The Continuum of the 1957 Abomination
on
The Humanity of Jesus Christ
"The
Humanity of the Son of God Is Everything to Us"1
Daniel Ferraz
Therefore we ought to give the more earnest heed to
the things which we have heard, lest at any time we should let them slip. For
if the word spoken by angels was steadfast, and every transgression and
disobedience received a just recompense of reward; how shall we escape, if we
neglect so great salvation? (Hebrews 2:1-3, emphasis supplied)2
INTRODUCTION
When searching for truth in the Word of God, the
“great controversy theme,” the original “war in heaven,” the struggle between
good the evil, the polemic between Christ and Satan (Revelation 12:7-9), must
be the foundation and guide to our reasoning. This theme presents our
implication in this conflict and our freedom to choose on whose side we want to
be. Thus, we are confronted with two counter and opposite ideologies: God’s
truth and the Devil’s lies.3 For example, the insinuations and
arguments that the Devil used to convince a “third” (Revelation 12:4) of the
angels that he was correct in accusing God of being arbitrary, and that the
principles of His sovereign government were self-centred and wrong, must have
been very convincing. But, as successful as his reasoning may have been, it was
skewed, misrepresentative, wrong, and riddled with lies (John 8:44).
An irreconcilable division between two vastly
different and opposite claims and ideologies still remains in the great
controversy theme. It would be inconceivable, therefore, to claim that we need
the Devil’s interpretation of events as to why he was expelled from heaven to
arrive at a ‘balanced view’ of the truth or the ‘complete picture.’ Thus, it would be
ludicrous, to try to combine the claims of the Devil with the claims of God and
profess to have achieved a ‘reasonable view;’ proposing a reconciliation
between the two camps, seeking to bring ‘unity’ from the ‘diversity’ of two
contradictory and opposing claims and ideologies in some sort of amalgamated,
new, middle-of-the-road, 'unprejudiced’ conciliatory, but compromised and
attempted solution!
To argue that opposing
claims are merely different poles of the same truth does not fit the great
controversy theme presented in the Bible. This reasoning is fallacious and
must be discarded. So it is when we seek to discover the truth about sin and
salvation or any other subject. We have what God says and what the Devil says,
and we must faithfully adhere to what God has revealed. If approached humbly,
He will reward us, aided by His Holy Spirit,4
with the ability to clearly distinguish between the two, even though the
philosophical and contrary arguments may seem very compelling and reasonable.
Ultimately, and contrary to Greek philosophy and the
prevailing opinion of the day, truth is absolute,5
belongs to God, and cannot be mixed with the half-truths and lies of the
Devil. In our search for the truth about anything, we must recognise three
things. First, there is ultimately only one source of truth, Jesus Christ, The
Word of God. Second, the claims of God and His Word have been, are, and will
constantly be under attack, and third, there will always seem to be a
convincing counterfeit argument to the truth until the enemy of truth is
finally destroyed (Revelation 20:10, 14).
THE SIN PROBLEM
Definitions of Sin
Sin is a broken relationship
between man and God, a rupture of a face-to-face communion, and dependence upon
the Lifegiver. When Adam and Eve sinned in the Garden
of Eden, they chose to act against the plain directives of the Word of God and
His law of love. As a result, sin and death entered and blighted the human
experience (Genesis 3).6
Consequently, sin has fundamentally two components: 1) the
weakening effect of Adam’s transgression, passed down to us through the law of
heredity7 in a fallen, sinful, sin-prone human nature, of which none
are guilty,8 and 2) our own sinful acts, for which we are
responsible and liable. Scripture says that when we commit acts of sin, this is
because we choose to respond to the pull and “lust of the flesh” of our own
unregenerate, sin-polluted human heart (James 1:12-15, 27; Joshua 24:15;
Psalm119:11).
The Bible clearly defines sinful acts and their
consequence, if unrepented of: “Whosoever committeth sin transgresseth
also the law: for sin is the transgression of the law” (1 John 3:4,
emphasis supplied). “The wages of sin in death” (Romans
6:23). “Whatever is not of faith is sin” (Romans 14:23). We choose to
sin. This occurs when we are deceived by a desire for short-lived (Hebrews
11:25), perverted, self-gratifying pleasure and disobey God’s law contained in
His Word. Thus, we come under the influence and control of the Devil. Sinning
feeds and strengthens the carnal nature and the lust of the fallen human sinful
flesh. In and of ourselves we are powerless to overcome this vicious cycle
unless we turn to Jesus Christ our sin substitute and example in the great
controversy.
Original Sin
When we choose to break the law of God, it follows
that we are guilty only of our own transgression. Therefore, the only thing we
inherited from the fall of Adam, and as a consequence of his fall, is aweakened human nature, the fallen sinful flesh. However, in no way do we receive any guilt
from, or deserve any punishment for, Adam’s sin. To believe this, would be
contrary to the united testimony of Scripture and would necessitate accepting
Roman Catholic, as well as the Protestant teaching of the dogma of “original
sin.”9
Subsequently, we would be compelled to believe in and
practice the error of infant baptism or christening. But newborn babies cannot
be guilty of Adam’s sin. Neither can they be condemned for his transgression.
Moreover, they cannot be guilty and damned for that which they have had no
knowledge.
Take for example the people of Israel. Because of
their own sin, murmuring, disbelief, and rebellion, they were forbidden entry
into the Promised Land. However, their innocent children were allowed entry
because they were not able to decide, neither participate in their parents’
sin. “Moreover your little ones, which ye said should be a prey, and your
children, which in that day had no knowledge between good and evil, they shall
go in thither, and unto them will I give it, and they shall possess it”
(Deuteronomy 1:39, emphasis supplied).10 Ellen G. White affirmed this in the
following statement: “As the little infants come forth immortal from their
dusty beds, they immediately wing their way to their mothers’ arms. They meet
again nevermore to part. But many of the little ones have no mother there. We
listen in vain for the rapturous song of triumph from the mother. The angels
receive the motherless infants and conduct them to the tree of life.11
Note by Ron: There “appears” to be some discrepancy
between the above statement as regards little children and the following
statement. It could be due to the intercessory prayers of others, including the
fathers of such children. Some fathers will be saved while some mothers will
not be saved. End note.
"I know that some questioned whether the little children of even
believing parents should be saved, because they have had no test of character
and all must be tested and their character determined by trial. The question is
asked, "How can little children have this test and trial?" I answer that the faith of the believing parents
covers the children, as when God sent His judgments upon the first-born of the
Egyptians." {3SM 313.4} End note by Ron.
The Word of God
nowhere mentions, neither does it teach “original sin.” It never teaches that
anyone is guilty and deserves condemnation or death because of the sins or
crimes committed by someone else (Ezekiel 18:2-4, 20; Jeremiah 31:29, 30;
Romans 2:5, 6; 6:23; 1 Corinthians 10:13; Galatians 6:7, 8; Revelation 20:12,
13; 21:8). This would be a monstrous and unjust portrayal of God and
constitutes a position that not even the courts of earth would rightly uphold.
The teaching of “original sin,” stemmed from Greek
paganism,12 and was further channelled by
the Bishop of Hippo in North Africa, Augustine (AD 354-430)—himself greatly influenced
by Greek philosophy—into the Roman Catholic Church and held by the majority of
Protestants since the Augsburg Confession in AD 1530. Today, the dogma relies
primarily on bad exegesis of Psalm 51:5 and inconsistent interpretation of
Romans 5:12, 18, 19 (with the rest of the book of Romans) and with the complete
witness of Scripture. Christians must follow divine revelation over and above
the prevailing and pervasive Roman Catholic Church tradition and Greek
philosophy.
Knowingly or not, it
is the false belief in “original sin,” and the presuppositions that derive from
it, that logically require that Christ assume the human nature of man before
the fall,13 to ostensibly free Him from the presumed guilt
of “original sin.” The next logical step, of course, is accepting the false
belief of the immaculate conception of Mary, the mother of Jesus, so that He
could receive a sinless human nature. If we accept this, then we must go
further and accept that the Roman Catholics are correct in venerating Mary as
the “mother of God,” and even “co-redemptrix.” But
these are hardly positions that Bible believing Christians can substantiate.
False belief about the nature of sin leads to false belief about the nature of
salvation. False belief about the nature of salvation risks keeping people
lost.
