, 
    the Creation, the fall of man, the lives of the patriarchs, and the experience 
    of Israel. This account of Old Testament history filled 383 pages. These two 
    volumes bore the subtitle, “Important Facts of Faith in Connection With the 
    History of Holy Men of Old.” Volume 3 carried an introductory statement of 
    twenty-four pages, on “Spiritual Gifts” written by James White. These volumes 
    are also currently available in a facsimile reprint.
“The 
    Spirit of Prophecy,” Volumes 1-4
            
    The years passed, the number of believers rapidly increased, and there was 
    a call for the republication of the little Spiritual Gifts volumes, 
    which the people had learned to love. Mrs. White, however, felt that she could 
    not consent to this. Since their publication she had been favored with revelations 
    in which many of the views had been repeated in more detail; so she pleaded 
    for time and opportunity to present the subjects more completely before they 
    were published again. Definite plans were laid for a series of four volumes, 
    of about four hundred pages each, to contain a fuller account of the great 
    conflict from its inception to its close, to be published under the general 
    title of Spirit of Prophecy.
The 
    work on this new series moved forward more slowly than had been anticipated. 
    James White’s recovery from a severe stroke in 1865 was long and tedious, 
    and caring for him drew heavily on Mrs. White’s time and strength. Volume 
    1, which was issued in 1870, told the conflict story from the fall of Lucifer 
    and the Creation to the time of Solomon, paralleling with some expansion the 
    account as published in 1864 in Spiritual Gifts, Volumes 3 and 4. Again 
    James White furnished an introduction dealing with the present-day manifestation 
    of the gift of prophecy. This statement he also published in the Review 
    and Herald.
Volume 
    2, issued in 1877, dealt with the life and work of Christ to the story of 
    His triumphal entry into Jerusalem. Volume 3, published the next year, completed 
    the life of Christ and carried the story to the midst of the ministry of Paul. 
    It closes on page 392 with the chapter “Opposition at Thessalonica.” Ellen 
    White and the publishers endeavored to keep each of the volumes at approximately 
    400 pages.
            
    It had been her plan, as she undertook the preparation of Volume 4, to resume 
    the story of The Acts of the Apostles where it was left at the end 
    of Volume 3, for she had prepared the chapters completing the story of the 
    early Christian church, concluding with the martyrdom of Paul and Peter. She 
    was, however, instructed by the Lord in vision to adopt the plan now seen 
    in The Great Controversy and begin the fourth volume with the account 
    of the destruction of Jerusalem. The reason for this soon became apparent. 
    But this created a gap in the story as already published, and Mrs. White was 
    left with five unused chapters. These were introduced in the second printing 
    of Volume 3, bringing it from 392 pages to 442. Thus the full account of the 
    life of Jesus and the work of the apostles was neatly confined to the two 
    volumes, Spirit of Prophecy, Volumes 2 and 3.
Volume 
    4, “The Great Controversy”
Some 
    chapters intended for Volume 4 were written; but not until the autumn of 1882, 
    one year after the death of James White, was the work of preparing this volume 
    for the press undertaken in earnest. The manuscript was completed and the 
    book was published in 1884.
It 
    had been revealed to Ellen White that she should present an outline of the 
    controversy between Christ and Satan, as it developed in the first centuries 
    of the Christian Era and in the great Reformation of the sixteenth century, 
    in such a way as to prepare the mind of the reader to understand clearly the 
    controversy as it is going on in our day. We can now see that the divine instruction 
    regarding the plan of the book has made it of untold value to the church and 
    the general public.
However, 
    at the time of writing, Mrs. White regarded this volume, like all her former 
    writings, as primarily a message to the church and in it she used some matter 
    and many phrases and expressions better understood by Seventh-day Adventists 
    than by the general public.
We 
    would consider this the first edition of the book so well known today as The 
    Great Controversy.
While 
    at work on the copy for this volume at her Healdsburg home she was stricken 
    with severe illness and despaired of recovery. She earnestly requested to 
    be taken to the camp meeting then in progress nearby. Assuming that this was 
    the last opportunity she would have to address the people, she asked to be 
    aided as she attempted to stand and speak. Supporting herself at the speaker’s 
    stand she began to bid the church farewell. Soon the audience observed the 
    blood coming to her cheeks and strength to her body. Her voice broke clear 
    and loud. All observed the healing. With her health completely restored, she 
    continued her work on the book. Another attack of Satan to thwart the work 
    was miraculously broken.
Adapted 
    for Publication in the “Signs of the Times”
            
    James White, in Oakland, California, in June, 1874, started publishing the 
    Signs of the Times as a missionary journal of the church. It was logical 
    as the chapters for Spirit of Prophecy, Volume 2, were in preparation 
    in 1876 that some of them should be considered appropriate for this widely 
    read weekly. Even before the publication of the book by the Review and Herald 
    at Battle Creek, selected chapters, beginning with “The Sabbath,” began to 
    appear in each issue of the journal published in the West. With the exception 
    of two chapters the entire book came before the readers of the Signs 
    over the period of a year. The same was true of Volume 3 the next year. As 
    the chapters were prepared copy was sent to the Signs and to the Review 
    office for book publication. The book came out while the series was running 
    in the paper.
It 
    was Mrs. White’s expectation to move quickly into Spirit of Prophecy, 
    Volume 4, and in February, 1878, she wrote of the decision to have it printed 
    at the Pacific Press in Oakland, and to have the type set, first for the Signs. 
    She planned to later print the book from the same type. She feared that in 
    book form it would not reach many of the Advent believers still observing 
    the first day of the week, but she thought she could reach quite a few of 
    them through the Signs.
Because, 
    of the illness of James White and other pressing tasks, she was unable to 
    follow through on these plans, and in December, 1878, she wrote of using Spirit 
    of Prophecy, Volume 1, as articles for the missionary journal published 
    in the West. The materials were edited somewhat to suit more appropriately 
    the needs of the non-Adventist reader, and then the chapters, representing 
    but little change, began to appear in the January 9, 1879, issue, under the 
    general title of “The Great Controversy.” Coming to the experience of Jacob, 
    Ellen White began to greatly expand the chapters, and as she continues the 
    Old Testament history it is difficult to correlate these with the Spirit 
    of Prophecy volume. These chapters, appearing intermittently in 1880, 
    1881, and 1882, seem to present an intermediate step between Spirit of 
    Prophecy, Volume 1, and Patriarchs and Prophets.
Ellen 
    White, after the death of James White, and while residing in California, undertook 
    in earnest the preparation of the chapters for Spirit of Prophecy, 
    Volume 4. Working ahead of the book, she placed in the Signs of the Times 
    a series of articles on Luther and Reformation history. There were nineteen 
    in all, appearing in 1883, between May and October. In these she presented 
    this segment of Reformation history more fully than she could in the chapters 
    for the book, for a balance must be kept in the amount of space allotted to 
    the period it covered.
In 
    1885, after the publication of Spirit of Prophecy, Volume 4, there 
    appeared in the Signs of the Times a number of articles presenting 
    selected chapters, in whole or in part, this time drawn directly from the 
    book.
How 
    the Light Came to Ellen White
As 
    we present the steps taken in the presentation of the Great Controversy story, 
    it will be well to examine the manner in which Ellen White received the information 
    which through her lifetime she presented in the several portrayals of the 
    agelong conflict.
Reference 
    has been made to the almost “digest” account presented in 1858 in Spiritual 
    Gifts, Volume 1, in which frequent use is made of such expressions as 
    “I saw” and “I was shown.” The 1864 Volume 3, paralleling early Bible history, 
    carries an author’s preface, which opens with the words:
 
In 
    presenting this, my third little volume, to the public, I am comforted with 
    the conviction that the Lord has made me His humble instrument in shedding 
    some rays of precious light upon the past.—Page v.
In 
    the body of this preface she declares:
 
The 
    great facts of faith, connected with the history of holy men of old, have 
    been opened to me in vision.—Ibid.
In 
    her introduction to the 1888 edition of The Great Controversy she explained:
 
Through 
    the illumination of the Holy Spirit, the scenes of the long-continued conflict 
    between good and evil have been opened to the writer of these pages. From 
    time to time I have been permitted to behold the working, in different ages, 
    of the great controversy between Christ, the Prince of life, the Author of 
    our salvation, and Satan, the prince of evil, the author of sin, the first 
    transgressor of God’s holy law.—Introduction, p. x. (Italics supplied.)
As 
    the Spirit of God has opened to my mind the great truths of His word, 
    and the scenes of the past and the future, I have been bidden to make 
    known to others that which has thus been revealed—to trace the history 
    of the controversy in past ages, and especially so to present it as to shed 
    a light on the fast-approaching struggle of the future.—Ibid., p. xi. 
    (Italics supplied.)
While 
    God did not confine Himself to only one method of imparting light in the unfolding 
    of historical events, it often came to the prophet in the form of visual unfolding 
    events, past and future.
In 
    other words, Ellen White seemingly viewed the occurring of the events of history 
    as would an eyewitness. This must have been much the manner in which Moses 
    just before his death was permitted to view, in advance, the history and fortunes 
    of Israel. The account given by Ellen White in Patriarchs and Prophets 
    is helpfully illuminating:
 
