Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Ellen Whites said Freemasonry was full of "infidels" and worshiped mammon



Ellen Whites said Freemasonry was full of "infidels" and worshiped mammon.

I spoke ... plainly and in clear lines in reference to his past work and what a loss it had been to the office. His connection with Free Masonry had absorbed his time and blunted his spiritual perception. His mind, his thoughts, had been upon this body, this association; and there were infidels, winebibbers, and every class. And he was bound up with these secret organizations. There was only one thing he could do—sever his connection with them and be wholly on the Lord’s side; for he could not possibly serve God and mammon. He said, “I receive the testimony; I shall heed its instruction.”—Manuscript 17, 1892. 
 
- Ellen White. "Evangelism". Secret Societies. https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Evangelism/Secret_Societies

Ellen White said you cannot be a Christian and a Freemason



In her pamphlet "Should Christians Be Members of Secret Societies? ", Ellen White, founder of the 7th Day Adventist Church, said you cannot be a Christian and a Freemason. 
Those who stand under the bloodstained banner of Prince Immanuel cannot be united with the Free Masons or with any secret organization. The seal of the living God will not be placed upon anyone who maintains such a connection after the light of truth has shone upon his pathway. Christ is not divided, and Christians cannot serve God and mammon. The Lord says, “Come out from among them, and be ye separate, ... and touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you, and will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be My sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty” (2 Corinthians 6:17, 18).—Letter 21, 1893. 
- Ellen G. White. "Selected Messages Book 2". 1958. Pgs. 135-136. Retrieved 07/22/2020 from: https://egwwritings-a.akamaihd.net/pdf/en_2SM.pdf

Ellen White got a 7th Day Adventists to leave Freemasonry



Here we see an example of where Ellen White convinced one of her members to leave Freemasonry. 
Early in her sojourn in Australia (1891-1900) Ellen White was called upon to give counsel to a prominent worker in our publishing house who had become deeply involved in the activities of the Masonic Lodge. The counsel she presented to this brother led him to sever his connections with the lodge in spite of the fact that he had attained the highest degree of honor in the organization. Without condemning, Mrs. White pointed out that the Christian cannot serve two masters, or render allegiance to two authorities. Our brother, who had become so involved in lodge activities that his work for the church had been sadly neglected, recognized the simple truth in the Ellen G. White counsels, and his confidence in the message was confirmed as Mrs. White—unbeknown to herself— gave the secret sign used only by members of the lodge. He promptly surrendered his membership in the lodge, although he had stoutly affirmed on a number of occasions that nothing would shake his confidence in the fraternal organization or lead him to break with it. Looking back to this experience in later years, he testified that the Spirit of Prophecy message completely changed his life. 
- Ellen G. White. "Selected Messages Book 2". 1958. Pg 118. Retrieved 07/22/2020 from: https://egwwritings-a.akamaihd.net/pdf/en_2SM.pdf

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

Anti-Freemason Ellen White lead the 7th Day Adventists out of nontrinitarianism




All three of the heavily Freemason influenced religions of Christian Science, Jehovah's Witnesses and Mormonism reject the trinity, because Freemasonry rejects the trinity likely as a Noahide requirement (here). The early 7th Day Adventist Church came out of Millerism, the teachings of William Miller, who was a Freemason but then supposedly switched and became an anti-Mason. It would seem that Miller's Freemasonry stayed with the early churches as they rejected the trinity. Ellen White, one the founders of the organized 7th Day Adventist Church, attempted to draw one of her disciples out of Freemasonry (here), and so we might assume she shared anti-Mason opinions. It was Ellen White who eventually brought the Trinity back into the 7th Day Adventist Church and this was affirmed universally by the church in 1980.


http://www.sdanet.org/atissue/trinity/Trinity%20Review%20art.htm


Heresy or Hopeful Sign?
Early Adventists' Struggle with the Truth about the Trinity
by Jerry Moon Ph.D. , professor of church history at the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary in Berrien Springs, Michigan