Note by Ron: God’s Word says that those who do not
believe that Jesus came in the likeness of sinful flesh are antichrist. And so they
are. If Christ is FULLY MAN, He must be like us except that He did not yield to
any temptation to sin. He has provided the same grace (Holy Spirit Power—Rom.
1:5), so that we may avoid sinning. End note.
The dogma of “original sin” is anti-Christian,14 in that it goes against, and seeks to stand
in the place of, the true teachings the Bible regarding the human nature of
Christ. So, inevitably we must concede that whatever conclusion is reached
regarding the effect of the fall of Adam (and the nature of the sin transmitted
in that fall), will also logically determine our conclusions on the human
nature of Jesus Christ.15
Note by Ron: Questions on Doctrines stated
flat out that Christ took the nature of Adam BEFORE the fall. The new annotated
edition of QOD is no better because it states that Christ did not have the
nature of Adam BEFORE or AFTER the fall. This position is antichrist as well.
End note.
GOD’S WORD SAYS CHRIST
TOOK THE FALLEN HUMAN NATURE OF MAN
In the fullness of time: “The SON of man16
is come to save that which was lost” (Matthew 18:11). “Jesus Christ, the son of
David, the son of Abraham” (Matthew 1:1), “the Word was made flesh” (John
1:14), was “made of a woman” (Galatians 4:4). He was “of the seed of David
according to the flesh” (Romans 1:3), “but he took on him the seed of Abraham”
(Hebrews 2:16). He also “took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in
the likeness of men . . . in fashion as a man” (Philippians 2:7, 8), “in the
likeness of sinful flesh” (Romans 8:3); thus, “God was manifest in the flesh”
(1 Timothy 3:16).17 What kind of flesh?
Taken simply and as it reads, the Word of God gives a clear, unequivocal
answer:
Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh
and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the
same; that through death he might destroy him who had the power of death, that
is, the devil; and deliver them…for verily He took not on him the nature of
angels, but he took on him the seed of Abraham. Wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his brethren . .
. For in that he himself has suffered being tempted, he is able to succour them
that are tempted. (Hebrews 2:14-18, emphasis supplied)
Question: How “much” are the fallen children that
Jesus came to save partakers of fallen human flesh and blood?
Answer: Completely.
Jesus “also, himself, likewise, took part of the same”
fallen, weakened, sin-affected, sin-infected, human nature, that by total
dependence and reliance upon the Father, He could kill sin’s power by paying
sin’s wages, death on the cross in the human body of His sin-weakened, fallen
human nature.
He became one of us18
in that he took on, at His incarnation (or “en-flesh-ment”),
the same weakened, fallen, human raw material—“sinful flesh” (Romans 8:3) that
we have as a result of the fall.19 Sinless
human nature before the fall could not die, but sinful human flesh after the
fall could die. That’s the kind of
human nature, “sinful flesh,” that the Bible teaches Jesus assumed at His
incarnation and finally to His death on the cross.
This condescension toward us, and identification with
His “converted brethren,” is so amazing, that Paul has to repeat it: “For
verily he
took not on him the nature of angels [that is, of an un-fallen being], but he took on him
the seed of Abraham” (Hebrews 2:16, emphasis supplied). When did Abraham live?
After the fall!20 And in case we
still did not get it, Paul soars to a crescendo of repetition, “Wherefore in
all things it behoved him to be made like unto his brethren” (Hebrew 2:17, emphasis
supplied). How many times do we have to say that Jesus took on sin-affected
humanity, sinful human flesh, as it was after the fall, to make that truth
clear?
Note by Ron: Satan’s intention in muddying the waters
on this all important doctrine, is that we will not
strive to overcome sin by the aid of the Holy Spirit indwelling the soul, which
gives power for obedience, Romans 1:5. Satan desires that we become lost as he
is. End note.
This text does not infer that Jesus committed acts of
sin. If this were so, He would not have been able—by taking flesh and blood
(from His human mother Mary)—to “destroy him that had the power of death, that
is, the devil” (Hebrews 2:14). Furthermore, the reality that Jesus “suffered
being tempted” (Hebrews 2:18) underlines the fact that He refused and resisted,
by the power of God, to commit any sinful act. This being indisputably the
case, we are assured later in the epistle to the Hebrews that “we have not a
high priest which cannot be touched with the feelings of our infirmities [of
the flesh]; but was in all points
tempted like as we are, yet without sin” (Hebrews 4:15, emphasis supplied).
At His incarnation, Christ took on the fallen weakened
nature of humanity, the “sinful flesh,” the same humanity of the men and women
He came to save. That was the whole
point of Him condescending to become a man. Biblically, it cannot be
otherwise. It was this truth that prepared, and enabled Jesus Christ, “to save
us unto the uttermost” (Hebrews 7:25), which means to save us completely from
the power of our sinful flesh, and thus to cease from sin (2 Timothy 2:19).
Note by Ron: If “likeness of human flesh” does not
mean like our sinful flesh, then it means NOTHING! End note.
Scripture says that, in our fallen human nature, if we
daily surrender ourselves to the Lordship of Christ, we are converted
Christians. We no longer are overcome by Satan through the weakness of our
fallen human nature, but under the power of the Spirit through faith in Christ.
We have been changed “from darkness to light,” we have been converted, changed
from being under the power of Satan to the power of God (Acts 26:18). “This I
say then, Walk in the Spirit, and ye
shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh” (Galatians 5:16, emphasis supplied).
This is the extent of God’s plan
of salvation, which is how far and how low He was prepared to go in order to
save us from the power of our fallen sinful nature. This is achieved because
Jesus took on the same “sinful flesh” of the fallen human nature to which we
are subjected and defeated the power of sin in that same fallen, human, sinful
flesh. As Jesus relied on and received God’s strength to do all that He did,21 so we, can in complete surrender to Christ,
experience victory and Salvation from sin:
There is therefore now no condemnation to those who
are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit. For the
law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has made me free from the law of sin
and death. For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the
flesh, God sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh,22 and for sin, condemned sin in the
flesh: that the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not
after the flesh, but after the spirit. (Romans 8:1-4, emphasis supplied).
We are to be transformed and transferred from the
power of Satan (exercised through the flesh of our fallen human nature) to the
power of Christ, in the spirit of the mind of the new man created in Christ.
This is the true effect upon believers and the real nature of “so great
salvation,” from God on those, “his brethren,” unto whom Jesus was not afraid
to be made like.
CONTEMPORY
THEOLOGIANS: FALLEN HUMAN NATURE OF CHRIST
All Christians acknowledge the concept that the Son of
Man took on human nature, which is why He was called the son of MAN, as well as
the Son of GOD. But the vital question is, what kind
of human nature did Christ adopt at His incarnation? Did he adopt the pure,
perfect sinless human nature God created before the fall (pre-lapsarian)? Or did Jesus assume the human nature of the
humanity He was incarnated to save—the nature of man affected, weakened, and
degraded by the fall (post-lapsarian)?
It may be surprising to many that the most eminent
Protestant theologians of the second half of the twentieth century, such as
Karl Barth, Emil Brunner, Rudolf Bultmann, Oscar Cullmann, J. A. T. Robinson, etc., have openly declared
Christ’s human nature to be that of man after
the fall.23
Karl Barth, for example, after affirming that Jesus
Christ is “truly God,” skilfully articulated the extent to which Christ’s human
nature is like ours, affected by the fall of Adam:
He [Jesus] was not a sinful man. But inwardly and
outwardly His situation was that of a sinful man. He did not commit the sin of
Adam. But He lived the human life in the very condition to which it had been
limited by the sin of Adam. Remaining guiltless, He took on the consequences of
the guilt of Adam and the consequences of the guilt of us all. Freely He
entered into solidarity and necessary association with our fallen and lost
existence. This was the cost to be paid so there “could” be Divine revelation
and reconciliation for us all.24
It is of critical importance to note that Barth
arrived at and based such declarations on the Bible, the letters of Paul,
especially the book of Hebrews. He used what God has revealed, to formulate his
understanding, definition, and description of the human nature that Christ
adopted at His incarnation. Having thus satisfactorily supported his
conclusions, Barth added:
“Be it as it may [or, Whatever
the case may be], one fact remains, that must be neither weakened, nor
obscured: that is that the [human] nature taken on by God in Christ is
identical to our nature, that of men placed under the banner of the fall. If
this were not the case, then how could Christ be like one of us? And in what way would He have been of
interest to us? Therefore, the Son of God, not only took our nature, but He
entered into the condition of our distress as men condemned, fallen and
separated from God. The only way He differed from us all: is that He did not
take part in the revolt against God; He was scarred by our guilt, but did not
participate in the sin that caused it; and He was made sin, without having
committed sin. All this however, should in no way prevent us from recognising,
without restriction or reservation of any kind, that He was completely made one
with us, and nothing that is human was foreign to Him.”25
The manner in which these and other theologians state
their case for the fallen human nature of Christ should not startle us and lead
us to believe that they overstate their case, and thus err. It is easy to get this
impression, given that we have had greater exposure to the now pervasive Roman
Catholic Christology. It proliferates the pre-fallen
human nature of Christ through astute and highly refined propaganda and
communication modes that have infiltrated widely all levels of higher learning
with their thought-systems.
ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF
CONSISTENT ADVENTIST WITNESS
In his book, Touched
With Our Feelings: A Historical Survey of Adventist Thought on the Human
Nature of Christ (translated from the original title in French), the late Jean
R. Zurcher, French-speaking Swiss scholar and church
administrator, provided a unique and exhaustive record, from 1844 to 1994, a
century and a half of official Adventist church documents and position
statements on the human nature of Christ. During 100 years, 1852-1952,
Adventists taught the postfall human nature of Jesus
Christ as the undisputed official Adventist position.
Zurcher then revealed how the
change took place, and the utter chaos
and theological confusion that have crept into the SDA Church from 1952 to the
present day through the changed, anti-biblical and essentially Roman Catholic
teaching.26 Today, a majority of Protestants, and increasingly
(for the most part, unwittingly) in the SDA Church today, have accepted that
Christ took the human nature of Adam before the fall.
Consistent with the official Adventist position, the
“holy flesh movement,” established between 1898 and 1899 in Adventist churches
in the Indiana Conference and founded by Pastor/Evangelist S. S. Davis (and
favoured by the entire Indiana Conference Committee), was rightly condemned by
the General Conference leaders and Ellen G. White, as it wrongly “asserted that
Christ had taken Adam’s pre-fall nature and that He therefore possessed ‘holy
flesh.’”27
SPIRIT OF PROPHECY:
THE CHRISTOLOGY OF ELLEN G. WHITE
The humanity of the
Son of God is everything to us. This is the Golden chain that binds our souls to Christ, and through Christ to God. This is to be our study.
Christ was a real man; He gave proof of His humility in becoming a man. Yet He
was God in the flesh. When we approach this subject, we would do well to heed
the words spoken by Christ to Moses at the burning bush, “Put off thy shoes
from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest
is holy ground.”
We should come to this study with the humility of a
learner, with a contrite heart. And the study of the incarnation of Christ is a
fruitful field, which will repay the searcher who digs deep for hidden truth.28
In Christ were united the human and the divine. His
mission was to reconcile God to man, to unite the finite with the infinite.
This was the only way in which fallen men could be partakers of the divine
nature. Taking human nature fitted Christ to understand man’s trials and sorrows,
and all the temptations wherewith he is beset. Angels who were unacquainted
with sin could not sympathize with man in his particular trials. Christ
condescended to take man’s nature and was tempted on all points like as we,
that He might know how to succor all who should be tempted.29
The great work of redemption could be carried out only
by the redeemer taking the place of fallen Adam. With the sins of the world
laid upon Him, He would go over the ground where Adam stumbled. He would bear
the test which Adam failed to endure, and which would be almost infinitely more
severe than that brought to bear upon Adam. He would overcome on man’s account,
and conquer the tempter, that through His obedience, His purity of character
and steadfast integrity, His righteousness might be
imputed to man, that through His name man might overcome the foe on his own
account.
What love! What amazing condescension! The King of
glory proposed to humble Himself to fallen humanity!
He would place His feet in Adam’s steps. He would take
man’s fallen nature and engage to cope with the strong foe who
triumphed over Adam. He would overcome Satan, and in thus doing He would open
the way for the redemption of those who would believe on Him from the disgrace
of Adam’s failure and fall. (1874), Review & Herald, Feb. 24, emphasis supplied. The point
of these statements, referring to Christ’s humility in assuming fallen humanity30
is consistent with Scripture:
To clearly emphasize that in His saving work for
mankind, Jesus needed to reach man in his fallen status, so that He could be
both our substitute and example, thus showing man the way to gain victory over
sin.
To clearly emphasize that as a man, Jesus had no
advantage over us—the same divine power to overcome sin that was available to
Him is also available to us because it has the same source—that of His and our
loving heavenly Father. He proved this, by taking our same fallen, sinful
flesh.
Ellen G. White remained consistent with Scripture by maintaining
that even as a human baby and child, Jesus still had no advantage over us:
Even the babe in its mother’s arms may dwell as under the shadow of the Almighty, through the
faith of the praying mother. John the Baptist was filled with the Holy Spirit
from his birth. If we live in communion with God, we too may expect the divine
Spirit to mold our little ones, even from their earliest moments.31
Jesus was placed where His character would be tested.
It was necessary for Him to be constantly on guard in order to preserve His
purity. He was subject to all the conflicts which we have to meet, that He
might be an example to us in childhood, youth, and manhood.32
In studying E. G. White statements on any topic, it is
important to realise that “depending on the circumstances and the specific
point under consideration, the same concepts are sometimes presented so
differently that they sometimes may appear contradictory.” So, as in basic
sound exegesis, context is vital, and we must “avoid the temptation to rely on
isolated statements.”33
Misuse of the unpublished personal “Baker Letter”
(written in 1895 and discovered in 1955) to ensure that he not give the
impression that Christ partook in sin itself, is a case in point. This letter
is frequently quoted with the following valuable statement omitted:34 “The exact time when humanity blended with
divinity, it is not necessary for us to know. We are to keep our feet on the
Rock, Christ Jesus, as God revealed in humanity.”35
It should be remembered and is well stated by David
Qualls: “That a few paragraphs from the unpublished, handwritten letter to an
individual, of whom little is known regarding his teachings in this area, when
stacked up against her voluminous, undeniably clear statements in
well-publicized works such as The Desire
of Ages [her complete and published explanation of Christ and His life],
provide little reason to change the course of history in the Adventist teaching
on this subject. Nevertheless, that is what happened.”36
SHIFT IN ADVENTIST
TEACHING
Preparing the Way
To shift the Seventh-day Adventist Church from its
consistently held official position from 1852 to 1952 on the fallen human
nature of Christ represented a formidable task. Herbert Douglass, eye witness37
to the events and experienced theologian calls it, the colliding of “two
Tectonic Plates,” and, an attempt to merge two theologies (Calvinism and the
Adventist form of Arminianism) that had a “Grand
Canyon between” them.38 The impossible was
being attempted.
In 1957, the events that led to open propagation of
the Questions on Doctrine (QOD), the
counter-Adventist interpretation on Christ’s human nature, are clearly stated
but not so widely known in Adventism today. They had remained somewhat secluded
in a few historic, yet revealing Adventist books of 1957 and 1970.39
One of the strongest and most active proponents of
this “theological earthquake,” of the new anti-Adventist interpretation,
proposing the pre-fall human nature of Christ, was LeRoy Edwin Froom.40 Froom has
recorded these leading events in some detail.41 Indeed, he admits
these initial movements “led the way in
corrective undertaking,”42 in an attempt lift from us the
handicap43 “of certain early published and unrepudiated
statements concerning the Eternal
Verities.”44 Froom was referring to
statements in Adventist literature such as Bible
Readings for the Home, which taught the official Adventist position on the
fallen human nature of Christ. This
position, Froom refers to as a “misconception,”45
a “last standing vestige of Arianism,”46 something “regrettable” and that needed “expunging.”47
As if the truth, which was gained at high cost and held so long, should now be
squashed under foot as if it were some loathsome insect!