And 
    now a panoramic view of the Land of Promise was presented to him. Every part 
    of the country was spread out before him, not faint and uncertain in the dim 
    distance, but standing out clear, distinct, and beautiful to his delighted 
    vision. In this scene it was presented, not as it then appeared, but as it 
    would become, with God’s blessing upon it, in the possession of Israel. He 
    seemed to be looking upon a second Eden. There were mountains clothed with 
    cedars of Lebanon, hills gray with olives and fragrant with the 
    odor of the vine, wide green plains bright with flowers and rich in fruitfulness, 
    here the palm trees of the tropics, there waving fields of wheat and barley, 
    sunny valleys musical with the ripple of brooks and the song of birds, goodly 
    cities and fair gardens, lakes rich in “the abundance of the seas,” grazing 
    flocks upon the hillsides, and even amid the rocks the wild bee’s hoarded 
    treasures....
Moses 
    saw the chosen people established in Canaan, each of the tribes in 
    its own possession. He had a view of their history after the settlement 
    of the Promised Land; the long, sad story of their apostasy and its punishment 
    was spread out before him. He saw them, because of their sins, dispersed 
    among the heathen, the glory departed from Israel, her beautiful city in ruins, 
    and her people captives in strange lands. He saw them restored to the land 
    of their fathers, and at last brought under the dominion of Rome.
He 
    was permitted to look down the stream of time and behold the first 
    advent of our Saviour. He saw Jesus as a babe in Bethlehem. He heard 
    the voices of the angelic host break forth in the glad song of praise 
    to God and peace on earth.... He beheld Christ’s humble life in Nazareth, 
    His ministry of love and sympathy and healing, His rejection by a proud, unbelieving 
    nation. Amazed he listened to their boastful exaltation of the law 
    of God, while they despised and rejected Him by whom the law was given. He 
    saw Jesus upon Olivet as with weeping He bade farewell to the city of His 
    love….
He 
    followed the Saviour to Gethsemane, and beheld the agony in 
    the garden, the betrayal, the mockery and scourging—the crucifixion…. He heard 
    Christ’s agonizing cry, “My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?” He saw 
    Him lying in Joseph’s new tomb. The darkness of hopeless despair seemed to 
    enshroud the world. But he looked again, and beheld Him coming forth 
    a conqueror, and ascending to heaven escorted by adoring angels and leading 
    a multitude of captives. He saw the shining gates open to receive Him, 
    and the host of heaven with songs of triumph welcoming their Commander. And 
    it was there revealed to him that he himself would be one who should attend 
    the Saviour, and open to Him the everlasting gates.—Pages 472-476. (Italics 
    supplied.)
The 
    dramatic picture continues, but we need go no further. Enthralled, Moses watched 
    the events take place—seeing, hearing, and participating, and in viewing the 
    scene even the sense of smell came into play. In this vivid manner the history 
    of the future was opened up to the prophet. It is very unlikely that dates 
    were given to him. It is not likely that all the cities he saw were named. 
    Those were inconsequential details, not essential to the unfolding theme.
            
    It was doubtless in just this manner that history, past and future, was often 
    presented to Ellen White, history on which was woven the tapestry of the Great 
    Controversy theme. As she referred to the visions relating to the second coming 
    of Christ she at one time declared: “Scenes of such thrilling, solemn interest 
    passed before me as no language is adequate to describe. It was all a living 
    reality to me.”—Selected Messages, book 1, p. 76.
As 
    Moses watched history in advance, so did Ellen White in vision watch history 
    develop, both past and future, and she was commissioned “to trace this 
    history.” This she did, delineating the account in greater detail as the 
    growing church could produce and use larger books, and as the repeated visions 
    brought to her the basis for fuller presentation.
Transforming 
    the Scene to the Language of Men
As 
    she undertook the work of setting forth in the printed page what she had received 
    in vision, she had to transform the scenes into human language so the reader 
    might visualize what she had seen.
No 
    supernatural force took mechanical control of her hand and guided in the words 
    that she wrote, and rarely were the exact words which she should use dictated 
    by the heavenly messenger at her side. Mrs. White speaks as follows regarding 
    her own choice of language in writing out her views:
 
Although 
    I am as dependent upon the Spirit of the Lord in writing my views as I am 
    in receiving them, yet the words I employ in describing what I have seen are 
    my own, unless they be those spoken to me by an angel, which I always enclose 
    in marks of quotation—Review and Herald, Oct. 8, 1867.
It 
    was ever a source of regret to Mrs. White that her schooling had been very 
    brief, and her knowledge of the technical rules of writing therefore limited. 
    William C. White, her son, says he clearly remembers the earlier years of 
    her work in Battle Creek, when his father James White, on coming home from 
    the Review and Herald office, would be asked to listen to what Mrs. White 
    had written and to help her in preparing it technically for publication. As 
    she read to him, he would comment on the matter, rejoicing in the power of 
    the message, and would point out weaknesses in composition and faulty grammar.
Regarding 
    such experiences, she made a statement in 1906 as follows:
 
While my husband lived, he acted as a helper and counselor 
    in the sending out of the messages that were given to me. We traveled extensively. 
    Sometimes light would be given to me in the night season, sometimes in the 
    daytime before large congregations. The instruction I received in vision was 
    faithfully written out by me, as I had time and strength for the work. Afterward 
    we examined the matter together, my husband correcting grammatical errors 
    and eliminating needless repetition. Then it was carefully copied for the 
    persons addressed, or for the printer.
As 
    the work grew, others assisted me in the preparation of matter for publication. 
    After my husband’s death, faithful helpers joined me, who labored untiringly 
    in the work of copying the testimonies and preparing articles for publication.—Selected 
    Messages, book 1, p. 50.
Usually 
    Mrs. White wrote comprehensively upon the subject she was presenting, and 
    there was occasionally a difference of opinion between her and the publishers 
    regarding the quantity of matter that should be used. She was best pleased 
    when the subject was presented very fully, but the publishers were pleased 
    to have the matter condensed or abbreviated so that the books would not be 
    too large. To this she would sometimes consent. But there were times when, 
    after important chapters were prepared in as brief a form as possible and 
    sent to the printer, a new presentation of the subject would be given to Mrs. 
    White, and she would then write additional matter and insist upon its incorporation. 
    (See the publishers’ preface to Spirit of Prophecy, Volume 4.)
Mrs. 
    White was not merely a mechanical writer. The deep impressions often made 
    upon the reader of her writings are due in part to her own intensity of spirit 
    while she wrote. Occasionally she referred in correspondence to her emotional 
    depth of feeling as she penned the solemn messages from Heaven to a perishing 
    world. Thus, on February 19, 1884, while nearing the close of her work on 
    the fourth volume, she wrote in a letter to Elder Uriah Smith:
 
I 
    write from fifteen to twenty pages each day. It is now eleven o’clock, and 
    I have written fourteen pages of manuscript for Volume IV…. As I write upon 
    my book, I feel intensely moved. I want to get it out as soon as possible, 
    for our people need it so much. I shall complete it next month if the Lord 
    gives me health as He has done. I have been unable to sleep nights, for thinking 
    of the important things to take place. Three hours and sometimes five is the 
    most sleep I get. My mind is stirred so deeply I cannot rest. Write, write, 
    write, I feel that I must, and not delay.
Great 
    things are before us, and we want to call the people from their indifference 
    to get ready. Things that are eternal crowd upon my vision day and night. 
    The things that are temporal fade from my sight.—Quoted in Ellen G. White, 
    Messenger to the Remnant, p. 57.
In 
    the fall of 1884 this book was ready for distribution. It could not be held 
    to the 400 pages as had at first been planned. The text closed on page 492 
    and a fourteen-page appendix followed, making the book 506 pages. Nevertheless, 
    the price was held to one dollar as advertised, and in keeping with the price 
    of the first three books of the series.
First 
    Colporteur Edition
            
