Questions and Answers About Ellen G. White
ELLEN G. WHITE'S LIFE AND MINISTRY
Ellen G. White and Seventh-day Adventist Church
		  Membership
Did Ellen White make acceptance of her prophetic ministry a
		prerequisite for joining the Seventh-day Adventist church?
Speaking of those who "had no opposition" to her prophetic gift, but
		who, for various reasons, were still undecided regarding her ministry, Ellen
		White wrote:
Such should not be deprived of the benefits and privileges of the
		  church, if their Christian course is otherwise correct, and they have formed a
		  good Christian character. . . .
Some, I was shown, could receive the published visions, judging of the
		  tree by its fruits. Others are like doubting Thomas; they cannot believe the
		  published Testimonies, nor receive evidence through the testimony of
		  others, but must see and have the evidence for themselves. Such must not be set
		  aside, but long patience and brotherly love should be exercised toward them
		  until they find their position and become established for or against. If they
		  fight against the visions, of which they have no knowledge; if they carry their
		  opposition so far as to oppose that in which they have had no experience, and
		  feel annoyed when those who believe that the visions are of God speak of them
		  in meeting and comfort themselves with the instruction given through vision,
		  the church may know that they are not right (Testimonies, vol. 1, p.
		  328).
Ellen G. White's Siblings, Family, and Genealogy.
How many children did Ellen White have?
Was Ellen White the only Seventh-day Adventist in her 
  family?
What is known about Ellen White's Geneaology?
How many children did Ellen White
		have?
Four boys were born into the White family. Henry Nichols (1847-1863) was
		their firstborn. He died of pneumonia at the age of 16. James Edson (1849-1928)
		became a Seventh-day Adventist minister and is most remembered for his
		pioneering evangelistic and educational work among African Americans in the
		Southern United States. William Clarence (1854-1937) also became a Seventh-day
		Adventist minister. After James's death in 1881, William became his mother's
		chief editorial assistant and publishing manager. John Herbert (1860) died at
		the age of three months from erysipelas.
Was Ellen White the only Seventh-day Adventist in
		her family? What about her brothers and sisters?
Of the eight Harmon children, two became active Seventh-day Adventists:
		Ellen and her older sister Sarah, whose son was hymn-writer F. E. Belden. Both
		of Ellen White's parents died Sabbathkeepers and believers in the Advent
		message, as did her brother Robert, who died a little more than 10 years before
		the church officially organized in 1863. Mary, six years older than Ellen,
		considered herself a Seventh-day Adventist, although there is no record of her
		formally joining the church.
Ellen White maintained close relationships with her remaining three sisters 
  and older brother, John, corresponding and visiting with them, and sending them 
  copies of her books and subscriptions to Adventist journals. At one time she 
  wrote of her sisters, "Although we were not practically agreed on all points 
  of religious duty, yet our hearts were one" (Review and Herald, Apr. 
  21, 1868).
What is Known Regarding Ellen White's 
  Genealogy?
 Documented evidence supports the conclusion that Ellen White's ancestry is 
  of Anglo-Saxon origin. In 1920 Ellen White's lineage on her father's side was 
  set forth in the publication of The Harmon Genealogy, by Artemas C. 
  Harmon. Many years later, in the early 1980s, the White Estate contracted with 
  a professional genealogist to specifically trace Ellen White's lineage on her 
  mother's side-Eunice Gould Harmon. The results were printed in 1983 in the form 
  of an ancestral 
  chart reaching back five generations to John Gold, son of Jarvis Gold and 
  Mary Gold, who came to Massachusetts from Kent County, England, in 1635. 
More recently, the White Estate contracted with another professional genealogist 
  to study in even more detail Ellen White's direct maternal Gould line. The results 
  of this second study were published in a genealogist's 
  report, completed in 2002. It harmonized with the conclusions of the previous 
  professional genealogist twenty years earlier, namely, that Ellen White's Gould 
  ancestors came directly from England to New England in 1635.
Thus, the White Estate's position that Ellen White's ancestry was of Anglo-Saxon 
  origin is based upon two professional genealogical studies, plus Artemas C. 
  Harmon's genealogical book. 
 
Ellen G. White's Visions
What were Ellen White's visions like? Are there any eye-witness
		accounts?
The work of anyone who claims to bear God's message must meet the sure
		tests of the Word of God, such as, "by their fruits ye shall know them," "to
		the law and to the testimony," the fulfillment of predictions, etc. While the
		physical phenomena that sometimes accompanied the visions do not rightfully
		form a test, they did supply, in the minds of most eyewitnesses, confirmatory
		evidence of the working of divine power. Those who personally witnessed Ellen
		White in vision observed very carefully what took place. From the
		eyewitness
		accounts available, we can build the following summary:
- 1. Immediately preceding a vision, both Mrs. White and others in the
		  room experienced a deep sense of the presence of God .
- 2. As the vision began, Ellen White would exclaim "Glory!" or "Glory
		  to God!", at times repeated. 
- 3. She experienced a loss of physical strength. 
- 4. Subsequently, she often manifested supernatural strength. 
- 5. She did not breathe, but her heartbeat continued normally, and the
		  color in her cheeks was natural. 
- 6. Occasionally she gave exclamations indicative of the scene being
		  presented to her. 
- 7. Her eyes were open, not with vacant stare, but as if she were
		  intently watching something. 
- 8. Her position might vary. At times she was seated; at times
		  reclining; at times she walked about the room and made graceful gestures as she
		  spoke of matters presented. 
- 9. She was absolutely unconscious of what was occurring about her.
		  She neither saw, heard, felt, nor perceived in any way her immediate
		  surroundings or happenings. 
- 10. The close of the vision was indicated by a deep inhalation,
		  followed in about a minute by another, and very soon her natural breathing
		  resumed. 