In January 1955, in an editorial note in Our Hope, Dr. E. Schuyler English stated
that Seventh-day Adventists are a church that “disparages the work and person
of Christ.” The basis for this “misconception,” Froom
stated, was that Dr. English understood Adventists to hold that Christ, during
his incarnation, “‘partook of our sinful fallen nature.’ In this expression he
was clearly alluding to the then oft-cited note in the old edition of Bible Readings.”48
This supposedly “infamous” note quoted in Bible Readings for the Home Circle, I
can read from my own, 1915 Stanborough Press,
Limited, Watford, Hertfordshire, (England) edition.
Under the heading, “A Sinless Life,”
on pages 173, and 174.49 The first four questions
establish that Christ committed no sin though He was tempted just as we are as
indicated in the following questions and answers:
5. In His humanity, of what nature did Christ
partake?
“Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh
and blood, He also Himself likewise took part of the same; that through death
He might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the Devil.” Heb.
2:14.
6. How fully did Christ share our common
humanity?
“Wherefore in all things it behoved Him to be made
like unto His brethren, that He might be a merciful and faithful high priest in
things pertaining to God, to make reconciliation for the sins of the people.” Verse 17. [Now, here comes the note!]
NOTE. – In His humanity Christ partook of our sinful,
fallen nature. If not, then He was not “made like unto His brethren,” and was
not “in all points tempted like as we are,” did not overcome as we have to
overcome, and is not, therefore, the complete and perfect Saviour man needs and
must have to be saved. The idea that Christ was born of an immaculate or
sinless mother, inherited no tendencies to sin, and for this reason did not
sin, removes from Him the realm of a fallen world, and from the very place
where help is needed. On his human side, Christ inherited just what every child
of Adam inherits,—a sinful nature. On the divine side, from His very conception
He was begotten and born of the Spirit. And
all this was done to place mankind on vantage-ground, and to demonstrate that in the same way everyone
who is “born of the Spirit” may gain like victories over sin in his own sinful
flesh. Thus each one is to overcome
as Christ overcame. Rev. 3:21. Without this birth there can be no victory over
temptation, and no salvation from sin. John 3:3-7.
7. Where did God, in Christ, condemn sin, and
gain the victory for us over temptation and sin?
“For what the law could not do, in that it was weak
through the flesh, God sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and
for sin, condemned sin in the flesh.” Rom. 8:3.
NOTE.—God, in Christ, condemned sin, not by
pronouncing against it merely as a judge sitting on the judgement-seat, but by
coming and living in the flesh, in sinful flesh, and yet without sinning. In
Christ, He demonstrated that it is possible, by His grace and power, to resist
temptation, overcome sin, and live a sinless life in sinful flesh.50
The official Adventist position on the human nature of
Christ, presented above, and in other Adventist literature, does not rely on
“regrettable statements still lingering in a few of our books”51 as Froom and others would have us believe. But it was, and is
based, as has always been the case, upon solid biblical evidence and sound
Christian doctrine. Nevertheless, this beautiful section of Bible Readings came under the knife to
remove “Christ partook of our sinful, fallen nature,” and even the key Bible
reference of the “sinful flesh” in Romans 8:3.52
Questions on Doctrine
In 1957, the book Seventh-day
Adventists Answer Questions on Doctrine was printed. This book, “easily
qualifies as the most divisive book in Seventh-day Adventist history. A book
published largely to help bring peace between Adventism and conservative Protestantism, its release brought prolonged alienation and
separation to the Adventist factions that grew up around it.”53
Note by Ron: The book QOD, was the first major “book
of a new order,” 1SM 204-205, of new movement, new organization Adventism, and
constituted the beginning of the omega of apostasy in the SDA church because
the human nature of Christ is inseparably linked to the Godhead, and that was
changed as well by the church’s adoption of Rome’s central doctrine, The
Trinity Doctrine, which sweeps away then entire Christian economy. End note by
Ron.
The events that led to the “whole QOD dance”54
were intriguing to say the least. In 1949, Toby E. Unruh, president of the East
Pennsylvania Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, listened to a radio
broadcast by Dr. Donald Grey Barnhouse, and was so
impressed by his presentation of “Righteousness by Faith”, that Unruh wrote Barnhouse a letter telling him so (November 28, 1949). Dr. Barnhouse was surprised that Unruh, a Seventh-day
Adventist, should find his presentation such a blessing, as Barnhouse
knew the Adventist understanding of righteousness by faith to be different from
his Calvinistic evangelical perception.55 So Barnhouse
offered to meet Unruh for lunch. As a basis for their discussion, Unruh sent Barnhouse a copy of Steps
to Christ. After reading the book, Barnhouse
wrote in an Eternity article: with
respect to Righteousness by Faith, this book is “false in all its parts,”
bearing the “mark of a counterfeit” it promoted “universalism…half truths and Satanic error…”56 With that,
Unruh decided not to respond.
Enter Walter Martin, evangelical specialist in
non-Christian cults. He was putting the final touches on his book, The Rise of the Cults, in which he
categorised Seventh-day Adventists as one of the “Big Five”: Jehovah's
Witnesses, Christian Science, Mormons, Un[versalism]ity, and Seventh-day
Adventists.57 But as he felt he needed more research on the
Seventh-day Adventists, he asked Unruh for a meeting with Froom
and top Adventist leaders in Washington, D.C. The rest is history.58
A few pertinent facts need to be highlighted at this
juncture. In the early stages, Froom conducted a poll
of where Adventist leaders stood on the human nature of Christ; “nearly all of
them”59 agreed with the biblical and Spirit of Prophecy teaching
that Jesus took on fallen, sinful flesh at the incarnation, but Froom ignored the poll and pressed ahead.
The “Representative Group of Seventh-day Adventist
Leaders and Bible Teachers and Editors,”60 by which QOD was claimed to
be prepared, comprised, “the QOD trio”: L.
E. Froom, W. E. Reed, R. A. Anderson. Though
respected and capable men, they were not trained theologians, and M. L. Andreasen was excluded. Although retired, he was one of
Adventism’s leading systematic theologians and experts on the book of Hebrews
and biblical atonement.
The four points of doctrinal contention that the
Evangelicals had with Adventists were:
1) that the atonement of Christ is not completed at
the Cross; 2) that salvation is the result of grace and works of the law; 3)
that the Lord Jesus Christ was a created being, and not from all eternity; and
4) that Jesus partook of
man’s sinful fallen nature at the Incarnation.61
Basically, the Evangelicals were saying that if any
denomination believed any of the above points, they would be classified as a
cult. It has to be said that QOD had a lot of Adventist truth in it, and
consequently, the second and third points were adequately rebuffed. QOD,
however, woefully compromised and watered down the first point, as it related
to Christ’s high priestly ministry in the heavenly sanctuary and “final
atonement.” The fourth point was contradicted.
When Barnhouse and Martin discussed with the QOD Trio “the
problem of the Incarnation”62 over the 18 conferences between 1955
and 1956, Martin attested they were
assured that “The majority of the denomination [SDA], has always held (the
nature of Christ while in the flesh) to be sinless, holy, and perfect, despite
the fact that certain of their writers have occasionally gotten into print with
contrary views completely repugnant to the church at large.”63
Compounding the blatant, complete inaccuracy and slander of the above claim was
the equally libellous assertion “declared”64 by the Adventists that “they had among their members a certain number of the
‘lunatic fringe,’ even as there are similar wild-eyed irresponsibles
in every field of fundamental Christianity.”65
In seeking to constrain (in one swoop) the meaning of
hundreds of Ellen G. White statements on the human nature of Jesus, R. A.
Anderson declared, “In only three or four places in all these inspired counsels
have we found such expressions as ‘fallen nature’ and ‘sinful nature.’”66
But he seems to ignore the fact there are copious statements, which clearly convey
the meaning he denies, in just one book, The
Desire of Ages!67 Even in the
limitations of this article, we have demonstrated Anderson’s glaring claim to
be incorrect.
Apparently, QOD did not significantly improve Barnhouse’s perception of Seventh-day Adventists. He is
reported to have said:
All I am saying is that the Adventists are Christians.
I still think their doctrines are about the screwiest of any group of
Christians in the world. I believe this beyond any question. In fact, the
doctrine of the Investigative Judgement is the most blatant face-saving
proposition that ever existed to cover up the debacle of the failure of Christ
to come in 1844 as they said.68
There has been consistent, constant
resistance—consternation, warnings, and solid opposition—levelled at the
compromises on the atonement, the remnant, and the human nature of Christ in
QOD. These have been voiced by, Francis Nichol,69
M. L. Andreasen (cf. his Letters to the Churches),
the inimitable Raymond Cottrell,70 Kenneth Wood, and Herbert
Douglass, just to name a few. The brief was ignored and was not presented to
the delegates.