    It has been seen that Ellen White and her associates considered the materials 
    appearing in the Spirit of Prophecy series as appropriate for the reading 
    of the general public, and much of it, with slight adaptation, had been republished 
    in the Signs of the Times. During the last years of the 1870’s and 
    the early 1880’s Seventh-day Adventists caught a vision of what might be accomplished 
    in selling books presenting the doctrinal views of the church to the general 
    public through door-to-door contacts. The works written by Uriah Smith, Thoughts 
    on Daniel and Thoughts on Revelation, had been put together in 
    a single volume for colporteur distribution and this book was selling well. 
    As Spirit of Prophecy, Volume 4, came from the press in 1884, the publishers 
    felt that this volume could be sold to those not of our faith; so with Mrs. 
    White’s cooperation, they took the plates and printed a subscription edition 
    on heavier paper and with wider margins, to sell for $1.50. This contained 
    22 full-page illustrations, the first Ellen G. White book to carry pictures. 
    Many of these illustrations were secured from the European publishers of works 
    dealing with Reformation history. Others were the works of religious artists. 
    Between 1885 and 1888 ten printings totaling 50,000 copies were produced and 
    sold.
Mrs. 
    White Visits the Scenes of the Reformation
From 
    1885 to 1887 Mrs. White visited Europe. While there, her contact with European 
    people and her visits to some of the historic places brought to her mind many 
    scenes that had been presented to her in vision during previous years, some 
    of them two or three times, and other scenes many times.
As 
    she and some friends were at Zurich, Switzerland, and entered the cathedral 
    where Zwingli had labored, she recognized her surroundings, and although she 
    had not before been there, she served as a guide to the group, recounting 
    the history. On another occasion in northern Italy, while visiting the caves 
    where the Waldenses hid in the mountains above Torre Pellice, she recognized 
    her surroundings as they had appeared to her in vision and recounted in detail 
    the events that had there occurred.
When 
    plans were discussed for the publication of The Great Controversy in 
    the principal European languages, she decided to make additions to the book. 
    Because of these contacts in Europe she was able to write more graphically 
    and fully regarding some important events, in preparing the manuscript for 
    translation.
It 
    should also be noted that while in these environs, many of the scenes were 
    repeated to her in vision. Of this she wrote:
 
While 
    writing the manuscript of The Great Controversy, I was often conscious 
    of the presence of the angels of God. And many times the scenes about which 
    I was writing were presented to me anew in visions of the night, so that they 
    were fresh and vivid in my mind.—Colporteur Ministry, p. 128.
It 
    was in Europe that Mrs. White developed more fully the plan for the presentation 
    of the entire Great Controversy story for the general public as well as for 
    the church in the five books of the Conflict of the Ages Series, all with 
    appropriate illustrations.
So 
    with the work of producing the Spirit of Prophecy, Volumes 1-4, just 
    completed, Mrs. White undertook again the rewriting and amplification of the 
    entire Great Controversy story. The books would not only be larger and fuller, 
    but they would be written also for the reader who knew nothing of Mrs. White’s 
    call and work.
In 
    her public ministry Mrs. White had always shown an ability to select from 
    the storehouse of truth, matter well adapted to the needs of the congregation 
    before her; and she also recognized that in the choice of material for publication 
    in her books, sound judgment should be shown in selecting what was best suited 
    to the needs of those who would read.
The 
    far-reaching decision to present The Great Controversy story to the 
    world as well as the church would also guide her in the phraseology employed. 
    She decided to refrain from using such phrases as “I saw” or “I was shown,” 
    which would have little significance to the reader not familiar with her call 
    and work and might even distract his attention from the important messages 
    of the books.
The 
    1888 Edition of “The Great Controversy”
The 
    1884 book, Spirit of Prophecy, Volume 4, under the title of “The Great 
    Controversy Between Christ and Satan During the Christian Dispensation,” had 
    now proved itself as a successful colporteur book. This would be the first 
    to be enlarged and rewritten. Ellen White began the work in 1886, while she 
    was residing in Basel, Switzerland, and completed it at her home in Healdsburg, 
    California, in May, 1888.
She 
    not only enlarged the presentation but in some cases she left out items. An 
    example of this is seen in the familiar chapter entitled “The Snares of Satan” 
    in The Great Controversy (pages 518-530 in current printings). The 
    first four pages of this chapter as printed in the 1884 book dealt with the 
    manner in which Satan employed Protestant ministers to carry out his objectives 
    in depreciating the Sabbath of the fourth commandment. This could be understood 
    by Seventh-day Adventists, but since the presentation was now to go to non-Adventists, 
    Mrs. White felt that the pages dealing with this should be dropped out of 
    the new and larger book. In 1923 the omitted portions of this chapter were 
    reprinted in Testimonies to Ministers, bringing them back for Adventist 
    reading.
In 
    the work of revising and enlarging the book, Ellen White had access to Elder 
    J. N. Andrews’ library. This was helpful to her, for in presenting historical 
    description she at times drew quotations from well-known authors.
The 
    new volume bore the title The Great Controversy Between Christ and 
    Satan During the Christian Dispensation. The words “Revised and Enlarged” 
    appear on the title page. The text extended to page 678 in place of the 492 
    pages of the earlier book. The page size was enlarged. The number of chapters 
    was increased from 37 to 42. The 1888 printing contained 26 full-page illustrations, 
    and the appendix was expanded by the addition of four notes. To this were 
    added thirteen pages of biographical notes, giving information on twenty-eight 
    prominent characters mentioned in the book and one page on the Waldenses. 
    No index was included.
Ellen 
    White did, however, in this volume provide an Author’s Preface, later denoted 
    as “Introduction,” filling eight pages, in which she deals with the manner 
    in which God has imparted information and light to the human family through 
    prophets. In this, as noted earlier, she carefully and tactfully introduced 
    the source of her information. This is now recognized as a very illuminating 
    and helpful statement on the subject of inspiration, both of the Bible and 
    of her writings. In a sense this is the author’s introduction to the five-book 
    Conflict of the Ages Series of which this was the first to be published.
This 
    1888 book became the volume known so well as The Great Controversy. 
    Its pagination is standard today. At the outset several sets of printing plates 
    were made which were put into use in the United States and overseas. This 
    edition of The Great Controversy was used until 1911, when a revision 
    took its place.
“Patriarchs 
    and Prophets”
With 
    the enlarged Great Controversy in the field, Ellen White now turned 
    her attention to the rewriting and enlarging of Volume 1 of the Spirit 
    of Prophecy series. Patriarchs and Prophets as we know it today 
    was the result. Ellen White, having now decided to prepare a fifth volume 
    dealing with the later part of Old Testament history, closed Patriarchs 
    and Prophets with chapter 73, “The Last Years of David.” This would leave 
    the story of Solomon and all that follows to the time of Christ for the new 
    book. The 714-page Patriarchs was completed in 1890. Elder Uriah Smith, 
    the editor of the Review and Herald with whom Ellen White had long 
    been acquainted, was asked to write the introduction to this volume. This 
    was an eight-page statement explaining and defending the proposition of the 
    appearance of the prophetic gift in the present age. Thirteen illustrations 
    embellished this first printing and it closed with an eight-page appendix, 
    consisting of twelve “notes.”
The 
    first printing of the book carried the title The Great Controversy Between 
    Christ and Satan as Illustrated in the Lives of Patriarchs and Prophets. 
    The text throughout carried the running title of “The Great Controversy.” 
    For a time Mrs. White and others referred to this book as Great Controversy, 
    volume 1. They soon saw, however, that the title did not effectively distinguish 
    this book from the 1888 Great Controversy. In a new printing, with 
    added illustrations and with the text material filling 762 pages, it was given 
    the title Patriarchs and Prophets. This left the one familiar Great 
    Controversy as the last book of The Conflict of the Ages Series from that 
    time onward.
The 
    Writing of `”The Desire of Ages”
All 
    through the years it was Mrs. White’s desire to deal very fully with the life 
    of Christ, His ministry, His teachings, and His sacrifice. That which she 
    had written on this phase of the conflict during the 70’s, and which was published 
    in Volumes 2 and 3 of the Spirit of Prophecy and in a number of pamphlets, 
    later seemed to her to be inadequate. Therefore when her work on Patriarchs 
    and Prophets was finished, her thoughts turned to the preparation of a 
    more comprehensive treatise on the life of Christ. For this work she carried 
    a great burden, and in her letters we find many references to her hope of 
    being able soon to get the book under way.
When 
    she went to Australia in the autumn of 1891, it was her expectation that the 
    long-hoped-for life of Christ could soon be prepared. During the years 1892 
    to 1898 she spent much time in writing chapters for this book.
A 
    glimpse of the intensity under which she worked while preparing copy for The 
    Desire of Ages is seen in a letter written in 1892 to Elder O. A. Olsen, 
    then president of the General Conference:
 
I 
    walk with trembling before God. I know not how to speak or trace with pen 
    the large subject of the atoning sacrifice. I know not how to present subjects 
    in the living power in which they stand before me. I tremble for fear lest 
    I shall belittle the great plan of salvation by cheap words. I bow my soul 
    in awe and reverence before God and say, “Who is sufficient for these things?”—Letter 
    40, 1892.
A 
    letter written two years later gives us a picture of Mrs. White’s busy life, 
    and explains the delay in preparing copy for the forthcoming book. She says:
 
Now, 
    after I have been in this country nearly three years, there is still much 
    to be done before the book will be ready for publication. Many branches of 
    work have demanded my attention. I am pressed beyond measure with the work 
    of writing out testimonies, caring for the poor, and traveling with my own 
    conveyance, eight, eleven, and thirteen miles to meet with the churches.—Letter 
    69, 1894.
            