- 11. Immediately after the vision all seemed very dark to her. 
- 12. Within a short time she regained her natural strength and
		  abilities.
The "Big Bible"
Is the story of Ellen G. White holding up a big Bible fact or
		fiction?
Early in 1845, while in vision at her parents' home in Portland, Maine,
		17-year-old Ellen Harmon (later White) picked up their large family Bible and
		held it on her outstretched left arm for 20 to 30 minutes. The story was
		documented by J. N. Loughborough who interviewed those who witnessed the
		vision, including Ellen's father, mother, and sister. The Bible (on display at
		the Ellen G. White Estate) weighs 18½ pounds (8 kilos) and was printed
		by Joseph Teal in 1822. W. C. White, Ellen White's son, also reported hearing
		of the incident from his parents. There are other reports of Ellen White
		holding large Bibles while in vision, including an eye-witness account printed
		in Spiritual Gifts, vol. 2, pp. 77-79.
Such experiences should not be considered proof of divine
		inspiration, as prophets must meet the tests set forth in the Scriptures; but
		this experience, as well as other remarkable physical phenomena, were seen as
		evidence by many early Adventists that Ellen Harmon's visions were of
		supernatural origin.
Cursory readers of a 1919 discussion regarding the "big Bible" have
		mistakenly concluded that the General Conference president, A. G. Daniells,
		questioned the historicity of the incident. They have missed Daniells's point,
		which he clarified when he was asked whether he was discrediting the miracle or
		stating that he would not use such manifestations as a "proof" of inspiration.
		He replied, "No, I do not discount them nor disbelieve them; but they are not
		the kind of evidence I would use with students or with unbelievers. . . . I do
		not question them, but I do not think they are the best kind of evidence to
		produce" (Minutes of the Bible and History Teachers' Council, July 30, 1919,
		pp. 2341-2344, 2360-2362).
Ellen G. White and Israel Dammon
In 1845 Elder Israel Dammon, a Millerite adventist, faced charges by the
		State of Maine that he was a "vagabond and idle person," "a common railer or
		brawler," "neglecting his employment," "misspending his earnings" and did not
		"provide for the support" of himself or his family. His trial was reported, in
		abridged format, in the Piscataguis Farmer of Dover, Maine, March 7,
		1845. The published record provides a fascinating contemporary account of some
		of the fanatical activities known to have been associated with certain
		ex-Millerite factions. What is of particular interest to Seventh-day Adventists
		is that the record mentions young Ellen Harmon (later White) as being present
		at one of the meetings.
It should be noted that none of the witnesses in the record of Israel
		Dammon's trial allege any fanatical activity by 17-year-old Ellen Harmon. But
		the question arises whether Ellen Harmon's attendance at meetings where
		fanaticism was evident should be construed as an endorsement of such behavior.
		We think not. When the Lord instructed Ellen Harmon to relate her first vision
		(received December 1844) to the Advent believers, He did not exclude the
		fanatics from her ministry. Ellen White refers to numerous occasions when she
		was directed to bear her testimony to those mistakenly caught up with fanatical
		ideas and practices. For example:
"In the period of disappointment after the passing of the time in 1844,
		fanaticism in various forms arose. Some held that the resurrection of the
		righteous dead had already taken place. I was sent to bear a message to those
		believing this, as I am now bearing a message to you [certain persons
		advocating strange doctrines in 1901]. They declared that they were perfected,
		that body, soul, and spirit were holy. They made demonstrations similar to
		those you have made, and confused their own minds and the minds of others by
		their wonderful suppositions. Yet these persons were our beloved brethren, and
		we were longing to help them. I went into their meetings. There was much
		excitement, with noise and confusion. One could not tell what was piped or what
		was harped. Some appeared to be in vision, and fell to the floor. Others were
		jumping, dancing, and shouting. They declared that as their flesh was purified,
		they were ready for translation. This they repeated again and again. I bore my
		testimony in the name of the Lord, placing His rebuke upon these
		manifestations" (Selected Messages, book 2, p. 34).
Ellen Harmon's association with Israel Dammon at this time may also be
		understood in light of the fact that while most Millerites had rejected their
		past experience, he was among a handful of leaders who still believed that
		Bible prophecy had been fulfilled in 1844--one of the few who would listen to
		the message of Ellen Harmon's first vision.
Ellen G. White's Financial Affairs
Was Ellen White a millionaire?
Didn't Ellen White contradict her own teachings by dying in
		debt?
 If Ellen White's writings are inspired,
		why are her books copyrighted and sold?
 Didn't
		Ellen White contradict her own counsel when she sometimes sent tithe funds
		directly to needy ministers?
 
Was Ellen White a millionaire?
More than once in her ministry, Ellen White was confronted by reports
		that she was accumulating great wealth because of her book royalties. Here is
		her direct response to one detractor, written in 1897 while she lived in
		Australia:
"You have made reports in reference to me being rich. How did you know I
		was? For about ten years I have been working on borrowed property. Should I
		sell all that I have in my possession, I would not have sufficient to pay my
		outstanding debts.
"Where have I invested this money? You well know where. I have been the
		bank from which to draw to carry forward the work in this country. . . .
"I have borrowed money to do the work which must be done. Not one
		shilling of the donations sent me, from the least sum to larger amounts, has
		been used for myself. Our good Sister Wessels made me a present of a silk
		dress, and made me promise I would not sell it. But I thought that had she
		placed in my hands the amount the dress was worth, it would have been used in
		the cause of God.
"I see debts on our meetinghouses and it hurts my soul. I cannot but
		feel distress over the matter. I have invested money in the Parramatta church,
		in the Prospect church, in the Napier church, in the Ormondville church, in the
		Gisborne church, and in the education of students. I have sent persons to
		America that they might be fitted to return and do work in this country. If
		this is the way to become rich, I think it would be well for others to try
		it.