As laudable as seeking to draw leaders in other
denominations to accept Seventh-day Adventists as “mainline” Christians (in
their estimation) might seem, the process and goal of “Changing the Impaired
Image of Adventism”71 that led to compromise and the watering down
of biblical truth, was an exercise in theology travesty and a repudiation of
true and essential biblical Christology. This was a part played by some of the
subject matter of Questions on Doctrine,
which shifted Seventh-day Adventist belief on key doctrinal counts.72
An example of the extent of the reaction to QOD is
clearly shown by the following “supporting brief” prepared by lawyers for a
proposed resolution to be presented to delegates of the 1958 General Conference
Session in Cleveland, Ohio:
Let it be resolved, that in view of the evidence
presented, the book Seventh-day
Adventists Answer Questions on Doctrine does not represent the faith and
belief of the Seventh-day Adventist Church and is herby
repudiated on the following five points:
1) It
contains specimens of scholastic and intellectual dishonesty.
2) It
contains duplicity.
3) It is
inadequate.
4) It
contains error.
5) It is
Satan’s masterpiece of strategy to defeat the purpose of God for the
Seventh-day Adventist Church.73
Being “accepted” by other denominations, to which we
have been commissioned to proclaim the three angels’ messages of Revelation 14,
has never been a divine mandate of God’s
remnant people so viciously under attack (Revelation 12:17). Preaching the
extent of the love of God in present truth—that of “the everlasting gospel”
(Revelation 14:6), warning that “Babylon…is fallen, is fallen, and is become
the habitation of devils” (Revelation 18:2, emphasis supplied) and proclaiming
the voice of God calling, “Come out of her, my people, lest you share in her
sins, and lest you receive of her plagues” (Revelation 18:4, emphasis supplied)74—however,
is God’s mandate.
The “tectonic shift” in Adventism was openly admitted
and boldly presented as “corrective.” But this was done through questionable
means and methods. There was no sound biblical substantiation for the change, and it leaned upon the skewed presentation
of Ellen White quotations, which were couched in some tendentious headings and
absence of biblical references.75
It was driven chiefly
by the reluctance to being called a cult, and the false sense of security and
satisfaction that come from “being accepted.” Even if, all of this were a
worthy pursuit, the aim was not achieved, as we have seen, and the consequences
to God’s remnant church have been unimaginable. So the whole so-called
“corrective undertaking”76 intended for QOD, and all that surrounded
it, was useless, reprehensible, and itself, is worthy of repudiation, but it
certainly is not worthy of republication after a so-called, 40-year hiatus.
Kenneth Wood, former editor of the Review and Herald and chair of the Ellen
G. White Estate Board of Trustees demonstrated the depth of the implications in
his perceptive comment:
It is my deep
conviction that before the church can proclaim with power God’s last warning
message to the world, it must be united on the truth about Christ’s human
nature.77
CONCLUSION
The Bible says, God’s “so great salvation” and
solution for the great predicament of sin is superior to the problem itself:
the divine Son of God condescended to be born into the fallen human race, lived
a sinless life in “sinful flesh,” and died an undeserving death on the cross to
“condemn sin in the flesh” and set us free from the power of sin in our mortal
body.
The Bible teaches that we inherited the effect, and
not the guilt of, Adam’s sin. Adam transmitted “sinful flesh” to us, a weakened,
fallen, human nature, with an inclination to sin. In this we had no choice, but sinning is our own choice. Rightly
understanding these elements of sin will help us understand the nature of
Christ’s humanity, which will then give us the biblical understanding of what
salvation from sin really is and the workings of conversion. Therefore, the
question: “Was Jesus only our substitute for sin, or was He also our example in
victory over sin?” will be answered correctly.
To find the truth to these questions, we have
fundamentally, two basic theological systems upon which to build. There is the
Roman Catholic/Calvinistic/Evangelical grid, whose predominant claims are: the Augustinian sovereignty of God, we are
all born sinners, need infant baptism, will continue sinning until the Lord
returns, and never gain complete victory over our sins. Romans 7 describes
a converted man; Jesus is only our substitute; salvation is not really our
choice but God’s; Jesus was born with a sinless human nature like Adam’s before
the fall; His human nature was not like ours; He had an advantage over us;
Mary, the mother of Jesus, had to be immaculately conceived.
Therefore, the crucial descriptions of salvation, the
“new birth,” being “born of the spirit,” being a “new creation,” “partaking of
the divine nature,” having Christ “dwell” in us, “righteousness by faith,”
being “holy” as our “father in heaven is holy,” are incapable of being rightly
understood, and consequently, the danger lingers that we remain in our sins.
Then there is the Adventist form of Arminianism, which maintains that we were all born with a
tendency toward sin; however, if we live completely surrendered and dependent
on God as Christ was, we can experience salvation “from” our sins now. Romans 7
describes a legalist and, therefore, an unconverted man, “Christ in you, [is]
the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27). Jesus is our substitute and our example
of victorious living. Salvation depends on our choice; Jesus was born with a
fallen human nature like Adam’s after the fall; His human nature was like ours;
He had no advantages over us; Mary was not immaculately conceived.
Thus, crucial descriptions of conversion can be
rightly understood, the whole Bible takes on a new depth of meaning. The study of
the humanity of the Son of God is everything to us, and it will bring us the
deep reward of understanding and experiencing the vital workings of salvation
from sin.
The context of E. G. White’s personal letter to Pastor
W. L. H. Baker needs to be understood and not used to displace her clear
consistent statements that Christ assumed our human nature weakened by the
fall, as presented in The Desire of Ages.
Confusion in the debate over the
human nature of Christ arises when we are captivated and confused by the
sophistication of human philosophising, and do not keep to what the
Scripture clearly teaches. The issue, is not the divinity of Christ, it is His
humanity. Attempting to resolve the debate over Christ’s human nature cannot be
done by amalgamation of the pre-fall and post-fall interpretations. It is a
question of one or the other.
Quote added by Ron:
"The enemy of souls has sought to bring
in the supposition that a great reformation was to take place among Seventh-day
Adventists, and that this reformation would consist in giving up the doctrines
which stand as the pillars of our faith, and engaging in a process of
reorganization. Were this reformation to take place,
what would result? The principles of truth that God in His wisdom has given to
the remnant church, would be discarded. Our religion
would be changed. The fundamental principles that have sustained the work for
the last fifty years would be accounted as error. A NEW ORGANIZATION would be
established. Books of a NEW ORDER would be written. A system of [HUMAN]
intellectual philosophy would be introduced. The
founders of this system would go into the cities, and do a wonderful work. The
Sabbath of course, would be lightly regarded, as also the God who created it. Nothing
would be allowed to stand in the way of the NEW MOVEMENT. The leaders would
teach that virtue is better than vice, but GOD BEING REMOVED, they
would place their dependence on human power, which, without God, is worthless. Their
foundation would be built on the sand, and storm and tempest would sweep away
the structure.
Who has authority to begin such a [NEW]
movement? We have our Bibles, we have our experience,
attested to by the miraculous working of the Holy Spirit. We have a truth that
admits of no compromise. Shall we not repudiate everything that is not in
harmony with this truth? E.G. White, Selected Messages, Vol. 1, 204, 205.
QOD was the ultimate
Trojan horse that “officially” opened the floodgates of Catholic and
Calvinistic theology into the divinely established Seventh-day Adventist belief
system.
This book effectively seeks to reverse a hundred years of official Adventist
teaching on the fallen human nature of Christ and mute our witness on the
investigative judgement, and the remnant. If ever
there were a “neutering of Adventism,” this is it! And all this was intended to
“help bring peace between Adventism and conservative Protestantism”? But the
price is too high, God’s Truth cannot be contradicted or altered without
impunity (Revelation 22:18, 19)!
As Adventists today, we desperately need to know the
truth about this part of our church history and the changes made to distinctly
Adventist teaching that have crept in as a result (Jude 4). This will help us
understand the internal disunity regarding our Christian standards, our remnant
identity, our prophetic mission and message, the reasons for the delay of
Christ’s second coming, and help us take a clear stand for true Adventism, with
all of its interrelated teachings, and thus be ready for the outpouring of the
Holy Spirit and Christ’s soon return.