"Although we claim to be believers in, and worshipers of, only one God, I have thought that there are as many gods among us as there are conceptions of the Deity," wrote D. T. Bourdeau in the Review in 1890.(1) What could have led Bourdeau, a highly respected evangelist and missionary in Canada, Europe, and the U.S.A., to make such a pessimistic statement about Seventh-day Adventist beliefs regarding God?
It may come as a surprise to some that the consensus reflected in the 1980 statement of fundamental beliefs didn't always exist among Adventists. The story of how the church came to doctrinal agreement on the Trinity, affords insights into several aspects of how Adventists discovered truth and preserved church unity amid a diversity of viewpoints.
Part of the legacy of the Great Disappointment of Oct 22, 1844 was that it taught its survivors a profound distrust of human opinion and tradition concerning the Bible. It instilled in them a fierce determination to test every belief by Scripture and to reject every doctrine not firmly grounded on a "Thus saith the Lord." This meant that virtually everything had to be investigated. The pioneers weren't endowed scholars with unlimited time for study, but people with families to raise and bills to pay. Consequently, the process of reaching doctrinal consensus was a slow and lengthy one.
The first priority was to solve the problem of why Jesus had not come on October 22, 1844, the end point of the prophecy of Daniel 8:14. Study on this issue led Hiram Edson and Owen Crosier by February 1846 to a fairly comprehensive understanding of the relationship between the Old Testament earthly sanctuary and the New Testament heavenly one where Jesus had been ministering since His ascension.(2)
Meanwhile, others had been studying the seventh-day Sabbath. The biblical basis for the Sabbath was one issue on which there already existed extensive writings because Seventh Day Baptists had already been observing it for two centuries. But the interconnectedness of Sabbath and sanctuary with the three angels' messages and other end-time prophecies still had to be worked out.
Another example of what seems today as a surprisingly slow discovery of a biblical lifestyle is that more than fourteen years after the Disappointment, James and Ellen White were still apparently using pork.(3) It was not until issues of church organization had been settled in May 1863 that Ellen White received the first comprehensive vision on health reform, which called Adventists to complete abstinence from pork(4) and pointed out the advantages of moving toward a vegetarian way of eating.(5) But what about the other animals listed in Leviticus 11 as inappropriate for dietary use? Another 40 years would pass before Adventists reached agreement that oysters, for instance, were also to be omitted from the diet of Bible-believing Christians.(6)
In view of this lengthy process of doctrinal development in which lay people as well as ministers took an active part, it is not so surprising that some teachings assumed by most Christians were rather late in receiving attention from this small but rapidly growing Christian denomination.(7)
The Adventist understanding of the doctrine of the Trinity came about through a long process of scrutiny, initial rejection, and eventual acceptance. The early Adventists had no question about the biblical testimony regarding the eternity of God the Father, the deity of Jesus Christ "as Creator, Redeemer and Mediator," and the "importance of the Holy Spirit."(8) However, they weren't initially convinced that the relation between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is best described by the word "trinity."
Anyone who has done any reading in theological writings about the Trinity knows that there can be a vast difference between the bare biblical statements about the Trinity and philosophical speculations about it. Some who have encountered the philosophical speculations may be pardoned for questioning whether they really have any biblical basis. The use, however, of extra-biblical words to describe biblical concepts is not inherently wrong. The word "millennium," for example, is an extra-biblical Latin term for a thoroughly biblical concept--the 1000 years of Revelation 20. So "trinity" is a Latin term meaning "triad" or "trio"---three components that make up one whole.
The biblical doctrine of the Trinity refers to the concept that God is One (Deut. 6:4), but that the Godhead or Deity (Col. 2:9) is composed of three Persons--Father, Son, and Holy Spirit (Matt. 28:19; 2 Cor. 13:14, etc.).(9) The term Person indicates a Being with personality, intellect, and will. Unlike the multiple gods of polytheism, the three Persons of the biblical Godhead are perfectly united in nature, character, and purpose so that despite their individuality, they are never divided, never in conflict, and thus constitute not three gods, but One God.(10)
How this can be explained has been the subject of much thought and speculation over the centuries. But just as the concept of Incarnation---Deity becoming flesh (John 1:14)---defies human ability to fully explain, yet is nonetheless a truth the Bible teaches and Christians accept, so also with the Trinity.
Here's where part of the problem occurs. The theological explanation of the Trinity doctrine over the centuries imported analogies and illustrations that made sense to the people of a given time and place and helped make the concept understandable to them. These additions to the Scriptural data, however, sometimes went far beyond the actual statements of Scripture. While they made a certain sense at the time they were written, they sometimes seemed unbiblical or even nonsensical to people of other times and places. Some writing about the Trinity is a curious mixture of Bible, medieval philosophy, and the personal opinions of the writer.
This wasn't lost on some Christians of the early 1800's, who associated the doctrine of the Trinity with other traditional beliefs they personally rejected. So it was that an American denomination called the Christian Connection concluded that the doctrine of the Trinity, at least the form of it that they had encountered, was of nonbiblical origin. Some prominent Millerites, such as J. V. Himes, and early Sabbath-keeping Adventists, including Joseph Bates and James White, had been members of the Christian Connection.
Either because of the influence of these leaders, or because others had independently come to similar conclusions, the Adventist pioneers who questioned the doctrine of the Trinity included the most influential writers among them, with one major exception---Ellen White.(11) Whatever may have been Ellen White's original beliefs, she never expressed anti-Trinitarian views in her writings, and she eventually led Adventists to reconsider and accept a biblical concept of the Trinity, as we shall see later.
Before 1890: Anti-Trinitarian Arguments
Among the reasons given by the early Adventists for rejecting the Trinity was the misconception that the Trinity made the Father and the Son identical. Joseph Bates wrote regarding his conversion in 1827, "Respecting the trinity, I concluded that it was impossible for me to believe that the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of the Father, was also the Almighty God, the Father, one and the same being." D. W. Hull, J. N. Loughborough, S. B. Whitney, and D. M. Canright shared this view.(12) And they were right in rejecting the concept that the Father and Son are the same person. This is an ancient heresy that denies the three-ness of God and asserts that Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are indistinguishable as separate personalities.(13)
Another objection to the Trinity was the misconception that it teaches the existence of three Gods. "If Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are each God, it would be three Gods," wrote Loughborough in 1861.(14)
 