    Pressed with these burdens and cares, she did much of her writing when others 
    were asleep. “My time for writing usually commences at three o’clock in the 
    morning,” she says, “when all in the house are asleep. Often I am awakened 
    at half past twelve, one, or two o clock.”—Letter 114, 1896.
The 
    Ministry of Suffering
It 
    is well known that some of the world’s masterpieces of literature, of poetry, 
    and of gospel hymns have been fashioned on the anvil of pain, and so it was 
    with a part of Mrs. White’s writings on the life and ministry of Jesus. Some 
    of the choicest passages in The Desire of Ages came from her pen when 
    she was confined not only to her room, but much of the time to her bed or 
    to her writing chair fitted with an adjustable rest for her pain-racked arm. 
    Soon after she reached Australia she began to suffer with inflammatory rheumatism, 
    and for eleven months was in constant pain. Of this experience she wrote:
 
I have been passing through great trial in pain and suffering 
    and helplessness, but through it all I have obtained a precious experience 
    more valuable to me than gold.—Letter 7, 1892.
Released 
    at last from the sickroom, Mrs. White was called upon to enter more fully 
    into the rapidly developing work in Australia, and the many calls for her 
    counsel and assistance, in addition to her extensive correspondence, greatly 
    hindered the progress of the work on The Desire of Ages. In a letter 
    written October 23, 1895, she says:
I 
    have about decided to . . . devote all my time to writing for the books that 
    ought to be prepared without further delay. I would like to write on the life 
    of Christ, on Christian Temperance [The Ministry of Healing] and prepare 
    Testimony Number 34 [Volume 6] for it is very much needed....
You 
    know that my whole theme both in the pulpit and in private, by voice and pen, 
    is the life of Christ.—Letter 41, 1895.
Some 
    have marveled at the extraordinary beauty of the language in The Desire 
    of Ages. The sentence of the above letter stating that this was her favorite 
    theme, suggests the reason for the exalted phraseology of the book.
How 
    the Work Was Done
In 
    the preparation of this work on the life of Christ as in the preparation of 
    other of her later publications, Mrs. White did not write the book straight 
    through, chapter by chapter, in the order in which the chapters appeared in 
    printed form. This was not necessary, for during the preceding thirty-five 
    years she had written many hundreds of pages on this theme, much of which 
    had already been published. With this background of material, she instructed 
    those who were employed as her helpers to gather from her published books, 
    articles, letters, and manuscripts what they could find on the subject. With 
    this in hand, she wrote many additional articles as the experiences of Christ 
    were opened anew to her. These newly written passages, together with what 
    she had written in former years, were grouped in their natural order, at times 
    arrived at by reference to works on the harmony of the Gospels. Mrs. White 
    again studied the story in this connection and sometimes added connecting 
    events.
Her 
    writings on the life and teachings of our Saviour were found to be so voluminous 
    that they could not all be contained in one book even though it was swelled 
    to 835 pages. Therefore some of the material which could not be included in 
    the 87 chapters of The Desire of Ages (1898 ) was used as in Thoughts 
    From the Mount of Blessing (1896), Christ’s Object Lessons (1900), 
    and a portion of The Ministry of Healing (1905).
The 
    Conflict Story Completed
Although 
    the outstanding features of the great conflict were covered in Patriarchs 
    and Prophets, The Desire of Ages, and The Great Controversy, 
    there still remained two wide gaps in the portrayal of the conflict between 
    good and evil from the Fall to the final restoration, one period reaching 
    from the death of David to the birth of Christ, the other covering the first 
    century of the Christian church. When other labors permitted, Mrs. White, 
    with the aid of her literary assistants, undertook with enthusiasm the task 
    of gathering and preparing material for two more volumes to complete the series. 
    As in the case of The Desire of Ages, there were to be found in earlier 
    books and in periodical articles hundreds of pages already in print covering 
    portions of these periods. Also many chapters and portions of chapters could 
    be drawn from the file of Mrs. White’s manuscripts. Then much new matter was 
    written by Mrs. White specifically for the work in preparation. Her 1883 book, 
    Sketches From the Life of Paul, comprised of portions of chapters from 
    Spirit of Prophecy, Volume 3, and filled out with new material written 
    for this Sabbath school lesson help hurried into the field, was drawn upon 
    heavily for The Acts of the Apostles.
Mrs. 
    White frequently wrote relative to the work on these volumes. A letter dated 
    October 15, 1911, gives a picture of the work then in progress:
 
My 
    work on the book The Acts of the Apostles is completed. In a few weeks 
    you shall have a copy. I have had excellent help in preparing this work for 
    the press. There are other writings that I desire to get before our people, 
    that they may speak when my voice is silent. The book on Old Testament History 
    [Prophets and Kings], which we hope to bring out next, will call for 
    earnest effort. I am grateful for the help the Lord is giving me in the labors 
    of faithful, trained workers, and that these workers are ready to carry forward 
    this work as fast as it is possible.—Letter 88, 1911.
A 
    few months after the foregoing statement was penned, The Acts of the Apostles 
    came from the press and was given a hearty welcome. Soon the work on Old Testament 
    history was undertaken in earnest, but owing to the pressure of other important 
    tasks was carried forward slowly. Of great service to her were articles published 
    in several journals of the church, such as a series of twenty-three articles 
    on the life of Solomon published in the Review and Herald in 1905 and 
    1906 and fourteen articles on the “Return of the Exiles” published in 1907 
    and 1908. Unfortunately, Mrs. White met with an accident as the
last 
    chapters were in preparation. As she was unable to continue her careful study 
    and approval of new work on the manuscript, the work came to a standstill. 
    The book was far enough along, however, so that it could be brought successfully 
    to finality. Life Sketches, published in 1915, informs us of the completion 
    of the book:
 
At 
    the time of her accident, in February, 1915, all but the last two chapters 
    had been completed . . . ; and these final chapters had been sufficiently 
    blocked out to admit of completion by the inclusion of additional matter from 
    her manuscript file.—Page 436.
The 
    volume came from the press in 1917 under the title of Captivity and Restoration 
    of Israel. Within a few years the title was changed to Prophets and 
    Kings, but many printings carried Captivity and Restoration as 
    the running title through the book.
God-given 
    Instruction
During 
    her last years Mrs. White frequently took pleasure in rereading the books 
    she had written containing the conflict story. In reviewing her experience 
    in bringing out these books, she places the origin of the information and 
    instruction far beyond her own mind. In 1902, speaking of the source of light 
    presented therein, she said:
 
Sister 
    White is not the originator of these books. They contain the instruction that 
    during her lifework God has been giving her. They contain the precious, comforting 
    light that God has graciously given His servant to be given to the world. 
    From their pages this light is to shine into the hearts of men and women, 
    leading them to the Saviour.—Colporteur Ministry, p. 125.
The 
    1907 Edition of “The Great Controversy”
Printing 
    after printing of the 1888 edition of The Great Controversy was made. 
    By the year 1907 the printing plates in use at our publishing houses in Mountain 
    View, California, Washington, D.C., and Watford, England, were badly worn. 
    It was hoped that the expense of resetting the type for the book could be 
    avoided.
The 
    printing plates were patched up; in some cases parts of pages were reset and 
    soldered into the old plates. The book was dressed up a bit and reillustrated. 
    The fullpage illustrations were increased to 40. The paging was unchanged 
    and there were no changes in the wording of the text. Scripture and subject 
    indexes were added at the close of the volume. On the basis of the new features 
    the book was registered again for copyright, so it carries the 1907 copyright 
    date and is at times referred to as the “1907 edition of The Great Controversy.” 
    From the standpoint of text, it is actually the 1888 edition, printed from 
    the 1888 patched-up plates.
The 
    1911 Edition of “The Great Controversy”
The 
    1911 edition of The Great Controversy is now the standard book currently 
    used throughout the world in English and in translations. When this book came 
    from the press, Ellen White wrote of it on July 25, 1911:
 
A 
    few days ago I received a copy of the new edition of the book Great Controversy, 
    recently printed at Mountain View, and also a similar copy printed at Washington. 
    The book pleases me. I have spent many hours looking through its pages, and 
    I see that the publishing houses have done good work....
Recently 
    it was necessary for this book to be reset, because the electrotype plates 
    were badly worn. It has cost me much to have this done,[1] 
    but I don’t complain; for whatever the cost may be, I regard this new edition 
    with great satisfaction.... 
When 
    I learned that Great Controversy must be reset, I determined that we 
    would have everything closely examined, to see if the truths it contained 
    were stated in the very best manner, to convince those not of our faith that 
    the Lord had guided and sustained me in the writing of its pages.
As 
    a result of the thorough examination by our most experienced workers, some 
    changing in the wording has been proposed. These changes I have carefully 
    examined, and approved. I am thankful that my life has been spared, and that 
    I have strength and clearness of mind for this and other literary work.—Letter 
    56, 1911.
In 
    the same statement she declared:
 