Finally, QOD has been the catalyst for an ingeniously
established, untenable, destructive, quick-spirited persecution of those who
seek to keep “the faith which was once delivered to the saints” (Jude 3). Those
Seventh-day Adventists of your church and my church,
who in Christlike manner teach and follow the
teachings of the Bible and the writings of Ellen G. White (especially with
regard to holy living, Christian perfection, and the heath message) too often
have persecution levelled at them, in the form of ridicule, which is consistent
with and akin to the “officially” accepted and established precedent of
“lunatic fringe,” “wide-eyed irresponsibles” and a
collection of similar disparaging terms. This abhorrent behaviour needs to be
repented of and the justification for it repudiated. How the Devil has waged
his war! (Revelation 12:17).
Note by Ron: Apparently Daniel Ferraz
has no concept of Jeremiah 11:9-15, wherein when Israel did the same thing SDA
leaders have done via the 1957 debacle involving QOD, Christ asked the
question:
14 Therefore pray not thou for this people, neither
lift up a cry or prayer for them: for I will not hear them in the time that
they cry unto me for their trouble.
15 What hath my beloved to do in mine house, seeing
she hath wrought lewdness with many, and the holy flesh is passed from thee? when thou doest evil, then thou rejoicest. Jeremiah 11:15.
Apparently Daniel Ferraz has
no knowledge that Ellen White and the apostles prophesied that this situation
would be repeated by God’s once chosen people at this, the end-time:
COUNTERPART: "The Lord commanded one of his ancient servants, 'Pray not thou for
this people [Jer. 7:16 and 11:14], neither
lift up cry nor prayer for them neither make intercession to me for I will not
hear thee.' The prophet thus describes the sins which had called forth this
fearful denunciation: 'The prophets prophesy falsely, and the priests bear rule
by their means and my people love to have it so and what will ye do in the end
thereof?' 'From the least of them even unto the greatest of them, every one is given to covetousness and from the prophet
even unto the priest, every one dealeth falsely. They
have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly, saying, Peace,
peace, when there is no peace.' The apostles declare that this
state of things will find its COUNTERPART in the last days. Many have a form of
godliness, but in their daily life deny the power thereof. They have ceased to
be convicted of their sins or alarmed at their state. They say in their hearts,
'The church is flourishing. Peace and spiritual prosperity are within her
borders.' The words of the prophet may well apply to these self-deceivers,
'They have chosen their own ways, and their soul delighteth in their
abominations. I also will choose their delusions, and will bring their fears
upon them." E. G. White, Second Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, 11-07-82.
The “chosen people” SDA church is the only COUNTERPART to God’s first
“chosen people, the Jews.
Apparently Daniel Ferraz has no knowledge of Christ’s
response and of those who followed Him:
"Christ was a protestant...The Reformers date back to Christ
and the apostles. They came out and separated themselves from a religion of
forms and ceremonies. Luther and his followers did not invent the reformed
religion. They simply accepted it as presented by Christ and the
apostles." E.G. White, Review and Herald, vol. 2, 48, col. 2.
Is not Christ our example?
"The Sanhedrin had rejected Christ's message and was bent
upon His death therefore Jesus departed from Jerusalem, from the priests, the
temple, the religious leaders, the people who had been instructed in the law,
and turned to another class to proclaim His message, and to gather out those
who should carry the gospel to all nations.
As the light and life of men was rejected by the ecclesiastical
authorities in the days of Christ, so it has been rejected in every succeeding
generation. Again and again the history of Christ's withdrawal from Judea has
been repeated. When the Reformers preached the word of God, they had no thought
of separating themselves from the established church but the religious leaders
would not tolerate the light, and those that bore it were forced to seek
another class, who were longing for the truth. In our day few of the professed
followers of the Reformers are actuated by their spirit. Few are listening for
the voice of God, and ready to accept truth in whatever guise it may be
presented. Often those who follow in the steps of the Reformers are forced to
turn away from the churches they love, in order to declare the plain teaching
of the word of God. And many times those who are seeking for light are by the
same teaching obliged to leave the church of their fathers, that they may
render obedience." E.G. White, Desire of Ages, 232.
Paul left
"And as they persisted in their rejection of the gospel the
apostle (Paul) went into the synagogue, and spake
boldly for the space for three months, disputing and persuading the things
concerning the kingdom of God. But when divers were hardened, and believed not,
but spake evil of that way before the multitude, he departed from them, and
separated the disciples, disputing daily in the school of one Tyrannus." Acts, 19:8, 9.
"Fearing that the faith of the believers would be endangered by
continued association with these opposers of the
truth, Paul separated from them, and gathered the disciples into a distinct
body." E.G. White, Acts of the Apostles, p. 286.
"The recreant priests added licentiousness to the dark
catalogue of their crimes yet they still polluted by their presence the
tabernacle of the Lord, and, laden with sin, dared to come into the presence of
a holy God. As the men of Israel witnessed the corrupt course of the priests,
they thought it safer for their families not to come up to the appointed place
of worship. Many went from Shiloh with their peace disturbed, their indignation
aroused, until they at last determined to offer their sacrifices themselves,
concluding that this would be fully as acceptable to God, as to sanction in any
manner the abominations practiced in the Sanctuary." E.G. White, The Signs of the
Times, vol.
1, p. 264, col. 3, December 1, 1881.
"It is IMPOSSIBLE for you to unite with those who are corrupt, and
still remain pure. (II Corinthians 6:14-15 quoted). God and Christ and the
heavenly host would have men know that if he unites with the corrupt he will
become corrupt." E. G. White, Review and Herald, Vol. 4, p. 137.
Apparently Daniel Ferraz believes that
somehow he can unite with the corrupt and still remain pure. If you read this
Daniel, will you write and tell me how it is done in contravention to God’s instruction
that it cannot be so?
Apparently, like Dr. Herb Douglass, Ferraz
believes that QOD is the only apostasy the church is in. But were that true, it
would still be enough because QOD is still antichrist in its teachings on the
human nature of Christ, and that error sweeps away the entire Christian
economy, as does the Trinity Doctrine, which Ferraz
seems oblivious to.
Apparently, like most Adventists, Ferraz is
ignorant of the following prophesy by Ellen G. White:
PROLEPSIS STATEEMNT:
Here is the Spirit of Prophecy prophesied prolepsis
statement regarding the final fate of that once Noble Ship. This is a major
LYNCHPIN to my warning message. Can you explain it away? Are you a passenger on
this once NOBLE SHIP, that is about to sink to rise no more? NOTICE
WHO SEPARATES FROM WHOM:
"Jesus sends HIS PEOPLE a message of warning
to prepare them for his coming. To the prophet John was made known the closing
work in the great plan of man's redemption. He beheld an angel flying 'in the
midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel to preach unto them that
dwell on the earth, and to every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and
people, saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him for the hour
of his Judgment is come and worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the
sea, and the fountains of waters [Rev. 14:6, 7.].
The angel represented in
prophecy as
delivering this message, symbolizes a class of faithful men, who, obedient to the promptings of
God's Spirit and the teachings of his word, proclaim this warning to the
inhabitants of earth. This message
was not to be committed to the religious leaders of the people. They
had failed to preserve their connection with God, and had REFUSED THE LIGHT
FROM HEAVEN therefore they WERE NOT of the number described by the apostle
Paul: 'But ye, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day should overtake you
as a thief. Ye are all the children of light, and the children of the day we
are not of the night nor of darkness' [1 Thess. 5:4,
5].
The watchmen upon the walls of Zion should be the first to catch
the tidings of the Saviour's advent, the first to lift their voices to proclaim
him near, the first to warn the people to prepare for
his coming. But they were at ease, dreaming of peace and safety, while the
people were asleep in their sins. Jesus saw HIS CHURCH, like the barren
fig-tree, covered with pretentious leaves, yet destitute of precious fruit.