A third view was that belief in the Trinity would diminish the value of the atonement.(15) Since the "everliving, self-existent God" cannot die, then if Christ had self-existence as God, He couldn't have died on Calvary, they reasoned. If only His humanity died, then His sacrifice was only a human one, inadequate for redemption. (see sidebar).(16)
The fact that Christ is called Son of God and "the beginning of the creation of God" (Rev 3:14) was thought to prove that He must be of more recent origin than God the Father.(17) It was also argued that "there are various expressions concerning the Holy Spirit which would indicate that it [sic] couldn't properly be considered as a person, such as its being 'shed abroad' in the heart [Rom. 5:5], and 'poured out upon all flesh' [Joel 2:28]."(18)
What Happened to Christ's Deity When He Died?
Most of these objections to the Trinity are either based on misunderstandings of the trinity doctrine, extreme distortions of it, or speculative extra-biblical additions to it. None of them is a valid objection to the true biblical view of one God in three Persons. Yet all of the objections were based on biblical texts. This shows that while misunderstanding or prejudice may have played a part, the pioneers were united in basing their arguments on Scripture. As long as they appealed to Scripture itself rather than to a creed as their rule of doctrine, they were bound to discover the truth sooner or later.
1898: Turning Point
The watershed for the Adventist understanding of the Trinity came in 1898. In that year Ellen White published her monumental Desire of Ages, in which she differed sharply with most of the pioneers regarding the preexistence of Christ. She lost no time in bringing up the main point. Her third sentence declared, "From the days of eternity the Lord Jesus Christ was one with the Father" (italics supplied). Yet even this sentence was not sufficiently unequivocal to clarify her position regarding the deity of Jesus. Later in the book, writing on the resurrection of Lazarus, she quoted the words of Christ, "I am the resurrection and the life," and followed them with a seven-word comment that would turn the tide of anti-Trinitarian theology among Adventists: "In Christ is life, original, unborrowed, underived" (p. 530, emphasis supplied). Christ didn't ultimately derive His divine life from the Father. As a man on earth, He subordinated His will to the will of the Father (John 5:19, 30), but as self-existent God, He had power to lay down His life and take it up again. Thus in commenting on Christ's resurrection, Ellen White again asserted His full deity and equality with the Father, declaring "The Saviour came forth from the grave by the life that was in Himself." (p. 785, see also the next two paragraphs)
These statements came as a shock to the theological leadership of the church. M. L. Andreasen, who had become an Adventist just four years earlier at the age of 18, and who would eventually teach at the church's main North American seminary, said the new concept was so different from the previous understanding that some prominent leaders doubted whether Ellen White had really written it. After Andreasen entered the ministry in 1902, he made a special trip to Ellen White's California home to investigate the issue for himself. Ellen White welcomed him and "gave him access to her manuscripts." He had brought with him "a number of quotations" concerning which he "wanted to see if they were in the original in her own handwriting." He later recalled,
"I was sure Sister White had never written, "In Christ is life, original, unborrowed, underived." But now I found it in her own handwriting just as it had been published. It was so with other statements. As I checked up, I found that they were Sister White's own expressions.(19)
Desire of Ages contained equally uncompromising statements regarding the deity of the Holy Spirit. In pages 669-671, Ellen White repeatedly uses the first-person pronoun "He" in referring to the Holy Spirit, climaxing with the impressive statement, "The Spirit was to be given as a regenerating agent, and without this, the sacrifice of Christ would have been of no avail. . . . Sin could be resisted and overcome only through the mighty agency of the Third Person of the Godhead, who would come with no modified energy, but in the fullness of divine power" (emphasis supplied).
The result of these and similar statements was a division of opinion among the ministers and leaders of the Seventh-day Adventist church. Some, like General Conference president A. G. Daniells, Review and Herald editor William Prescott, and Andreasen, accepted these statements as inspired doctrinal correction for the church. Others, disbelieving that they could have been wrong for so many years, continued to repeat the old arguments.
Ellen White's testimony, by calling attention to Scriptures whose significance had been overlooked, created a paradigm shift that couldn't be reversed. As Adventists, like the Bereans of Acts 17:11, returned to the Scriptures to see "whether those things were so," they came to a growing consensus that the basic concept of the Trinity was a biblical truth to be accepted and embraced. The change didn't occur overnight, but no new anti-Trinitarian publications came from denominational presses after 1898.(20) Some reprints of older books and articles still contained such views, but these were eventually discontinued or edited to reflect the new understanding.
God seldom gave light by visions until His people had done their best to investigate what the Scriptures had to say on the subject. If Ellen White had corrected every incomplete understanding of truth, some Adventists would have done nothing except sit and wait for her to write.
Why No Correction Till 1898?
Some may wonder, "If the pioneers were wrong about such a basic matter, why didn't God lead Ellen White to correct them right at the beginning?" That question involves three issues: the timing of God's purposes; the method of His working through Ellen White; and the relation of both timing and method to the unity of the church.
Regarding timing, it's generally recognized(21) that God had a definite order of priority for introducing new truth to the church. Instruction to publish came in the 1840s; the call for "church organization" came in the 1850s; and just two weeks after the conclusion of a long contentious struggle that resulted in the legal organization of the church (May 1863), God sent the comprehensive vision on health reform.(22) Perhaps God saw that the young church could sustain only a certain level of uncertainty and debate without breaking up its unity, so He paced the introduction of new light to not overwhelm the believers.
Timing was important, not only in institutional developments, but in doctrinal development and correction as well. In correcting doctrinal errors, Ellen White was very careful not to unnecessarily disrupt church unity over issues that might need correction but which weren't as essential to practical godliness as some people thought. Even concerning the great issue of righteousness by faith that tore the church apart in the 1880s and early '90s, Ellen White tried initially to keep that from being brought before the church in a contentious disunifying way. Only after both G. I. Butler and E. J. Waggoner had gone into public print with their disagreements did Ellen White concede that since the damage of disunity had already been done, the only way out was by a full discussion in order to discover the truth about the issues under debate.
She never wrote an article directly confronting wrong views about the Godhead. But she published in Desire of Ages and elsewhere statements that couldn't be explained away and that were destined eventually to change the view of the church.
Thus the timing and method of God's leading through Ellen White reflected not only concerns for church unity, but for safeguarding the spiritual life of the church and its foundation in personal Bible study. If every time someone studied the Bible and came to an incomplete understanding of truth, Ellen White had corrected it, soon Adventists would have done nothing except sit and wait for her to write. Historically, the progressive understanding of truth has always involved groping after it, writing partial understandings, to be corrected and advanced by others afterward.
It appears to be a pattern in Seventh-day Adventist history that God seldom gave light by visions until His people had done their best to investigate what the Scriptures had to say on the subject. The few exceptions were cases where perhaps God saw there was too much at stake to wait for the normal process to work itself out. Much more often, He allowed partial truth or outright error to stand for months or even years while people studied it and evaluated it from Scripture. If the error would be refuted from Scripture, God didn't need to send a vision to deal with it.
 