Yesterday I read what W. G White has recently written 
    to Canvassing Agents and responsible men at our publishing houses regarding 
    this latest edition of Great Controversy, and I think he has presented 
    the matter correctly and well.—Ibid.
The 
    revision of an inspired book quite naturally raised some question in the minds 
    of ministers and laity alike. Some of the questions involved an understanding 
    of inspiration. The fact that Ellen White determined to make the revision 
    and worked closely with her office staff in doing so, helped to mitigate some 
    of the questions. W. C. White made three major statements regarding the work, 
    first an extended letter written July 24 to “Our General Missionary Agents” 
    and to “Publishing House Managers,” and the next day a letter addressed to 
    “Members of the Publication Committee.” As the General Conference Committee 
    met in Autumn Council, he on October 30 made a third presentation. After a 
    brief introductory statement he read to the council his letter of July 24. 
    He also had considerable correspondence with executives and leading ministers 
    of the church regarding this new edition.
The 
    Changes in the 1911 Edition
We 
    turn to the W. C. White communications here mentioned to gain a picture of 
    what was involved in bringing out the 1911 book.  The key points, which for 
    clarity we will present in numbered paragraphs, are:
 
1. 
    “The most noticeable change in the new edition, is the improvement in the 
    illustrations....
2. 
    The thirteen Appendix notes of the old edition, occupying thirteen pages, 
    have been replaced by thirty-one notes occupying twelve pages.... The Biographical 
    Notes have been omitted.” [Neither the Appendix notes nor Biographical Notes 
    were prepared by Mrs. White.]...
3. 
    “The general Index has been enlarged from twelve to twenty-two pages. . . 
    .
4. 
    “In the body of the book, the most noticeable improvement is the introduction 
    of historical references. In the old edition, over seven hundred biblical 
    references were given, but in only a few instances were there any historical 
    references to the authorities quoted or referred to. In the new edition the 
    reader will find more than four hundred references to eighty-eight authors 
    and authorities….
5. 
    “In a few instances, new quotations from historians, preachers, and present-day 
    writers, have been used in the place of the old, because they are more forceful, 
    or because we have been unable to find the old ones. In each case where there 
    has been such a change, Mother has given faithful attention to the proposed 
    substitution, and has approved of the change....
6. 
    “In spelling, punctuation, and capitalization, changes have been made to bring 
    this book into uniformity of style with the other volumes of this series [The 
    Desire of Ages and Patriarchs and Prophets].
7. 
    “In eight or ten places, time references have been changed because of the 
    lapse of time since the book was first published.
8. 
    “In several places, forms of expression have been changed to avoid giving 
    unnecessary offense. An example of this will be found in the change of the 
    word ‘Romish’ to ‘Roman’ or ‘Roman Catholic.’
9. 
    “In two places the phrase ‘divinity of Christ’ is changed to ‘deity of Christ.’ 
    And the words ‘religious toleration’ have been changed to ‘religious liberty.’…
“In 
      the new edition, the rise of the papacy in 538, and its fall in 1798, are 
      spoken of as its ‘supremacy’ and ‘downfall,’ instead of its ‘establishment’ 
      and ‘abolition,’ as in the old edition.
 
“In 
    each of these places the more accurate form of expression has been duly considered 
    and approved by the author of the book.
10. 
    “On pages 50, 563-564, 580, 581, and in a few other places where there were 
    statements regarding the papacy which are strongly disputed by Roman Catholics, 
    and which are difficult to prove from accessible histories, the wording in 
    the new edition has been so changed that the statement falls easily within 
    the range of evidence that is readily obtainable.”
“Regarding 
    these and similar passages, which might stir up bitter and unprofitable controversies, 
    Mother has often said: ‘What I have written regarding the arrogance and the 
    assumptions of the papacy, is true. Much historical evidence regarding these 
    matters has been designedly destroyed; nevertheless, that the book may be 
    of the greatest benefit to Catholics and others, and that needless controversies 
    may be avoided, it is better to have all statements regarding the assumptions 
    of the pope and the claims of the papacy stated so moderately as to be easily 
    and clearly proved from accepted histories that are within the reach of our 
    ministers and students.’”
Work 
    Done in Mrs. White’s Office
These 
    illustrations make clear the type of work that was done in making the revisions 
    for the 1911 edition of The Great Controversy. The work was done in 
    Mrs. White’s office at Elmshaven, near St. Helena in northern California, 
    by her office staff and under her direction. The reader may ask, “What evidence 
    do we have that Mrs. White did as she said she did in her statement quoted 
    earlier: ‘These changes I have carefully examined and approved’?”
The 
    records of the White Estate are very full. In these is a large Manila envelope 
    containing proofs showing the changes made in the 1911 edition. This envelope 
    is marked: “Controversy Proofs Prepared for Mrs. E. G. White’s Inspection 
    and Approval.” At the bottom appear the words “All Approved.”
Everyone 
    therefore may rest assured that the 1911 edition, published four years before 
    Mrs. White’s death, was her presentation of the subject, in which, as she 
    said, truths “were stated in the very best manner,” prepared to reach the 
    public in a form bearing her full and unqualified endorsement.
Four 
    sets of printing plates were made, and the book was issued simultaneously 
    from the three publishing houses in North America and the publishing house 
    serving the church in Great Britain.
Many 
    Printings of the 1911 Edition
            
    The 1911 edition of The Great Controversy became the standard work 
    throughout the world. References in the Sabbath school lessons and textbooks 
    are to this edition. It was soon provided on thin paper without illustrations 
    for convenient reference work in what in denominational circles has become 
    known as the “trade edition.”
The 
    paging of certain of the editions intended for colporteur sale in some cases 
    has varied—the illustrations have been different; there has been an updating 
    of the appendix notes; in some editions some of the chapter titles have been 
    changed and hundreds of thousands of copies have been distributed under the 
    title The Triumph of God’s Love. But the text of the book is the same—the 
    text of the 1911 edition. A few typographical or grammatical errors have been 
    corrected, and current forms of capitalization and spelling have been employed. 
    Such adjustments, made to keep a widely circulated book in the most acceptable 
    form, do not affect the sense or the message of the volume.
As 
    for adjustments related to the passage of time since 1911, the White Trustees 
    in 1950 authorized a rewording of four phrases in the book in order to convey 
    the sense correctly both in 1911 and to the present-day reader. The reader 
    today is often a non-Adventist not familiar with the history of the book and 
    the later of the editions. These four are:
 