There was a boastful observance of the forms of religion, while the spirit of
true humility, penitence and faith--which alone could render the service
acceptable to God--was lacking. Instead of the graces of the Spirit, there were manifested pride, formalism, vainglory, selfishness,
oppression. A BACKSLIDING CHURCH
closed their eyes to the signs of the times. God did nor forsake them, or
suffer his faithfulness to fail but they departed from him, and SEPARATED THEMSELVES from his love. As they REFUSED TO COMPLY WITH THE CONDITIONS, his promises were
NOT FULFILLED to them." E.G. White, The
Spirit of Prophecy, Vol. 4, pp. 199-200 [The 1884 edition of The
Great Controversy, 199, 200].
Note these important delineations in
the above statement:
·
Ellen
White is addressing HIS PEOPLE.
·
Ellen
White is addressing those to whom was committed the EVERLASTING GOSPEL of
Revelation 14.
·
Ellen
White is defining the angel represented in prophecy as symbolizing a class of
faithful men.
·
Ellen
White is saying emphatically that the final Loud Cry message is delivered NOT
BY THE LEADERS OF THE SDA CHURCH, but by a class of faithful men, because
the leaders had failed to preserve their connection with God and had refused
light from heaven!
·
Ellen
White is addressing "watchmen upon the walls of Zion," NOT FALLEN
BABYLON!
·
It is the MEMBERS of
said church that SEPARATE FROM GOD, AND THAT IS WHY WE HAVE TO SEPARATE FROM
THEM OR BE CORPORATELY RESPONSIBLE FOR THEIR APOSTASY.
·
And
twice Ellen White mentions HIS CHURCH, NOT FALLEN BABYLON.
Ellen White is addressing a BACKSLIDING CHURCH whose
leaders and laity alike failed and rejected light from heaven and who
refused to comply with the conditions so that God's promises are not fulfilled
to them. End Ron’s note.
The stakes are extremely high as Zurcher
pointed out:
If we are mistaken
about the human nature of Jesus, we risk being mistaken about every aspect of
the plan of salvation. We may fail to understand the redemptive reality of
the grace bestowed upon humans by Jesus to set humanity free from the power of
sin.
Ellen White, stresses this
fundamental truth: “Christ’s overcoming and obedience is that of a true human
being. In our conclusions, we make many mistakes because of our erroneous views
of the human nature of our Lord. When we give to His human nature a power that
it is not possible for man to have in his conflicts with Satan, we destroy the
completeness of His humanity.78
The Bible says, “And every transgression and disobediencereceived a just recompense of reward; How shall
we escape, if we neglect so great salvation?” (Hebrews 2:2, 3, emphasis
supplied).
REFERENCES
1.
A favourite phrase
of Ellen G. White, The Youth’s Instructor, Oct. 13, 1898,
and: Selected Messages, Book 1 (Washington, DC: Review and Herald
Publishing Association, 1958), 244.
2.
All Scriptural references and quotations, unless
otherwise indicated, are from the King James Version.
3.
To deceive the sons and daughters of God, the
Devil has mastered the art of 1) challenging what God has said and insinuating
doubt (Genesis 3:1, 4), and 2) deception that relies upon the use of truth
mixed with error (Genesis 3:4, 5).
4.
He will, “abide with you for
ever” (John 14:16); “he shall teach you all things” (John 14:26); and
“the Spirit of truth . . . will guide you into all truth” (John 16:13).
5.
Jesus said, “I am the way,
the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me”
(John 14:6, emphasis supplied). Jesus also said, “To this end was I born, and
for this cause came I into the world, that I should bear
witness unto the truth. Everyone that is of the truth heareth my voice” (John 18:37, emphasis supplied).
6.
Notice also, “Wherefore, as by one man sin
entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for
that all have sinned” (Romans 5:12).
7.
See for example: Ellen G. White, Desire
of Ages (Oakland, CA: Pacific Press Publishing Association, 1898), 49,
and, Ellen G. White, Selected Messages, Book 1 (Washington, DC:
Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1958), 267, 268.
8.
“Nevertheless, death reigned from Adam to
Moses, even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of
Adam’s transgression” (Romans 5:14).
9.
The Roman Catholic Church teaches we are born
sinners, and that “original sin . . . is universal. Every child is
therefore defiled at its birth with the taint of Adam’s disobedience.
. . . Hence baptism, which washes away original sin, is as essential
for the infant as for the full grown man, in order to attain the
kingdom of heaven.” Cardinal James Gibbons, Faith of Our Fathers (Baltimore:
John Murphy & Co., 1891), 311 (emphasis supplied), see also, 303-319.
Likewise, “original sin,” has been believed by the majority of Protestants
since the Augsburg Confession of Protestant Princes on June 25, AD 1530. It
reads: “Article II Confesses Original Sin. Since the fall of Adam, all men
descending from him in ordinary generation are born in sin,
which places under condemnation and brings eternal death to
all who are not born again by baptism [infant baptism] and the
Holy Ghost.” (J. A. Wylie, The History
of Protestantism, Part 1 (Mourne Missionary
Trust, Church Road, Carginagh, Kilkeel,
Co. Down. N. Ireland), 597 (emphasis supplied).
10.
God considered the guilty parents’
babies innocent, and so they were to go into the Promised Land,
which is a figure of our promised future inheritance. Note, also, that Jesus in
no way refers to babies and little ones as being guilty at birth, or at
any time, for Adam’s transgression or anyone else’s (Matthew 18:2-4, 5, 10,
14; 19:14).
11.
Ellen G. White, Selected Messages,
Book 2 (Washington, DC: Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1958), 260
(emphasis supplied).
12.
“The popular view [of Greek philosophy] was
that guilt was inherited, that is, that the children are punished
for their fathers' sins.” S. H. Butcher, Some Aspects of the Greek
Genius, 123 (London, England: Macmillan, 1904 ).
This “popular view,” though repudiated by Scripture, was brought into
Catholicism by Augustine, who was greatly influenced by Greek pagan ideas. From
Catholicism it was passed on to the majority of today’s Protestant
denominations.
13.
The Augustinian notion has often been
repeated, that if Jesus were born in fallen, sinful flesh, “then He himself
would have needed a Saviour ” (R. A. Anderson, Ministry,
September 1956, 13). But this presupposes guilt at the moment of
birth, that is, “Original Sin, ” which is contrary to
the clear and unified testimony of Scripture.
14.
II John 7; I John 4:3, 4.
15.
Norman Gully wrote that the two conflicting
understandings of the human nature of Christ “spring from two different
understandings of what constitutes sin” (Adventist Review, January 25,
1990).
16.
“Son of man” was Christ’s favourite
title.
17.
All emphasis in this section was supplied by
the author.
18.
“Us” here is meant in the biblical sense;
those converted by the indwelling power of Jesus Christ.
19.
After the beloved disciple John wrote of the
converted, “which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh,
nor of the will of man, but of [Greek: ek—“out
of”] God,” that he then pronounces with a [kai --“and”
explicative] “and the word was made flesh, and dwelt among us” (John
1:13, 14).
20.
Abraham is one of the “converted
brethren”—“converted children” that “are partakers of flesh and blood,” of whom
Jesus was not ashamed to be called a brother (Hebrews 2:11).
21.
Jesus said, “I can of Mine own self do
nothing” (John 5:30); “The words that I speak unto you I speak not of myself:
but the Father who dwells in Me, He does the works” (John 14:10,
emphasis supplied).
22.
Note: Scripture says Christ took, “sinful [human]
flesh,” which we all have inherited from Adam after his fall. God’s Word does
not say Jesus took, sinless [human] flesh, such as Adam had
before the fall.
23.
J. R. Zurcher, Touched With Our Feelings: A Historical Survey of
Adventist Thought on the Human Nature of Christ (Hagerstown, MD:
Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1999). Translated by Edward E. White,
from the original French: Le Christ Manifesté
en Chair: Cent cinquante années
de Christology Adventist 1844 – 1994 [Christ Manifested in the Flesh: One
Hundred and Fifty Years of Adventist Christology 1844 – 1994] (Haute-Savoie, France: Faculte Adventist
de Theologie, Collonges-sous-Salève, 1994).
24.
Karl Barth, Dogmatics,
vol. 1, part 2 (Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 1956), 152, quoted in Zurcher, op. cit., French edition 12 (emphasis and
translation supplied), English edition, 24.
25.
Ibid. (emphasis supplied).
26.