"All the royalty on my foreign books sold in America is sacredly
		dedicated to God for the education of students, that they may be fitted for the
		ministry. Thousands of dollars have been thus expended. Is this the way to
		accumulate money? The old story that Canright and others have circulated, that
		I was worth thirty thousand dollars, all fiction. It has increased to thirty
		thousand pounds, by report, since I came to Australia.
"I do not know where it is. I am using up my means, just as fast as it
		comes in, to carry forward the work in this country. If I had thirty thousand
		pounds, I would not have sent to Africa for the loan of one thousand pounds on
		which I am paying interest. If I could, I would get a loan of another thousand
		pounds, so that we might be able to put up the main school building.
"I have not thirty thousand pounds. I only wish I had a million dollars.
		I would do as I did in Sydney. I would put men in the field to labor, defraying
		their expenses from my own funds. We need one hundred men where we now have one
		in the field" (Letter 98a, 1897).
Six years later, in a private letter dated October 19, 1903, Ellen White
		wrote, "I have done all I could to help the cause of God with my means. I am
		paying interest on twenty thousand dollars, all of which I have invested in the
		work of God. And I shall continue to do all in my power to help to forward His
		work" (Letter 218, 1903).
Didn't Ellen White contradict her own teachings by
		dying in debt?
Ellen White wisely warned against the dangers of indebtedness, but when
		she died she owed nearly $90,000, with assets appraised at a little more than
		$65,000. This left a deficit of more than $20,000. Did Ellen White handle her
		finances irresponsibly and in complete disregard to her own counsels? When all
		the facts of her business affairs are considered, it is clear that Ellen White
		did not violate the spirit and intent of the counsel she gave concerning
		freedom from debt.
It should be noted that Ellen White did not advocate an extreme position
		on debt--that under no circumstances should one make any moves unless the money
		is in hand. She recognized that opportunities present themselves where the
		appropriate response is to move forward in faith, even if it is necessary to
		"borrow money and pay interest" (Counsels on Stewardship, p. 278).
In her own experience, most of Ellen White's borrowing was incurred
		during the later years of her life when, realizing the shortness of her days,
		she did some of her heaviest work in preparing new books, both in English and
		in other languages. There were only two ways in which such expenses of book
		preparation could be met--either in profits from former publishing (i.e.,
		royalties), or by borrowing against anticipated royalties. Because of Ellen
		White's past generosity in contributing funds toward the work of the church,
		she was left to rely upon future earnings (royalties) to liquidate her debt.
		Part of that generosity consisted in her declining to receive royalties for
		non-English editions, and donating the royalties of her most popular later
		works, Christ's Object Lessons (1900) and The Ministry of Healing
		(1905), for the support of specific church projects. In the years following her
		death the continued sales of her publications entirely met her obligations, as
		she had anticipated. For a fuller discussion of Ellen White's indebtedness, see "Mrs. White's Indebtedness." 
If Ellen White's writings are inspired, why are her
		books copyrighted and sold? Shouldn't her books be given away?
Thousands of Ellen White's books are given away. In such cases,
		however, some person or group has donated funds to cover the printing
		costs--just as copies of the Word of God are circulated freely only by means of
		the generosity of others. When one bears in mind that Ellen White herself
		underwrote the costs of preparing book plates, illustrations, and translations,
		not to mention the costs of producing the book manuscripts themselves, it does
		not appear unreasonable that she should expect to cover those expenses through
		the regular mechanism by which most authors are remunerated--royalties. In
		addition, copyrighting a book provides a protection for maintaining the
		accuracy of the text. Today, there are continuing expenses incurred in
		maintaining Ellen White's original manuscripts, preparing new publications,
		including CD-ROM products, and other materials pertaining to her life and
		ministry.
Didn't Ellen White contradict her own counsel when
		she sometimes sent tithe funds directly to needy ministers?
Ellen White's instruction on the proper application of the tithe funds
		is clearly presented by her in Testimonies for the Church, vol. 9, pages
		245-251. She states that the tithe is to be brought into God's treasury to
		sustain gospel laborers (p. 249), and that none should "feel at liberty to
		retain their tithe, to use according to their own judgment. They are not to use
		it for themselves in an emergency, nor to apply it as they see fit, even in
		what they may regard as the Lord's work" (p. 247). Ellen White's policy and
		practice was to follow that model. She wrote in 1890, "I pay my tithes gladly
		and freely, saying as did David, 'Of thine own have we given thee'"
		(Pastoral Ministry, p. 260). At a time when certain denominational
		workers were being inadequately sustained or deprived outright of legitimate
		salaries, Ellen White acted upon instruction she received from the Lord that
		she should assist such workers with her own tithe funds, if necessary. She did
		not regard her action as either the withholding of tithe funds from the
		treasury or the redirection of them to unauthorized uses. Rather she recognized
		the inability of the "regular channels" to meet the needs of those particular
		workers at that point in time.
Ellen G. White's Practice Regarding Vegetarianism
Did Ellen White eat any meat after her health-reform vision in 1863?
		What about that 1858 "pork" testimony?
Ellen White did not claim that after her 1863 health vision she never
		again ate meat. Prior to the vision, she believed that she "was dependent upon
		a meat diet for strength." Because of her weak physical condition, especially
		for her tendency to faint when weak and dizzy, she thought that meat was
		"indispensable." In fact, at that time she was "a great meat eater"; flesh meat
		was her "principal article of diet."
But she complied with advancing light. She cut meat out of her "bill of
		fare" immediately, and it was no longer a regular part of her diet. She
		practiced the general principles she taught others, such as that one must use
		the best food available under the circumstances. When away from home, either
		while traveling or camping in austere conditions, decades before convenience
		foods were invented, finding an adequate diet was often difficult. Not always
		able to obtain the best, for whatever reason, she at times settled for the
		good--the best under the circumstances.