While the early Adventists eschewed the term "trinity," much of what they did believe was compatible with Trinitarianism, as they occasionally acknowledged(23) (see sidebar)." The pioneers in the 1840s and '50s were approaching the Bible from the standpoint of other extremely important doctrines, such as the earthly and heavenly sanctuaries, which have everything to do with the character of God. In the divine purpose for this movement, the understanding of the character of God was a higher priority than the understanding of His nature.
After extensive Bible study, confirmed by revelation, laid the foundations of the sanctuary and related doctrines, God led Ellen White to invest more and more of her time in studying and writing about the life and character of Christ. In connection with this rediscovery/revelation of the character of Christ, both in his full humanity and His full deity, she was led to correct two errors that had prevailed regarding Christ and the Holy Spirit. Christ had been regarded as less eternal than the Father, and the Holy Spirit had been regarded as merely a power or influence coming from Christ and the Father, rather than as a divine Person, co-equal with Christ and the Father.
Were early Adventists Arians? 
The acceptance of Christ's full eternity and the Holy Spirit as the "Third Person of the Godhead" removed the two greatest reasons for opposition to the doctrine of the Trinity. With the new perspective provided by Desire of Ages, Adventists went back to their Bibles and discovered a whole range of information about the Godhead that they had not noticed before. They became convinced that indeed, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit were three divine Persons. Yet they found clear Scriptural teaching as well that these three were one in nature, character, and purpose. Thus they constitute one God, not three gods. The belief in three divine Persons who constitute one God is precisely the concept for which the term Trinity stands.
For these reasons, leaders from the second generation of the pioneers and many others after 1898 accepted the doctrine of the Trinity as a further unfolding of the biblical truths that the first pioneers had accepted. This unfolding illustrates the divinely-ordained reason the pioneers were reluctant to make official statements of doctrine and absolutely refused to vote a creed---because they recognized there was more truth coming, and they didn't want to hinder it by defining their beliefs too rigidly.
Seventh-day Adventists still hold to that principle. Even though they voted in 1980 a Statement of Fundamental Beliefs, they still maintain that the Bible is their only creed. The Fundamental Beliefs can and will be refined as further insights clarify old truths or as new situations necessitate new explanations to the world of what the Bible teaches and what Seventh-day Adventists believe.