The Roman Catholic Encyclopedia states, “In
the Constitution Ineffabilis Deus of
8 December, 1854, Pius IX pronounced and defined that the Blessed Virgin Mary
‘in the first instance of her conception, by a singular privilege and grace
granted by God, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the human
race, was preserved exempt from all stain of original sin’”
(emphasis supplied). This false premise then, according to Roman Catholic
dogma, logically attributes and holds Jesus to, a pre-fall human nature. See
also, J.A.T. Robinson, The Body, a Study in Pauline Theology (London:
SCM Press, LTD, 1952), 37, 38.
27.
Zurcher, op.
cit., 107. See whole chapter, 107-115.
28.
Ellen G. White, “Search the Scriptures,” The
Youth’s Instructor, October 13, 1898, (emphasis supplied).
29.
Ellen G. White, Testimonies for the
Church, Vol. 2 (Oakland, CA: Pacific Press Publishing Association, 1869),
201 (emphasis supplied).
30.
See a selection of similar statements
in, The Desire of Ages, 24, 49, 111, 112, 116, 117, 122, 123, 266,
311, 312, 641, and 763.
31.
Selected Messages,
Book 1, 267, 268 (emphasis supplied).
32.
Desire of Ages,
71.
33.
Zurcher,
op. cit., English edition, 54.
34.
For example, Questions on Doctrine,
1957, 62.
35.
For full quotation, see Seventh-day
Adventist Bible Commentary, Vol. 5, 1128, 1129, emphasis supplied).
36.
David Qualls’ book review on J. R. Zurcher’s Touched With Our
Feelings: A Historical Survey of Adventist Thought on the Human Nature of
Christ, published on, GreatControversy.org, November 1, 2004, 10, 11.
37.
Herbert Douglass, member of the Seventh-day
Adventist Bible Commentary Committee at the time, worked in the General
Conference offices in Washington D.C., adjacent to where the QOD trio met.
38.
Hebert E. Douglass, A Fork in the
Road: Questions on Doctrine/The Historic Adventist Divide of 1957 (Coldwater,
MI: Remnant Publications, 2008), 15.
39.
Briefly, in the introduction of, Seventh-day
Adventists Answer Questions on Doctrine (Washington, DC: Review and
Herald Publishing Association, 1957), 7-10. LeRoy
Edwin Froom, Movement of Destiny (Washington,
DC: Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1970), 420-428; 465-475; and
476-492.
40.
General Conference Seventh-day Adventists
ministerial director, 1941–1950; professor emeritus of historical theology,
Andrews University; and author.
41.
Movement of Destiny,
465-475.
42.
Ibid.,
468 (emphasis supplied).
43.
Froom,
himself stated, “Previously we had been handicapped,” ibid., 467 (emphasis supplied).
44.
Ibid. (emphasis supplied).
45.
Ibid.,
465, 469 (emphasis supplied).
46.
This claim by Froom
is as inaccurate as it is shocking. Arianism denies the divinity of Christ,
stemming from the belief that Jesus Christ was the first created being;
this has never been widely held or ever been the official Adventist position!
47.
Ibid.,
465 (emphasis supplied).
48.
Ibid.,
469.
49.
The same pagination and exact text is in the
1949, Bible Readings for the Home, Review and Herald Publishing
Association, Washington D. C. (USA version), copyrighted in London, England.
50.
All emphasis is original.
51.
Movement of Destiny,
467 (emphasis supplied).
52.
Touched With Our Feelings,
154, 155.
53.
Questions on Doctrine, Annotated Edition.
Notes with Historical and Theological Introduction by George Knight (Berrien Springs,
MI: Andrews University Press, 2003), xiii.
54.
A Fork in the Road,
16.
55.
This letter, and that it should be sent to Barnhouse, was, Douglass recalls, a “mystery to many of us
in Washington during the 1950’s…” Ministry, August 2004, 16.
56.
Donald Grey Barnhouse,
“Spiritual Discernment, or How to Read Religious Books,” Eternity (June 1950),
as quoted in, A Fork in the Road, 16.
57.
Walter R. Martin, The Rise of the
Cults (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1955), 12, as quoted in, A
Fork in the Road, 17.
58.
For further details and implications see:
Chapter 10, “Adventism’s New Milestone,” Touched With
Our Feelings, 153-166; A Fork in the Road, 17-21. Also, Norman
McNulty’s lectures, “The History of Questions on Doctrine,” and “The Desmond
Ford Apostasy,” available on www.audioverse.org.
These sources are vital to anyone interested in knowing why there is a loss of
identity and mission, along with theological disagreement at all levels within
the Seventh-day Adventist Church today.
59.
Questions on Doctrine (Andrews
University Press edition, 2003), xiii, as quoted by Herbert E. Douglass, in
Ministry, August 2004, 16.
60.
QOD, 1957, front inside page.
61.
Ibid.,
xv.
62.
Touched With Our
Feelings, French edition, 129, emphasis supplied. (The English edition
translates, “le probleme,” incorrectly as, “the
doctrine,” 156.)
63.
Donald Grey Barnhouse,
“Are Seventh-day Adventists Christians?” Eternity (September
1956).
64.
Touched With Our
Feelings, French edition, 129.
65.
Walter Martin, ibid. This glaring,
inconceivable, unbelievable, unsubstantiated, untenable claim, demands to be
laid in the dust! Note just a portion of the prominent men of Adventist
leadership and ministry that comprise the so called, “lunatic fringe” and
“wide-eyed irresponsibles”: Francis Nichol, W. H.
Branson, Ray Cottrell, Don Neufeld, K. H. Wood, H. E. Douglass, (all living in
Washington during the 1950’s), as well as a century of Adventist leadership,
such as, James White, (see, Zurcher, op. cit., pp.
46, 48,) E. J. Waggoner, A. T. Jones, S. N. Haskell, W. W. Prescott, Uriah
Smith, M.C. Wilcox, G. W. Reaser, G. B. Thompson, M.
E. Kern, M. C. Snow, C. P. Bollman, Meade MacGuire, C. B. Haynes, I. H. Evans, L. A. Wilcox, William
Wirth, E. F. Hackman, A. G. Daniells, Oscar Tait, Allen Walker, Merlin Neff, E. W. Howell, Gwynne Dalrymple, T. M. French, J. L. McElhany,
C. Lester Bond, E. K. Slade, J. E. Fouton, D. H.
Kress, Frederick Lee, L. H. Wood, A. V. Olson, Christian Edwardson,
J. C. Stevens, F. M. Wilcox, A. W. Truman, F. G. Clifford, Varner Johns, Dallas
Young, J. B. Conley, Fenton Edwin Froom, W. E. Read,
J. A. McMillan, Benjamin Hoffman, L. H. Ruddy, M. L. Andreasen
and E. G. White (from Herbert Douglass, op. cit., p. 19). The same phrase
“lunatic fringe” has recently been used by professor
Gary Bradley, while teaching biology at La Sierra University, to refer to SDAs
who believe in the literal biblical six-day Creation account (see Jack
Stripling, Creating Controversy, www.insidehighered.com, September
9, 2009). Are we to accept libel and slander as valid arguments against
biblical truth and those who uphold it?
66.
R. A. Anderson, “Human, Not Carnal,” Ministry (September
1956), 13.
67.
See a selection of overlooked statements
in, The Desire of Ages, 24, 49, 111, 112, 116, 117, 122, 123, 266,
311, 312, 641, and 763.
68.
Telephone conversation on May 16, 1958,
between Al Hudson (Adventist printer and first elder) and Dr. Barnhouse, as quoted in, A Fork in the Road,
79.
69.
A Fork in the Road,
37.
70.
Ibid.,
36.
71.
L.E. Froom, Movement
of Destiny, 465-475.
72.
These have caused disunity and confusion in
Adventist soteriology, and have seriously diminished Adventism’s divinely
established system of doctrine, and it’s clear and unified understanding of its
remnant identity, mission, and the proclamation of the angels’ messages in
Revelation chapters 14 and 18.
73.
A Fork in the Road,
79.
74.
The whole of Revelation 18:2-4, needs to be
read to appreciate the abhorrent characteristics of Babylon that God denounces
and that He wants His people to leave.
75.
QOD, 1957, 647-660.
76.
Movement of Destiny,
468.
77.
Touched With Our Feelings,
19.
78.
Ellen G. White, Seventh-day Adventist
Bible Commentary, vol. 7 (Washington, D.C.: Review & Herald Publishing
Association, 1953-1957), 929, (emphasis supplied).