Page 
    287: In referring to the Bible, the 1911 edition stated: It “has since been 
    translated into more than four hundred languages and dialects.” By 
    1950 the number was more than a thousand. The phrase was reworded so as to 
    convey a correct image both in 1911 and the present, and reads in current 
    printings; “has since been translated into many hundreds of languages and 
    dialects.”
Page 
    288: Speaking of Voltaire, the atheist, Mrs. White stated in the 1911 edition: 
    “A century has passed since his death.” By 1950 it was more nearly 
    two centuries. The substitute wording correctly stating the fact, whether 
    in 1911 or the present, is “Generations have passed since his death.”
Page 
    378: In reference to the Jewish nation, Ellen White stated in the 1911 edition: 
    “The people of Israel for eighteen hundred years have stood, indifferent 
    to the gracious offers of salvation.” By 1950 it was nearer to nineteen hundred 
    years. Reworded to state the facts correctly in 1911 and the present, the 
    phrase reads: “The people of Israel during succeeding centuries have 
    stood, indifferent to the gracious offers of salvation.”
Page 
    579: Mrs. White stated in the 1911 edition, “For more than half a century, 
    students of prophecy in the United States have presented this testimony to 
    the world.” The earlier 1888 edition read: “For about forty years.” 
    By 1950 it was actually a full century. The White Trustees in this case authorized 
    a specific reading that would be unaffected by time lapse: “Since the middle 
    of the nineteenth century, students of prophecy in the United States have 
    presented this testimony to the world.”
To 
    speak of the foregoing four adjustments in wording as “changes in wording 
    of an E. G. White book” is correct only if we mean technical corrections of 
    historical phrases to keep the statements chronologically accurate.
History 
    and Historical Quotations
The 
    fact that some historical quotations were changed, one being substituted for 
    another in the 1911 edition, and the fact that source references were given 
    to historical materials which had not been credited in earlier printings brought 
    to the fore the question of Ellen G. White’s writing in the field of history, 
    and the basic source of the historical information she set forth in The 
    Great Controversy. Did she receive this information from God? Did she 
    secure it from the writings of historical authors, and if so to what extent? 
    How is this related to the question of inspiration?
Mrs. 
    White ever sought to avoid being influenced by others. Shortly after the Great 
    Controversy vision of March 14, 1858, at meetings in Battle Creek held over 
    a weekend, she told the high points of what had been shown to her in that 
    vision. Elder J. N. Andrews, who at the time was in Battle Creek, was much 
    interested. After one of the meetings he told her some of the things she had 
    said were much like a book he had read. Then he asked if she had read Paradise 
    Lost. She replied in the negative. He told her that he thought she would 
    be interested in reading it.
Ellen 
    White forgot about the conversation, but a few days later Elder Andrews came 
    to the home with a copy of Paradise Lost and offered it to her. She 
    was busily engaged in writing the Great Controversy vision as it had been 
    shown her. She took the book, hardly knowing just what to do with it. She 
    did not open it, but took it to the kitchen and put it up on a high shelf, 
    determined that if there was anything in that book like what God had shown 
    her in vision, she would not read it until after she had written out what 
    the Lord had revealed to her. It is apparent that she did later read at least 
    portions of Paradise Lost, for there is one phrase quoted in Education.
The 
    vision created in Mrs. White’s heart a deep interest in Reformation history. 
    After having completed her writing, and after the book was published, she 
    turned to some of the well-known histories. In the 1858 vision she had seen 
    essential portions of this historical period. She had seen Martin Luther nail 
    the theses to the church door at Wittenberg. She had viewed other scenes of 
    the Reformation in that vision. The vision brought light to her on the whole 
    matter of the conflict between the forces of righteousness and the forces 
    of evil. With that interest, the White family read for worship most of D’Aubigne’s 
    History of the Reformation. They observed with particular interest 
    those portions that were in harmony with what had been shown to her.
It 
    was quite natural, then, that as Mrs. White later undertook to present in 
    a number of chapters the account of the Protestant Reformation, she should 
    quote from accepted writers in that historical field.
The 
    Place of History in The Great Controversy Story
In 
    chronicling events in historical narrative, Ellen White makes no attempt to 
    be complete or exhaustive, but rather is selective, drawing in those events 
    which form the background of the Great Controversy theme. She did not write 
    essentially as a historian. Moreover, in all her writings, the details of 
    history were always subordinated to the great theme of the conflict. Even 
    where the facts of the Bible or secular history are introduced, there is always 
    a characteristic background of the invisible, contending forces of good and 
    evil, such as no other writer has attempted. Her view of the place of history 
    as exemplified in her own writings is well expressed in the following words:
 
In 
    the annals of human history, the growth of nations, the rise and fall of empires, 
    appear as if dependent on the will and prowess of man; the shaping of events 
    seems, to a great degree, to be determined by his power, ambition, or caprice. 
    But in the word of God the curtain is drawn aside, and we behold, above, behind, 
    and through all the play and counterplay of human interest and power and passions, 
    the agencies of the All-merciful One, silently, patiently working out the 
    counsels of His own will.—Prophets and Kings, pp. 499, 500.
We 
    are to see in history the fulfillment of prophecy, to study the workings of 
    Providence in the great reformatory movements, and to understand the progress 
    of events in the marshaling of the nations for the final conflict of the great 
    controversy.—The Ministry of Healing, pp. 441, 442.
In 
    connection with the writing out of these views of the events of ancient and 
    modern history, and especially the history of the great Reformation of the 
    sixteenth century, her reading of D’Aubigne, Wiley, and others proved to be 
    helpful. W. C. White in his 1911 statement, read and approved by Ellen G. 
    White, explains this:
 
Mother 
    has never claimed to be authority on history. The things which she has written 
    out, are descriptions of flashlight pictures and other representations given 
    her regarding the actions of men, and the influence of these actions upon 
    the work of God for the salvation of men, with views of past, present, and 
    future history in its relation to this work. In connection with the writing 
    out of these views, she has made use of good and clear historical statements 
    to help make plain to the reader the things which she is endeavoring to present.
When 
    I was a mere boy, I heard her read D’Aubigne’s “History of the Reformation” 
    to my father. She read to him a large part, if not the whole, of the five 
    volumes. She has read other histories of the Reformation. This has helped 
    her to locate and describe many of the events and the movements presented 
    to her in vision. This is somewhat similar to the way in which the study of 
    the Bible helps her to locate and describe the many figurative representations 
    given to her regarding the development of the great controversy in our day 
    between truth and error.—W. C. White letter, July 24, 1911.
When 
    Spirit of Prophecy, Volume 4, came from the press in 1884 and our ministers 
    and members began to read it, they discovered that Mrs. White had employed 
    a number of historical quotations, and this led to some questions. Why had 
    she done so? Did she gain her information on the phases of history these quotations 
    touched on from these historians, or did she receive the information from 
    God? Did her use of these quotations place them in the category of inspiration? 
    She replied that what she had presented had been opened to her by God in vision, 
    but she found the historical accounts of service in locating and describing 
    certain of these events. The question having been raised she, at the first 
    opportunity, in the 1888 edition of the book, dealt with the question in her 
    author’s “Introduction,” found currently on pages xi and xii:
 
The 
    great events which have marked the progress of reform in past ages are matters 
    of history, well known and universally acknowledged by the Protestant world; 
    they are facts which none can gainsay. This history I have presented briefly, 
    in accordance with the scope of the book, and the brevity which must necessarily 
    be observed, the facts having been condensed into as little space as seemed 
    consistent with a proper understanding of their application.
In 
    some cases where a historian has so grouped together events as to afford, 
    in brief, a comprehensive view of the subject, or has summarized details in 
    a convenient manner, his words have been quoted: but in some instances no 
    specific credit has been given, since the quotations are not given for the 
    purpose of citing that writer as authority, but because his statement affords 
    a ready and forcible presentation of the subject....
It 
    is not so much the object of this book to present new truths concerning the 
    struggles of former times, as to bring out facts and principles which have 
    a bearing on coming events. Yet viewed as a part of the controversy between 
    the forces of light and darkness, all these records of the past are seen to 
    have a new significance.
Was 
    She Shown These Things?
The 
    appearance of the 1911 “revised” edition again raised the question of the 
    relationship between Mrs. White’s reading of historical works and her writings 
    in the field of history. In a letter written in 1912 W. C. White referred 
    to the sources of Mrs. White’s information as presented in The Great Controversy:
 
Regarding 
    Mother’s writings, I have overwhelming evidence and conviction that they are 
    the description and delineation of what God has revealed to her in vision.—W. C. 
    White letter to W. W. Eastman, Nov. 4, 1912.
Answering 
    certain questions some years later, he explained in a letter to L. E. Froom:
 
The 
    framework of the great temple of truth sustained by her writings was presented 
    to her clearly in vision. In some features of this work, information was given 
    in detail. Regarding some features of the revelation, such as the features 
    of prophetic chronology, as regards the ministration in the sanctuary and 
    the changes that took place in 1844, the matter was presented to her many 
    times and in detail many times, and this enabled her to speak very clearly 
    and very positively regarding the foundation pillars of our faith.
In 
    some of the historical matters such as are brought out in Patriarchs and 
    Prophets, and in Acts of the Apostles, and in Great Controversy, 
    the main outlines were made very clear and plain to her, and when she came 
    to write up these topics, she was left to study the Bible and history to get 
    dates and geographical relations and to perfect her description of details.—W. 
    C. White letter to L E. Froom, Dec. 13, 1934.
This 
    statement makes it clear that Ellen White in vision watched history develop, 
    both past and future, and she was instructed “to trace this history.” She 
    did this.
The 
    Basic Concept and Incidental References
But 
    was she shown in each instance in minute detail the names of the places and 
    the dates of the events? The evidence is that she was not. She in vision saw 
    the events occur. The significant events as a part of the controversy story 
    was the important part, the basic concept. Minor details and incidental 
    references not basic to the account were of minimal importance. Some of this 
    information could be ascertained from the sacred writings, some from common 
    sources of knowledge, some from reliable historians. Apparently God in His 
    providence did not consider it essential to impart all of this minutiae through 
    vision. This leads us to the point of inspiration and to just how much we 
    are justified in demanding of divine revelation.
On 
    this, W. C. White, following his declaration that “mother has never claimed 
    to be authority on history” and his explanation of how the light came to her, 
    wrote:
 
Mother 
    has never laid claim to verbal inspiration, [see Introduction to The Great 
    Controversy, pages 11 and 12], and I do not find that my father, or Elder 
    Bates, Andrews, Smith or Waggoner put forth this claim. If there were verbal 
    inspiration in writing her manuscripts, why should there be on her part the 
    work of addition or adaptation? It is a fact that Mother often takes one of 
    her manuscripts, and goes over it thoughtfully, making additions that develop 
    the thought still further.
On 
    this point, there had come from the General Conference of 1883 a significant 
    declaration:
 