1. D. T. Bourdeau, "We May Partake of the Fullness of the Father and the Son," Review and Herald, 67 (November 18, 1890), 707; in Erwin R. Gane, "The Arian or Anti-Trinitarian Views Presented in Seventh-day Adventist Literature and the Ellen G. White Answer" [M.A. Thesis, Andrews University, 1963], p. 48.
2. O. R. L. Crosier, "The Law of Moses," Day-Star Extra, Feb 7, 1846.
3. Ellen G. White, Testimonies for the Church, Volume 1, pp. 206-207.
4. While she strongly maintained the health advantages of abstinence from pork, she consistently insisted that it was not a test of fellowship. Testimonies, 1:206; MS 15, 1889 (in Manuscript Releases, 16:173).
5. Vegetarianism for Ellen G. White meant not habitually using meat, not necessarily total abstinence. (Herbert Douglas, Messenger of the Lord, Nampa, ID: Pacific Press, 1898), 316; A. L. White, Ellen G. White,  Volume 4: The Australian Years, (Review and Herald Publishing Association: Hagerstown, Maryland), p.119.
6. See, e.g. S. N. Haskell, The Bible Training School, 1903.
7. Seventh-day Adventists numbered about 3,500 in 1863, 75,000 in 1898, and 10.3 million in 1999.
8. E. R. Gane, "The Arian or Anti-Trinitarian Views Presented in Seventh-day Adventist Literature and the Ellen G. White Answer" (M.A. thesis, Andrews University, 1963), p. 109.
9. See also Seventh-day Adventists Believe . . .: A Biblical Exposition of 27 Fundamental Doctrines, (Review and Herald Publishing Association: Hagerstown, Maryland), pp. 22-25.
10. Seventh-day Adventists Believe, 23.
11. Gane, 67.
12. Gane, 104.
13. Gane, 3.
14. J. H. Loughborough, "Questions for Bro. Loughborough," Advent Review and Sabbath Herald 18 (Nov. 5, 1861), 184; in Gane, 30.
15. Gane, 105.
16. J. H. Waggoner, The Atonement (Oakland, CA: Pacific Press, 1884), 174; in Gane, 42; Uriah Smith made a similar argument in Looking Unto Jesus (Battle Creek, MI: Review & Herald, 1898), 23; in Gane, 29.
17. Uriah Smith, Thoughts on the Book of Daniel and the Revelation (Battle Creek, MI: Review and Herald, 1882), 487; Uriah Smith, Looking Unto Jesus (Battle Creek, MI: Review & Herald, 1898), 10; both in Gane, 25, 28.
18. Uriah Smith, "In the Question Chair," Review and Herald, Mar 23, 1897, 188; in Gane, 24.
19. M. L. Andreasen, "The Spirit of Prophecy," chapel address at Loma Linda, California, November 30, 1948, quoted in Russell Holt, "The Doctrine of the Trinity in the Seventh-day Adventist Denomination: Its Rejection and Acceptance" (Term Paper, Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, 1969), 20.
20. Gane, 55.
21. Roger W. Coon, "The 'Organization' Message", Final 20 Years," Lecture Outline, Writings of E.G. White, Andrews University; March 5, 1996.
22. Some older sources give June 6, because the vision was given on a Friday night (June 5) after sundown, hence by sundown reckoning was part of Sabbath June 6, 1863.
23. Roswell F. Cottrell, "The Doctrine of the Trinity," Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, June 1, 1869.