Ellen White was not dogmatic regarding meat eating. In 1895 she noted,
		"I have never felt that it was my duty to say that no one should taste of meat
		under any circumstances. To say this . . . would be carrying matters to
		extremes. I have never felt that it was my duty to make sweeping assertions.
		What I have said I have said under a sense of duty, but I have been guarded in
		my statements, because I did not want to give occasion for anyone to be
		conscience for another" (Counsels on Diet and Foods, pp.462, 463).
In modern attempts to understand history, too frequently the past is
		judged by the present, most often unknowingly. Individuals of the past must be
		judged in the context of their circumstances, not ours. In a day without
		refrigeration, when obtaining fresh fruit and vegetables depended on where one
		lived and the time of the year, when meat substitutes were rarely obtainable
		before the introduction of peanut butter and dry-cereals (mid-1890s), on some
		occasions one either ate meat or nothing at all. In our day, in most
		circumstances meat eating is rarely a necessity.
While in Australia, she came to the place where she "absolutely banished
		meat from my table." For a time, she had allowed some meat to be served to
		workers and family members. From that time on (January 1894) it was understood
		"that whether I am at home or abroad, nothing of this kind is to be used in my
		family, or come upon my table" (ibid., p. 488). Many of Ellen White's strongest
		statements against meat were written after she had renewed her commitment to
		total abstinence in 1894.
Ellen White's major health visions of 1863 and 1865 encompassed all
		features of the health reform message that she emphasized until her death.
		Changes in certain emphases through the years only refined those principles,
		they did not add or subtract from them. As time passes, even prophets must take
		time to assimilate revealed principles--time for theory to become practice in
		their own lives. She constantly advocated the principle, in practice as well as
		in teaching, that everyone who is committed to truth will move from the bad to
		the good, from the good to the better, from the better to the best. Such was
		her experience.
What about her apparent reversal on the question of eating pork? In 1858
		she wrote to the Haskells (Brother and Sister A) on a number of items, rebuking
		them for insisting that pork-eating should be made a "test question": "I saw
		that your views concerning swine's flesh would prove no injury if you have them
		to yourselves; but in your judgment and opinion you have made this question a
		test. . . . If God requires His people to abstain from swine's flesh, He will
		convict them on the matter. . . . If it is the duty of the church to abstain
		from swine's flesh, God will discover it to more than two or three. He will
		teach His church their duty" (Testimonies for the Church, vol. 1,
		pp. 206, 207).
In the health reform vision of June 6, 1863, a broad array of health
		principles was revealed. The next year she published a fifty-page chapter
		entitled "Health" in Spiritual Gifts, volume 4. In reference to swine's
		flesh she said: "God never designed the swine to be eaten under any
		circumstances" (p. 124), and in her later books she continued to emphasize the
		injurious consequences of eating swine's flesh.
How does one account for this change in Ellen White's views between 1858
		and 1863? 
First, she had received no light from God on swine's flesh before 1863.
		Her vision in 1858 did not inform her as to the rightness or wrongness of
		eating pork. Rather, it reproved this brother for creating division among
		Adventists by making the issue a test question at that time. Second, she left
		open the possibility that if pork-eating ought to be discarded by God's people,
		He would, in His own time, "teach his church their duty." When the
		vision did come, nearly five years later, the whole church saw the issue
		clearly and never again was there division regarding this issue.
[Adapted from Herbert E. Douglass, Messenger of the Lord: the Prophetic 
  Ministry of Ellen G. White (Nampa, Idaho: Pacific Press Publishing Association, 
  1998), pp. 157, 158, 312-319.]
For additional information about Ellen White's dietary practices see,  
 Ellen White and Vegetarianism.
ELLEN G. WHITE'S WRITINGS
Ellen G. White and "The Bible and the Bible Only"
Do Seventh-day Adventists believe that the writings of Ellen G. White
		are equal to, or an addition to, the Scriptures? If the Bible is
		all-sufficient, why do we need Ellen White's writings?
Seventh-day Adventists do not place Ellen White's writings on the same
		level as Scripture. "The Holy Scriptures stand alone, the unique standard by
		which her and all other writings must be judged and to which they must be
		subject" (Seventh-day Adventists Believe . . . , p. 227). Another way of
		framing this question is to ask why the church should need any of the promised
		gifts of the Holy Spirit. Ellen White answered this question in the
		Introduction to her book The Great Controversy Between Christ and
		Satan:
"In His word, God has committed to men the knowledge necessary for
		salvation. The Holy Scriptures are to be accepted as an authoritative,
		infallible revelation of His will. They are the standard of character, the
		revealer of doctrines, and the test of experience. "Every scripture inspired of
		God is also profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for
		instruction which is in righteousness; that the man of God may be complete,
		furnished completely unto every good work" (2 Timothy 3:16, 17, R.V.).
"Yet the fact that God has revealed His will to men through His Word,
		has not rendered needless the continued presence and guiding of the Holy
		Spirit. On the contrary, the Spirit was promised by our Saviour, to open the
		Word to His servants, to illuminate and apply its teachings. And since it was
		the Spirit of God that inspired the Bible, it is impossible that the teaching
		of the Spirit should ever be contrary to that of the Word.
"The Spirit was not given--nor can it ever be bestowed--to supersede the
		Bible; for the Scriptures explicitly state that the Word of God is the standard
		by which all teaching and experience must be tested. . . .