We 
    believe the light given by God to His servants is by the enlightenment of 
    the mind, thus imparting the thoughts, and not (except in rare cases) the 
    very words in which the ideas should be expressed.—Review and Herald, 
    Nov. 27, 1883.
Henry 
    Alford, the highly appreciated British theologian in his New Testament 
    for English Readers (1875 ), in discussing “the inspiration of the evangelists 
    and other New Testament writers” in a manner in which we may heartily agree,[2] 
    under point 11, suggests that the leading of the minds of the apostles by 
    the Holy Spirit in their reconstruction of the gospel story “admits of much 
    variety in points of minor consequence,” and he points out:
 
Two 
    men may be equally led by the Holy Spirit to record the events of our Lord’s 
    life for our edification, though one may believe and record, that the visit 
    to the Gadarenes took place before the calling of Matthew, while the other 
    places it after that event; though one in narrating it speaks of two demoniacs, 
    the other, only of one.—Preliminary Chapter, p. 23.
In 
    dealing with points of insignificance or minor consequence, Alford continues:
 
14. 
    And not only of the arrangement of the Evangelic History are these 
    remarks to be understood. There are certain minor points of accuracy or inaccuracy, 
    of which human research suffices to inform men, and on which, from want of 
    research, it is often the practice to speak vaguely and inexactly. Such are 
    sometimes the conventionally received distances from place to place; such 
    are the common accounts of phenomena in natural history, etc. Now in matters 
    of this kind, the Evangelists and Apostles were not supernaturally informed, 
    but left in common with others, to the guidance of their natural faculties.—Ibid., 
    p. 24.
In 
    describing the walk to Emmaus, Luke informs us, as presented in the KJV, that 
    this town “was from Jerusalem about threescore furlongs.” Ellen White in commenting 
    on this in The Desire of Ages, page 795, puts Emmaus as “a little town 
    eight miles from Jerusalem.” In Testimonies, volume 9, page 173, she 
    describes Loma Linda as “about four miles from Redlands.” We may properly 
    ask, Did the Holy Spirit impart this detailed information on “the conventionally 
    received distances” between the cities named, or did the prophetic writers 
    draw this incidental and unimportant, but descriptive information from the 
    common source of knowledge available to anyone?
In 
    discussing the number of rooms in the Paradise Valley Sanitarium, and the 
    fact that a personal letter she had described the building as having 40 rooms 
    when in reality it had only 38, she stated:
 
The 
    information given concerning the number of rooms in the Paradise Valley Sanitarium 
    was given, not as a revelation from the Lord, but simply as a human opinion. 
    There has never been revealed to me the exact number of rooms in any of our 
    sanitariums; and the knowledge I have obtained of such things I have gained 
    by inquiring of those who were supposed to know. In my words, when speaking 
    upon these common subjects, there is nothing to lead minds to believe that 
    I receive my knowledge in a vision from the Lord and am stating it as such. 
    . . .
When 
    the Holy Spirit reveals anything regarding the institutions connected with 
    the Lord’s work, or concerning the work of God upon human hearts and minds, 
    as He has revealed these things through me in the past, the message given 
    is to be regarded as light given of God for those who need it. But for one 
    to mix the sacred with the common is a great mistake. In a tendency to do 
    this we may see the working of the enemy to destroy souls.—Selected Messages, 
    book 1, p. 38.
The 
    point is so clear, further comment is uncalled for.
To 
    return to the Alford statement on the inspiration of the New Testament writers:
 
15. 
    The same may be said of citations and dates from history. In the last apology 
    of Stephen, in which he spoke, being full of the Holy Ghost, and with divine 
    influence beaming from his countenance, we have at least two demonstrable 
    inaccuracies in points of minor detail. And the occurrence of similar ones 
    in the Gospels would not in any way affect the inspiration or the veracity 
    of the Evangelists.—Op. cit., p. 24.
Stephen, 
    in his address, in an incidental reference to the people who went down into 
    Egypt, puts the number at “threescore and fifteen souls” (Acts 7-14). 
    The Genesis record, in presenting the history, a basic account in the historical 
    setting, states, “All the souls of the house of Jacob, which came into 
    Egypt, were threescore and ten” (Gen. 46:27). This record makes it 
    clear that this included “the sons of Joseph, which were born him in Egypt.”
The 
    Genesis record is the detailed historical account; the reference in Stephen’s 
    defense is but an incidental reference. Would we require that the Holy Spirit 
    should in this crisis presentation, supernaturally guide Stephen’s mind on 
    an inconsequential point of information which at least in its general features 
    was a matter of common knowledge to all Jews? Would we use Stephen’s statement 
    to correct the basic historical record? In other words, would we make Stephen 
    on this incidental point, an “authority on history”? If we do not choose 
    to do so, does this impair his reliability as an inspired witness?
The 
    Question of Authority on History
One 
    statement made by William White at the 1911 Autumn Council has been of particular 
    interest. He declared: “Mother has never claimed to be authority on history.” 
    (See p. 4). This sentence has become an oft-referred-to exhibit in some discussions 
    and in certain statements touching on the inspiration of the Ellen G. White 
    writings. This is akin to Ellen White’s statement, “I do not claim to be a 
    prophetess,” made in the Battle Creek Tabernacle on October 2, 1904. (See 
    Selected Messages, book 1, pp. 31-35.) These words, standing alone, 
    can be quite misleading. They have frequently been quoted without context. 
    But taken in the setting of her life experience, her many allusions to her 
    prophetic work, and her own explanation, the matter is clear.
Likewise, 
    the E. G. White-approved statement by W. C. White, “Mother has never claimed 
    to be authority on history,” is rightly employed only in the light of the 
    full W. C. White declaration of 1911, other statements made by him, and Ellen 
    White’s own statements.
The 
    issues were (1) Was it proper to revise The Great Controversy, an inspired 
    book, even if the work was done by Mrs. White herself, or under her eye? (2) 
    Did the Ellen G. White use of historical quotations as a part of her record 
    impart inspiration or a seal of inerrancy to the statements quoted? (3) Inasmuch 
    as The Great Controversy was an inspired book, would not the minute 
    detail of historical account embodied therein settle in the minds of Seventh-day 
    Adventists any differences which might occur in the records of various historians? 
    In other words, would not Mrs. White’s writing of history serve to correct 
    history in all its minor details?
If 
    we held to verbal inspiration, this would be so. The point made by W. C. White 
    in saying “Mother has never claimed to be authority on history” was his attempt 
    to prevent an unwarranted use of the E. G. White writings as settling the 
    minor points of difference between historians. With his knowledge of the 
    manner in which the light came to his mother, he felt that the course followed 
    by some was unjustified. Perhaps an illustration will be in place.
A 
    Documented Illustration
One 
    of the points called to Ellen White’s attention in response to her call for 
    an examination of the book The Great Controversy, referred to in her 
    Letter 56, 1911, involved her account of St. Bartholomew’s massacre. The 
    Great Controversy, 1888 edition, states on page 272:
 
The great bell of the palace, tolling at the dead of 
    night, was a signal for the slaughter.
She 
    was now informed that historians differed on the point of which bell actually 
    gave the signal, (1) the bell of the palace, (2) the bell of the palace of 
    justice, or (3) the bell of the church of St. Germain. All three were within 
    a radius of approximately a city block. The plan was that the bell of the 
    palace would give the signal, and certain reliable historians state that it 
    did. Others differed. Here is some of the documentation in the White Estate 
    files having to do with the 1911 revision:
 
Criticism: All the histories dealing with the French Revolution 
    which I have been able to consult, state that it was the original plan to 
    toll the bell of the palace as the signal, but owing to special circumstances, 
    the signal was given by the ringing of the bell of the church of St. Germain.
Wylie’s 
    Account: It was now eleven o’clock of Saturday night, and the 
    massacre was to begin at daybreak.... The signal for the massacre was to be 
    the tolling of the great bell of the Palace of Justice…. The Queen-mother 
    feeling the suspense unbearable, or else afraid, as Maimbourg suggests, that 
    Charles, “greatly disturbed by the idea of the horrible butchery, would revoke 
    the order he had given for it,” anticipated the signal by sending one at two 
    o’clock of the morning to ring the bell of St. Germain l’Auxerois, which was 
    nearer than that of the Palace of Justice.
Scarcely had its first peal startled the silence of the 
    night when a pistol shot was heard. The king started to his feet, and summoning 
    an attendant he bade him go and stop the massacre. It was too late; the bloody 
    work had begun. The great bell of the palace had now begun to toll; another 
    moment and every steeple in Paris was sending forth its peal; a hundred tocsins 
    sounded at once.—History of Protestantism, vol. 2, pp. 600-602.
Eyewitness 
    Account: As soon as they had caused the bell of the palace clock 
    to ring, on every side arose the cry, “To arms! and the people ran,” etc.—Account 
    of the Massacre by “the statesman and fairminded historian, De Thou (1553-1617), 
    who as a young man witnessed the Massacre of St. Bartholomew.”—Quoted in J. 
    H. Robinson’s Readings of European History, chap. 28, sec. 6 (No. 286), 
    pp. 180-182.
New 
    International Encyclopedia: From the tower of the royal palace the signal 
    was given for a carnival of blood.—Art Bartholomew.
Ellen 
    White, in vision, had seen and heard what took place. She heard the tolling 
    of a bell which gave the signal, and she saw what followed. It was most unlikely 
    that the angel gave her minute information as to which bell tolled. Would 
    not this point be in the field described by Henry Alford as “certain minor 
    points of accuracy or inaccuracy of which human research suffices to inform 
    men”? She accepted the record of a reliable historian at hand who indicated 
    that it was the bell of the palace. When she learned that the matter was in 
    uncertainty, she reworded the statement to read:
 