" Article previously published in the Review & Herald 1999 "

Freemason says 7th Day Adventist church is anti-Mason by "rule"



Freemason author Robert Morris in his book on anti-Masonry lists the 7th Day Adventists church as having rules against Freemasonry.
"The Christian denominations which oppose Freemasonry as rules of the church, are said to be United Brethren, Papists, Seventh Day Adventists, Old School Baptists, and possibly some others." 
- Robert Morris. "William Morgan, Or, Political Anti-Masonry: Its Rise, Growth and Decadence". Robert Macoy, Masonic Publisher. 1883. Pg. 376

7 Day Adventists met and preached in Freemason Halls



7th Day Adventists often claim that they had no association with Freemasonry, and that they were even anti-Mason (here & here), regardless the 7th Day Adventist churches met in Mason Halls and they were also used for pubic preaching.
Excerpt From:

"Auburn Seventh-day Adventist Church History" 
by Brian Strayer
Andrews University 



During this meeting, local elder William Frank proposed that they move their meetings to the Ensenore Lodge Room of the Odd Fellows Hall on Garden Street so that the senior saints had no stairs to climb. After meeting there for two years, Auburn members moved once again to the Masonic Hall on South Street in 1924 because, besides being cleaner and neater than the Odd Fellow’s Hall, it also offered elevator service for the expanding membership...

...After the fire, members met in the Odd Fellows Hall on State Street for a year until the new Masonic Hall was finished, and then they met on the third floor in St. Paul’s Lodge rooms from 1927 until 1951...

...Newly elected President Elder Owen T. Garner, stern and balding, preached at the Masonic Hall at 10 South Street in August 1942; Field Missionary Secretary C. J. Oliver spoke on canvassing that summer; and Elder Bohner also visited Auburn, thrilled to hear that members had ordered 480 copies of the new booklet “What Seventh-day Adventists Believe” for distribution to Auburn’s citizens....

...Elder Reiswig returned in September for the Central New York Sabbath School Improvement Association meeting at the Masonic Temple, led by Elder Lemuel Esteb of the Atlantic Unon. The Auburn Dorcas ladies provided a delicious lunch. Local member Mary Green was elected assistant secretary of the Improvement Association...

...The decade of the 1950s brought more changes to the Auburn church than any previous decade in its history. After 40 years “in the wilderness,” moving from halls to Masonic temples to upstairs rooms for services, members secured a permanent chapel on 17 Nelson Steet in 1957...

...In 1950 members still held Sabbath services in the Masonic Temple on South Street, but when 21 of them met there on February 5, they discussed a new church building project, studied blueprints, and appointed a six-man committee (Elder Smith, William Frank, Harold Kriegelstein, C. W. White, Maurice Roche, and Herb Pratt)...


7th Day Adventists try to get Freemason to quit



Nathaniel Faulkhead was a 7th Day Adventists who was also a Freemason, but because of his excessive involvement in the secret society, church leaders asked him to leave and when he did not he was eventually relieved from his employment with the Adventists


FROM LINEAGE JOURNAL 
AN ADVENTIST PROJECT
https://lineagejourney.com/episodes-season-2/nathaniel-faulkhead-freemason-to-adventist/


NATHANIEL FAULKHEAD: FREEMASON TO ADVENTIST

NATHANIEL FAULKHEAD’S EARLY CONVERSION
As Nathaniel Faulkhead made his way down the narrow hallway his mind recalled a dream he had had the previous night in which he had seen Ellen White presenting him with a special testimony. At present, he was on his way to meet her having been informed by her son Willie White that she had requested to see him.

The Faulkheads had chosen to become Seventh-Day Adventists around 1886 or 1887 and Nathaniel Faulkhead was appointed as treasurer of the Echo Publishing House shortly thereafter. He was an amiable man with a generous heart and sharp business acumen. At first, he served in his role wholeheartedly but gradually another aspect of his life began to overshadow his spiritual interests.