"In harmony with the Word of God, His Spirit was to continue its work
		throughout the period of the gospel dispensation. During the ages while the
		Scriptures of both the Old and the New Testament were being given, the Holy
		Spirit did not cease to communicate light to individual minds, apart from the
		revelations to be embodied in the Sacred Canon. The Bible itself relates how,
		through the Holy Spirit, men received warning, reproof, counsel, and
		instruction, in matters in no way relating to the giving of the Scriptures. And
		mention is made of prophets in different ages, of whose utterances nothing is
		recorded. In like manner, after the close of the canon of the Scripture, the
		Holy Spirit was still to continue its work, to enlighten, warn, and comfort the
		children of God" (The Great Controversy, pp. vii, viii).
 Ellen G. White's Literary Productions
How many books and articles did Ellen White
		write?
 What is Ellen White's most popular
		book?
 Haven't some of Ellen White's
		writings been suppressed?
 
How many books and articles did Ellen White
		write?
At the time of her death Ellen White's literary productions totaled
		approximately 100,000 pages: 24 books in current circulation; two book
		manuscripts ready for publication; 5,000 periodical articles in the journals of
		the church; more than 200 tracts and pamphlets; approximately 35,000
		typewritten pages of manuscript documents and letters; 2,000 handwritten
		letters and diary materials comprising, when copied, another 15,000 typewritten
		pages. Compilations made after her death from Ellen White's writings bring the
		total number of books currently in print to more than 130.
What is Ellen White's most popular
		book?
Millions consider Ellen White's classic volume on the life of
		Christ--The Desire of Ages--to be their favorite Ellen White book. But
		her most popular book is Steps to Christ, which presents the essentials
		of basic Christian living. First published in 1892 and since translated into
		more than 165 languages, tens of millions of copies are in circulation.
Haven't some of Ellen White's writings been
		suppressed?
All of Ellen White's published works (including those alleged to be
		suppressed) are included on the White Estate's CD-ROM, The Complete
		Published Writings of Ellen G. White. All of her unpublished works (letters
		and manuscripts) are available for study at the 22 Ellen G. White-SDA Research
		Centers located around the world. None of her writings are suppressed.
Critics point to certain deletions in early publications as an evidence
		that James and Ellen White (or church leaders) attempted to suppress statements
		supporting erroneous beliefs. It is a fact that some of the early writings that
		have been reprinted through the years have had sentences and even paragraphs
		deleted from them and other revisions made. The question really is twofold: a)
		May a true prophet revise or delete or perhaps even not preserve his God-given
		messages? b) What were Ellen White's motivations in the changes that were made
		in her writings?
The Bible reveals that God's messengers exhibited a degree of freedom in
		deciding what to write and how best to present it. Many prophets delivered
		messages orally, and thus no written account was preserved at all. In addition,
		God did not see fit even to preserve the messages of some prophets who had
		written out their messages (see, for example, 1 Chron. 29:29). Jeremiah tells
		us that when he re-wrote his message for king Jehoiakim he "added besides unto
		them many like words" (Jer. 36:32), implying that he was not confined to the
		use of only his original words in expressing his message.
In responding to the charge of suppression in 1883, Ellen White wrote,
		"So far from desiring to withhold anything that I have ever published, I would
		feel great satisfaction in giving to the public every line of my writings that
		has ever been printed" (Selected Messages, 1:60). Such a statement would
		hardly be made by one whose motivation for changes in her writings was to
		suppress embarrassing statements. At the same time, an author has the right
		(some would say, duty) to make sure that his or her ideas are expressed as
		clearly as possible--even if this should mean deleting and/or revising passages
		liable to be misinterpreted by readers. An examination of Ellen White's alleged
		"suppressions" is found in F. D. Nichol's Ellen G. White and Her
		Critics, pp. 267-285 and 619-643.
 The Role of Ellen G. White's Literary Assistants
What were Ellen White's secretaries and literary assistants permitted
		to do in regard to her writings?
Ellen White did not always use perfect grammar, spelling, punctuation,
		or sentence or paragraph construction in her writing. She freely acknowledged
		her lack of such technical skills. In 1873 she lamented, "I am not a scholar. I
		cannot prepare my own writings for the press. . . . I am not a grammarian"
		(Selected Messages, book 3, p. 90). She felt the need of help from
		others in the preparation of her manuscripts for publication. W. C. White
		describes the boundaries that his mother set for her workers:
"Mother's copyists are entrusted with the work of correcting
		  grammatical errors, of eliminating unnecessary repetitions, and of grouping
		  paragraphs and sections in their best order. . . .
"Mother's workers of experience, such as Sisters Davis, Burnham,
		  Bolton, Peck, and Hare, who are very familiar with her writings, are authorized
		  to take a sentence, paragraph, or section from one manuscript and incorporate
		  it with another manuscript where the same thought was expressed but not so
		  clearly. But none of Mother's workers are authorized to add to the manuscripts
		  by introducing thoughts of their own" (W. C. White to G. A. Irwin, May 7,
		  1900).
While the chapters for each book were being prepared, Ellen White was
		constantly consulted, and when the work was completed, it was given to her for
		final approval.
At the age of 75 she explained her work to her sister, Mary:
"Now, my sister, do not think that I have forgotten you; for I have
		  not. You know that I have books to make. My last effort is a book on true
		  education. The writing of this book has been very trying to me, but it is
		  nearly finished. I am now completing the last chapter. This book will not have
		  in it so much matter as there is in some of my larger works, but the
		  instruction it contains is important. I feel the need of help from God
		  continually.
"I am still as active as ever. I am not in the least decrepit. I am
		  able to do much work, writing and speaking as I did years ago.
"I read over all that is copied, to see that everything is as it
		  should be. I read all the book manuscript before it is sent to the printer. So
		  you can see that my time must be fully occupied" (Letter 133,
		  1902).
The Plagiarism Charge
Was Ellen White a plagiarist?