A 
    bell, tolling at dead of night, was a signal for the slaughter.—The Great 
    Controversy, 1911 ed., p. 272.
The 
    point being of no real significance, she removed from The Great Controversy 
    the temptation that might come to some to employ the book to settle this disputed 
    and very inconsequential point.
The 
    Details of History and Historical Dates
Pursuing 
    this matter a little further, and enlarging it to include chronology, we turn 
    to a rather enlightening W. C. White statement, written Nov. 4, 1912, in a 
    letter addressed to W. W. Eastman, a leader in SDA publishing work:
 
Regarding 
    Mother’s writings and their use as authority on points of history and chronology, 
    Mother has never wished our brethren to treat them as authority regarding 
    details of history or historical dates. The great truths revealed to 
    Mother regarding the controversy between good and evil, light and darkness, 
    have been given to her in various ways, but chiefly as flashlight views of 
    great events in the lives of individuals and in the experiences of churches, 
    of bands of reformers, and of nations. What has thus been revealed to her 
    she has written out first briefly in the Early Writings, then more 
    fully as in Spiritual Gifts and in Spirit of Prophecy, and finally 
    in The Great Controversy series.
When 
    writing out the experiences of reformers in the time of the Reformation and 
    in the great Advent Movement of 1844, Mother often gave at first a partial 
    description of some scene presented to her. Later on she would write it out 
    more fully, and again still more fully. I have known her to write upon one 
    subject four or five times, and then mourn because she could not command language 
    to describe the matter more perfectly.
When 
    writing out the chapters for Great Controversy, she sometimes gave 
    a partial description of an important historical event, and when her copyist 
    who was preparing the manuscripts for the printer, made inquiry regarding 
    time and place, Mother would say that those things are recorded by conscientious 
    historians. Let the dates used by those historians be inserted. At other times 
    in writing out what had been presented to her, Mother found such perfect descriptions 
    of events and presentations of facts and of doctrines written out in our denominational 
    books, that she copied the words of these authorities. [See her statement 
    in The Great Controversy, “Introduction.”]
When 
    Controversy was written, Mother never thought that the readers would 
    take it as authority on historical dates or use it to settle controversy regarding 
    details of history, and she does not now feel that it should be used in that 
    way. Mother regards with great respect the work of those faithful historians 
    who devoted years of time to the study of God’s great plan as presented in 
    the prophecy, and the outworking of that plan as recorded in history. (Italics 
    supplied.)
How 
    Far Can We Depend on Mrs. White?
Just 
    how far, then, can we depend on Mrs. White? Where do we set the bounds? There 
    were points in The Great Controversy in the historical account, which 
    even when challenged Ellen White refused to surrender, because of the visions. 
    Note the statement from W. C. White quoted earlier. This appears in the same 
    document that carries the sentence “Mother has never claimed to be authority 
    on history”:
 
“On 
    pages 50, 563-564, 580, 581, and in a few other places where there were statements 
    regarding the papacy which are strongly disputed by Roman Catholics, and which 
    are difficult to prove from accessible histories, the wording in the new edition 
    has been so changed that the statement falls easily within the range of evidence 
    that is readily obtainable.
“Regarding 
    these and similar passages, which might stir up bitter and unprofitable controversies, 
    Mother has often said: ‘What I have written regarding the arrogance and 
    the assumptions of the papacy, is true. Much historical evidence regarding these matters has 
    been designedly destroyed; nevertheless, that the book may be of the greatest 
    benefit to Catholics and others, and that needless controversies may be avoided, 
    it is better to have all statements regarding the assumptions of the pope 
    and the claims of the papacy stated so moderately as to be easily and clearly 
    proved from accepted histories that are within the reach of our ministers 
    and students.’” (Italics supplied.)
Here 
    in a historical area was a basic concept brought to Ellen White by 
    vision. Any modification in the account was made by Ellen White for reasons 
    quite different from inconsequential details concerning which she made 
    no claim for “authority.”
W. 
    C. White in his 1911 statement, also makes another reference to the revelations 
    to Ellen White relating to the history of the sixteenth-century Protestant 
    Reformation:
Mother’s 
    contact with European people had brought to her mind scores of things that 
    had been presented to her in vision during past years, some of them two or 
    three times, and other scenes many times. Her seeing of historic places and 
    her contact with the people refreshed her memory with reference to these things, 
    and so she desired to add much material to the book. This was done.—The 
     Great Controversy, 1911 ed., p. 5.
Chronological 
    Problems
There 
    are some chronological problems both in the Bible and in the Ellen G. White 
    writings. One holding to the verbal inspiration concept will find himself 
    in a difficult position in his attempts to cope with such problems. With a 
    factual understanding of how the prophets received light from the Lord, such 
    problems do not discount the value of the record. It is proper to ask, Is 
    the validity of the historical account bound up with the chronology? Is there 
    some danger of our attaching too much weight to these problems?
On 
    this point, W. C. White, who for years worked closely with Ellen G. White, 
    observed in his letter, Nov. 4, 1912, to W. W. Eastman:
 
It 
    seems to me there is a danger of placing altogether too much stress upon chronology. 
    If it had been essential to the salvation of man that he should have a clear 
    and harmonious understanding of the chronology of the world, the Lord would 
    not have permitted the disagreements and discrepancies which we find in the 
    writings of the Bible historians, and it seems to me that in these last days 
    there ought not to be so much controversy regarding dates.
Considerable 
    chronology appears in the Ellen G. White writings. It is worthy of examination. 
    Eight pages of the Index (543-551) are devoted to an enumeration of 
    such references in the current Ellen G. White books. It will be observed that 
    there are items of direct and precise treatment and there are a few references 
    to incidental statements often couched in very general terms.
The 
    Holy Spirit Indelibly Traced These Truths
One 
    point is crystal clear. Ellen White understood that the books recounting The 
    Great Controversy story embodied that which the Lord had revealed to her. 
    Repeatedly she spoke and wrote of this. Of the Conflict books before Prophets 
    and Kings and The Acts of the Apostles were published she said:
 
How 
    many have read carefully Patriarchs and Prophets, The Great Controversy, 
    and The Desire of Ages? I wish all to understand that my confidence 
    in the light that God has given stands firm, because I know that the Holy 
    Spirit’s power magnified the truth, and made it honorable, saying: “This is 
    the way, walk ye in it.” In my books, the truth is stated, barricaded by a 
    “Thus saith the Lord.” The Holy Spirit traced these truths upon my heart and 
    mind as indelibly as the law was traced by the finger of God, upon the tables 
    of stone.—Colporteur Ministry, p. 126.
Writing 
    specifically of The Great Controversy she declares:
 
I 
    was moved by the Spirit of the Lord to write that book…. The Lord has set 
    before me matters which are of urgent importance for the present time, and 
    which reach into the future. The words have been spoken in a charge to me, 
    “Write in a book the things which thou hast seen and heard, and let it go 
    to all the people; for the time is at hand when past history will be repeated.” 
    I have been aroused at one, two, or three o’clock in the morning with some 
    point forcibly impressed upon my mind, as if spoken by the voice of God.—Ibid., 
    pp. 127, 128.
This 
    is the simple historical record of the portrayal of The Great Controversy 
    story—a task that parallels much of Ellen White’s seventy years of active 
    ministry—and of the production of books read by millions in the leading languages 
    of the world.
Washington, 
    D.C.
May 
    12, 1969
 
[1] 
    To relieve the publishers of expense they then could not well carry and to 
    keep the sale price of the books down, Ellen White met the initial expense 
    of the production of her subscription books, recouping herself from an “initial 
    expense” royalty.
 
[2] 
    This statement, long known to the workers in Mrs. White’s office at Elmshaven, 
    was considered by them and their successors as summing up the subject factually 
    in full harmony with what they had observe in their close association with 
    Ellen G. White.