At the time he became a Seventh-Day Adventist Faulkhead was the member of several secret societies. By his own admission, he was a high ranking member of the Freemasons, The Knights Templar and several other secret societies. He continued to serve these societies in these roles even after his baptism and soon they began to soak up a considerable amount of his time and attention.

When Ellen White arrived in Australia in 1891 she was given visions regarding the general condition of the publishing house and its workers. She was also given specific testimonies directed at certain individuals and one of these was Nathaniel Faulkhead. The testimony she received with regards to Faulkhead dealt with his involvement with Secret Societies and the detrimental effect this was having on his spiritual life. She wrote out the entire testimony which ended up filling fifty pages of written manuscript and prepared to mail it. However, something held her back and she had a distinct impression that it was not yet the right time to send it because the Faulkheads would not receive her testimony then.

Bundling together the thick sheaf of papers Ellen White slid them into a drawer and left them there for about a year. Neither did she mention anything regarding the testimony to anyone. The only tell-tale sign that she had received the vision was the deep interest she took in the spiritual wellbeing of Nathaniel Faulkhead and his wife thereafter. However, it wasn’t just Ellen White who was concerned about him. His colleagues at work had noticed his steady spiritual decline and the decided uptick in his absorption with the Secret Societies. They pleaded with him to disengage himself from all involvement with these organisations but he refused, later stating “my heart was full of those things, in fact, I thought more of them than I did of anything else”

He met the appeals of his brethren with the defiant and bold statement that he would not give up any of his connections with the Freemasons regardless of what G.B. Starr or W.C. White or anyone else might have to say about the matter. This was a distressing development and it soon became apparent to the leaders in charge of the work that unless there was a decided change in his course of action and his attitude he would have to find employment elsewhere.

Writing about the incident Ellen White remarked “none could reach him in regard to Freemasonry. He was fastening himself more and more firmly in the meshes of the enemy and the only thing we could see to be done was to leave him to himself.” In a vision, she was shown that his spiritual condition was similar to that of a man, precariously perched on the edge of a precipice and in danger of losing his balance and falling off the edge.

William Miller was at first a Freemason and held positions



Even though he later turned against Freemasonry (here) [or did he?] William Miller, the inspiration for the 7th Day Adventist Church, was a recorded Freemason and held titles in the lodge.


WILLIAM MILLER
Grand Lodge Of British Columbia And Yukon

https://freemasonry.bcy.ca/biography/miller_w/miller_w.html


February 15, 1782 - December 20, 1849

William Miller was an American Baptist preacher who is credited with beginning the mid-nineteenth century North American religious movement now known as Adventism. Preaching the impending return of Christ, he began public lecturing in 1831. Several religious denominations, including Seventh-day Adventists and Advent Christians, have a direct connection with his followers, the Millerites, and an event that came to be called the Great Disappointment of October 22, 1844, when Christ did not appear.
Millers' exact masonic history is impossible to determine from available records. Morning Star Lodge No. 27 (later No. 37) went inactive as a result of the Morgan Incident—not reopening until 1856—and the early records of the lodge are lost.
He joined the lodge sometime after moving to Poultney, Vermont in 1803. Grand Lodge of Vermont records show his participation at their annual communications, as a proxy in 1809 and as Senior Warden of his lodge in 1810. Although there is no extant record, there is no reason not to believe that he served the lodge as Worshipful Master in 1811. Miller resigned from the lodge in September 1831. He did not hold any Grand Lodge office.
Worshipful Master: 1811
Morning Star Lodge No. 27, Vermont


Sources: Transactions The American Lodge of Research Free and Accepted Masons. vol. iii, no. 1 (October, 31, 1938 - October 30, 1939). New York : 1939. p. 182; David L. Rowe, God's Strange Work: William Miller and the End of the World. Grand Rapids, Mich. : Eerdmans, 2008. p. 94.

While they first defended themselves, the German 7th Day Adventist Church only apologized for Nazi collaboration in 2005




While at first they defended themselves (here), the 7th Day Adventist Church in Germany only apologized for their collaboration with the Nazis 60 years later in 2005.

In 2005, 60 years after WWII, when most of the victims had died, the church in Austria/Germany officially apologized on the record. That, I suppose is progress, since no such recognition of sorrow or acknowledgement of wrong has been expressed officially by the church’s higher leadership about South Africa or Rwanda. But is it fair or even Christian to essentially “run out the clock” on those who were directly impacted by these events? 