Ellen White often made use of literary sources in communicating her
		messages. In the Introduction to one of her most popular books she wrote:
"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. In narrating the
		experience and views of those carrying forward the work of reform in our own
		time, similar use has been made of their published works" (The Great
		Controversy, p. xii).
Ellen White's use of other authors was not limited to historical or
		geographical material, but included other subject areas as well. Research has
		found that she enriched her writings with choice expressions from her reading
		more extensively than had been known, although the
		amount that has been
		documented thus far is a small percentage (less than 2 percent) when
		measured against her total literary output.
In 1980 Dr. Fred Veltman, at that time the chairman of the Religion Department of 
		Pacific Union College, undertook a detailed analysis of Ellen White's use of 
		literary sources in her book The Desire of Ages, a study which took eight years 
		to complete. Copies of the full 2,561-page report were distributed to Seventh-day 
		Adventist college and university libraries throughout the world. The complete 
		report, including its 100-page summary, is also available online at the General 
		Conference Archives web site: 
		http://docs.adventistarchives.org//doc_info.asp?DocID=1158.
	 (You will need to install the DJVU Plugin to view the document.)
Because she included such selections from other authors in her writings,
		critics have charged Ellen White with plagiarism. But the mere use of another's
		language does not constitute literary theft, as noted by Attorney Vincent L.
		Ramik, a specialist in patent, trademark, and copyright cases. After
		researching about 1,000 copyright cases in American legal history, Ramik issued
		a 27-page legal opinion in which he concluded "Ellen
		White was not a plagiarist, and her works did not constitute copyright
		infringement/piracy." Ramik points out several factors that critics of Ellen
		White's writings have failed to take into account when accusing her of literary
		theft or deceit. 1) Her selections "stayed well within the legal boundaries of
		'fair use.'" 2) "Ellen White used the writings of others; but in the way
		she used them, she made them uniquely her own"--adapting the selections into
		her own literary framework. 3) Ellen White urged her readers to get copies of
		some of the very books she made use of--demonstrating that she did not attempt
		to conceal the fact of her use of literary sources, and that she had no
		intention to defraud or supersede the works of any other author.
Ellen White "did not copy wholesale or without discrimination. What she selected 
  or did not select, and how she altered what she selected" reveals that she used 
  literary sources "to amplify or to state more forcefully her own transcending 
  themes; she was the master, not the slave, of her sources" (Herbert E. Douglass, 
  Messenger of the Lord, p. 461). See also The 
  Truth about the White Lie.
ELLEN G. WHITE'S TEACHINGS
The Use of Different Bible Versions
Did Ellen White use any translations of the Bible other than the King
		James Version?
Yes. While it was Ellen White's custom to use the King James Version,
		she made occasional use of the various English translations that were becoming
		available in her day. She does not, however, comment directly on the relative
		merits of these versions, but it is clear from her practice that she recognized
		the desirability of making use of the best in all versions of the Bible. For
		example, in her book The Ministry of Healing, Ellen White employed eight
		texts from the English Revised Version, 55 from the American Revised Version,
		two from Leeser's translation, and four from Noyes, in addition to seven
		marginal renderings. In her preaching, however, Ellen White preferred to use
		the language of the King James Version as it was the most familiar to her
		listeners.
The Godhead
What did Ellen White believe regarding the Godhead?
Ellen White never used the term "trinity," although she did refer to the
		"three living persons of the heavenly trio" (Evangelism, p. 615). She
		believed in the full deity of Christ, stating that "Christ was God essentially,
		and in the highest sense. He was with God from all eternity, God over all,
		blessed forevermore" (Review and Herald, April 5, 1906). She also
		referred to the Holy Spirit as "the Third Person of the Godhead" (The Desire
		of Ages, p. 671). Her comments, as collected in Evangelism, pages
		613-617, suggest that she believed that the Scriptures taught the existence of
		three co-eternal divine persons.
Did Ellen White believe the Holy Spirit is a divine person?
Yes, but at times she used the pronoun "it" when referring to the Holy Spirit. 
  Several statements regarding the personality of the Holy Spirit are collected 
  in Evangelism, pages 616, 617. In 1906, for example, she wrote, "The 
  Holy Spirit has a personality, else He could not bear witness to our spirits 
  and with our spirits that we are the children of God. He must also be a divine 
  person, else He could not search out the secrets which lie hidden in the mind 
  of God. 'For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which 
  is in him? even so the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God'" 
  [1 Corinthians 2:11] (Evangelism, p. 617). (To view Ellen White's original, 
  unedited draft of this passage,  click here.) 
  See also the PDF document: "Ellen White's Trinitarian 
  Statements: What Did She Actually Write?
The Age of the Earth
Did Ellen White believe the earth to be about 6,000 years
		old?
Ellen White rejected the idea that "the world has existed for tens of
		thousands of years." She accepted the Biblical record that the creation days
		were seven literal 24-hour periods, believing that the world "is now only about
		six thousand years old" (The Spirit of Prophecy, vol. 1, p. 87.) While
		Ellen White stated that she was shown in vision that creation week consisted of
		seven literal days (ibid., p. 85), she did not claim to have received any
		special revelation regarding the specific age of the earth.
The "Seventh Millennium Theory" and Time-setting
Did Ellen G. White teach that Jesus will return at the beginning of
		the seventh millennium?
Ellen White believed the earth's age to be about six thousand years.
		(See question above, "The Age of the Earth.") She also expected to see Jesus
		return in her day. Thus, when describing future events connected with the end
		of time, she could write of Satan's ruinous reign having lasted for six
		thousand years. (See The Great Controversy, p. 673, for example.)
		Nowhere in her writings, however, did Ellen White refer to a divine timetable
		of seven millennia corresponding to the creation week. She consistently opposed
		any efforts to calculate the date (day or year) of Christ's return. She wrote,
		"Again and again have I been warned in regard to time setting. There will never
		again be a message for the people of God that will be based on time"
		(Selected Messages, book 1, p. 188). And, "Anyone who shall start up to
		proclaim a message to announce the hour, day, or year of Christ's appearing,
		has taken up a yoke and is proclaiming a message that the Lord has never given
		him" (Review and Herald, September 12, 1893).
THE ELLEN G. WHITE ESTATE, INC.
What is the Ellen G. White Estate?
Origin
 Organization
 Relationship to the General Conference
 The Work of the White Estate
 Branch Offices and Research Centers
 Use of Ellen G. White Manuscript Materials
 Officers of the Board
 How to
		Contact the Ellen G. White Estate 
[Material adapted slightly from the Seventh-day Adventist
		Encyclopedia, second revised edition (Hagerstown, Md.: Review and Herald
		Publishing Association, 1996), vol. A-L, pp. 503-506.]
The Ellen G. White Estate, Incorporated, is
		an organization created by the last will and testament of Ellen G. White to act
		as her agent in the custody of her writings, handling her properties,
		"conducting the business thereof," "securing the printing of new translations,"
		and the "printing of compilations from my manuscripts." Her will, dated Feb. 9,
		1912 (printed in its entirety as Appendix Q in F. D. Nichol's Ellen G. White
		and Her Critics), named five church leaders to serve as a board of
		trustees: Arthur G. Daniells, president of the General Conference; William C.
		White, her son; Clarence C. Crisler, a secretary; Charles H. Jones, manager of
		the Pacific Press; and Francis M. Wilcox, editor of the Review and
		Herald. Four of the five were members of the Executive Committee of the
		General Conference.
Appointment of the trustees was for life, Ellen White providing that "if
		a vacancy shall occur for any reason among said trustees, or their successors,
		a majority of the surviving or remaining trustees are hereby empowered and
		directed to fill such vacancy by the appointment of some other fit person"; or
		if this provision were to fail, the General Conference Executive Committee
		should appoint someone to fill such a vacancy. The will dedicated the major
		portion of the existing and potential royalty incomes from her books to the
		work of the trustees. (For additional information, see Appendix B, "The
		Settlement of Ellen G. White's Estate," in volume 6 of A. L. White's biography
		of Ellen White, Ellen G. White: The Later Elmshaven Years.)
At the death of Ellen White, July 16, 1915, this self-perpetuating board
		began to function. It soon sold Ellen White's real estate, consisting mainly of
		Elmshaven, her home property near St. Helena, California, then began the
		continued care of her literary properties. Under the terms of the will, such
		responsibilities fell into three areas: (1) possession of the copyrights to her
		writings and the care and promotion of her books in the English language; (2)
		preparation of manuscripts for, and the promotion of the translation and
		publication of her writings in other languages; and (3) custody of the files of
		manuscripts and other files, and the selection of matter from the Ellen G.
		White manuscript files for publication. The board now carries a fourth
		responsibility, which has developed naturally through the years--acquainting
		Seventh-day Adventists and others with Mrs. White and her work.
Organization.  The Original
		Board. When the board was organized in 1915, A. G. Daniells served as
		president. The secretaryship, after being held for a short time by C. C.
		Crisler, passed to W. C. White, the only member of the board devoting full time
		to the work of the trustees. He filled this office until his death in 1937.
		From 1915 to 1937 the work was carried on at Elmshaven in a rented office
		building with a vault that was used to house the Ellen G. White materials.
During the 19 years they worked together, the original members, in
		addition to routine tasks, (1) published 10 posthumous compilations (for an
		annotated bibliography of the Ellen G. White books, see White, Ellen G.,
		Writings of, and Appendix D in the Comprehensive Index to the Writings of
		Ellen G. White); (2) produced an 865-page Comprehensive Index to the
		Writings of Ellen G. White, published in 1926; (3) carried forward the
		thorough indexing of the Ellen G. White manuscript files; and (4) in counsel
		with the leading officers of the General Conference in 1933 and 1934, laid the
		foundation for continuing the trusteeship in perpetuity. The steps taken to
		ensure the perpetuation of the trusteeship were: (a) in 1933 the
		trustees, as the constituency, formed a corporation under the laws of the state
		of California "to carry out and perform the provisions of the charitable trust
		created by the last will and testament of Ellen G. White deceased"; (b)
		the General Conference agreed to provide adequate financial support for the
		work of the trustees in the form of an annual budget; the trustees, in turn,
		assigned to the General Conference all royalty incomes produced by the Ellen G.
		White books; (c) it was agreed to move the property and work of the
		trustees at some appropriate future time to Washington, D.C., thus placing it
		close to the world headquarters of the church.
Period of Transition. When three of the original trustees
		died--one in 1935 and two in 1936--the vacancies were filled in harmony with
		the provisions of the will and the bylaws of the 1933 corporation. The
		full-time secretary, W. C. White, died on Sept. 1, 1937. He was replaced by his
		son, Arthur L. White, who for nine years had served as his secretary and for
		four years as assistant secretary of the White Estate. The work of the White
		Estate was moved to the General Conference, Washington, D.C., in January,
		1938.
Present Organization. With the demands upon them increasing
		steadily with the growth of the church and numerous constituencies to be
		represented, in 1950 the trustees increased the board's membership from five to
		seven, and in 1958 amended the bylaws of the corporation to provide for a
		constituency and board of nine, seven to be life members and two to be elected
		for a term corresponding to that of General Conference elected personnel
		(originally four years, but now five). In 1970 the board was increased to 11;
		in 1980, to 13; and, in 1985, to 15. The number of life members is currently
		five. At quinquennial meetings the board also elects the secretary and
		associate secretaries, as well as officers of the corporation, as provided for
		in the bylaws.
Relationship to General Conference.
		Through the years a close working relationship has obtained between the White
		trustees and the General Conference. Most of the trustees are members of the
		General Conference Executive Committee. Various matters, such as promoting the
		overseas publication of the Ellen G. White material, appropriation of funds to
		assist in the foreign language publication of Ellen G. White books, and overall
		planning of Spirit of Prophecy promotion, including preparation of materials
		for the annual Spirit of Prophecy Sabbath, although intimately related to the
		work of the White trustees, are beyond the sphere of their direct
		responsibility. These are handled by the General Conference Committee through a
		sub-committee known as the Spirit of Prophecy Committee. This committee
		includes several of the White trustees. The duties of this subcommittee and the
		working relationship between the General Conference Committee and the White
		Estate are currently set forth in a joint agreement adopted by the General
		Conference Committee and the White Estate trustees on Oct. 10, 1957. There is
		an interlocking and at times overlapping of responsibilities; nevertheless, a
		smooth and efficient working relationship between the two organizations is
		maintained.
The Work of the White Estate. Routine
		Work. The paid staff members: (1) safeguard and maintain the records in the
		custody of the trustees, and the indexes thereto, in such a manner as to serve
		the church; (2) handle the copyrights to the Ellen G. White works; (3) conduct
		such research in these works and the related historical materials as may be
		called for; (4) respond to questions that may be directed to the White Estate
		in personal interviews and in a worldwide correspondence; (5) assemble, when
		authorized by the trustees, materials for compilations from Ellen G. White's
		writings; (6) foster, in conjunction with the Spirit of Prophecy Committee, the
		ever-widening publication of these writings in various languages and at times
		make selections or abridgments as called for and authorized; (7) fill
		assignments in church, institutional, and field visitation as the needs and
		best interests of the advancing work of the church require; (8) conduct tours
		of historical sites of denominational interest, especially in the New England
		states; and (9) prepare articles, correspondence lessons, and text
		materials.
Productions of special value to the church include the four-volume
		Comprehensive Index to the Writings of Ellen G. White (1962, 1992); the
		six-volume facsimile reprints of the Ellen G. White Present Truth and
		Review and Herald articles; the four-volume Ellen G. White Signs of
		the Times articles; the Ellen G. White Youth's Instructor articles;
		the Periodical Resource Collection volumes; the six-volume biography of Ellen
		G. White, by A. L. White; and The Published Writings of Ellen G. White on
		Compact Disc (CD-ROM), a tool of inestimable value to users of
		computers.
Branch Offices and Research Centers.  The
		White Estate maintains three branch office research centers--at Andrews
		University, Berrien Springs, Michigan, at Loma Linda University, Loma Linda,
		California, and at Oakwood College, Huntsville, Alabama. These offices contain
		duplicates of the Ellen G. White documents and other historical materials
		housed in the main office at General Conference headquarters. Beginning in
		1974, the White Estate also has set up Ellen G. White-SDA Research Centers on
		the campuses of 11 Seventh-day Adventist colleges and universities outside
		North America, in the countries of Argentina, Australia, Brazil, England,
		India, Korea, Mexico, Nigeria, Philippines, Russia, and South Africa.
Use of Ellen G. White Manuscript Materials. 
		During the later years of her life, Ellen G. White often drew upon her unique
		50,000-page manuscript file in the preparation of published works. The White
		trustees have continued to draw upon this for the compilations made since her
		death. These manuscripts constitute an invaluable basic file of historical
		records and of counsel to the church. The copyright of these manuscripts
		resides solely with the White trustees.
While all of Ellen White's writings are available for research, the
		unpublished letters, manuscripts, and other materials in the Ellen G. White
		files do not constitute a public archive. The sacred nature of the files
		generally and the confidential nature of many of the communications in the
		files require that they be cared for and used responsibly. Even manuscripts
		whose primary value is historical in nature must not be used in a solely
		secular manner. "Spiritual things are spiritually discerned" (The Desire of
		Ages, p. 55; see also 1 Cor. 2:14). Because of this, during the first few
		decades following Ellen White's death, careful policies governing the use and
		release of unpublished materials were set up, ultimately resulting in the
		publication of 21 volumes known as Manuscript Releases. In recent years
		the earlier restrictive policies have been adapted to accommodate the needs of
		increased research.
Officers of the Board. The two chief
		officers of the board are the chair and the secretary. The chair is also
		president of the corporation. The secretary serves not only as secretary of the
		board but as executive secretary of the organization, being responsible for the
		day-to-day operations of the office and staff. Beginning in 1915, when the
		terms of Ellen G. White's will went into effect, the White Estate has had 10
		chairs and six secretaries.
Chairs: A. G. Daniells, 1915-1935; J. E. Fulton, 1935-1936; J. L.
		Shaw, 1936-1937; F. M. Wilcox, 1938-1944; M. E. Kern, 1944-1951; D. E. Rebok,
		1952; A. V. Olson, 1952-1963; F. D. Nichol 1963-1966; W. P. Bradley, 1966-1980;
		Kenneth H. Wood, 1980- .
Secretaries: William C. White, 1915-1937; Arthur L. White,
		1937-1978; Robert W. Olson, 1978-1990; Paul A. Gordon, 1990-1995; Juan Carlos
		Viera, 1995-2000; James R. Nix, 2000- .
How to Contact the Ellen G. White
		Estate
Ellen G. White Estate
 12501 Old Columbia Pike
 Silver Spring, MD
		20904-6600 U.S.A.
 Phone: 301 680-6540
 FAX: 301 680-6090
 E-mail:
		[email protected]
 
Ellen G. White Estate Homepage
Selected Issues Regarding Inspiration and the
		Life and Work of Ellen G. White