Matthew Quartey. "THE IMMORALITY OF SILENCE: ADVENTIST LEADERSHIP IN TIMES OF CONFLICT"Spectrum Magazine. Published 21 Nov 2019. Retrieved 07/21/2020 from: https://spectrummagazine.org/views/2019/immorality-silence-adventist-leadership-times-conflict

Nazi linked 7th Day Adventist Church never denounced South African apartheid



Even when it became extremely popular to do so, the Nazi linked 7th Day Adventists never took a position against South African apartheid, when most major Christian denominations did.
At least on two occasions in more recent memory our church failed to exercise moral and ethical leadership in its dealings with state governments during major conflicts. Both failures happened in Africa. The first was in South Africa during the Apartheid era. Our leaders, both in South Africa and at the world church headquarters in Washington, kept quiet and did not take a disciplined ethical position in any significant way against the regime or its racist ideology. 
In the mid-1970s, following the Soweto uprising and the Apartheid government’s brutal crackdown, external opposition to the South African government, led by Western governments, institutions and the Church, became widespread, persistent and even “fashionable”. Businesses and financial institutions were targeted and “forced” to divest from South Africa, resulting in a near total isolation of the country from the community of nations. Many organizations, realizing the sun was setting on Apartheid, did what was expedient and belatedly denounced the system and its whole apparatus. 
Our church did not even do that. Our leaders were resolute in their silence and inaction, making us one of the few global churches who took a noncommittal stance against Apartheid even when it was acutely unnecessary to do so. And by playing it safe we effectively endorsed Apartheid to the bitter end. After the regime fell, our leaders continued their silence as though such silence was synonymous with forgetting.  
Matthew Quartey. "THE IMMORALITY OF SILENCE: ADVENTIST LEADERSHIP IN TIMES OF CONFLICT"Spectrum Magazine. Published 21 Nov 2019. Retrieved 07/21/2020 from: https://spectrummagazine.org/views/2019/immorality-silence-adventist-leadership-times-conflict

Some WWII German 7th Day Adventists churches disfellowshipped Jews and posted lists of their names



Nazi collaborating 7th Day Adventists churches routinely disfellowshipped Jews and posted lists of their names.
Having fully bought into the Nazi narrative of Aryan race superiority, some German Adventist churches posted on-premises notices advising Adventists of Jewish ancestry that they no longer had a home within the church. And many, thus excluded, would leave, bereft of lifelong friendships and often the only fellowship they had known. Daniel Heinz, an archivist at Friedensau Adventist University, retells the gut-wrenching story of Max-Israel Monk, an Adventist of Jewish descent who, after being “disfellowshipped”, “was placed in two concentration camps by the Nazis. [But] he survived and returned to his church after the war. He said he did not wish to act toward his congregation in the way he had been treated.” (Mark A. Kellner, Church Leaders Say ‘We’re Sorry’) 
Matthew Quartey. "THE IMMORALITY OF SILENCE: ADVENTIST LEADERSHIP IN TIMES OF CONFLICT"Spectrum Magazine. Published 21 Nov 2019. Retrieved 07/21/2020 from: https://spectrummagazine.org/views/2019/immorality-silence-adventist-leadership-times-conflict

German 7th Day Adventists ratted out reformist noncombatant Adventists to the Nazis



German 7th Day Adventists would rat out members of the 7th Day Adventist Reform Movement (SDARM) which opposed combatancy to the Nazis who had then banned.
The deep collaboration with the state ultimately led to nightmarish consequences. The official German church would inform Nazis of the existence of the Seventh-day Adventist Reformed Movement (SDARM), German Seventh-day Adventists who had separated themselves from the main church due to ideological differences such as noncombatancy. Alerted, the Nazis swiftly banned the SDARM. 

Matthew Quartey. "THE IMMORALITY OF SILENCE: ADVENTIST LEADERSHIP IN TIMES OF CONFLICT"Spectrum Magazine. Published 21 Nov 2019. Retrieved 07/21/2020 from: https://spectrummagazine.org/views/2019/immorality-silence-adventist-leadership-times-conflict

During WWII, German 7th Day Adventist journals published anti-Semitic tropes and stereotypes



During WWII, German 7th Day Adventist journals published anti-Semitic tropes and stereotypes
In keeping with Nazi doctrine, the chief focus for ostracism in Adventist publications were Jews. In one publication [Gegenwarts-Fragen, no. 7/8 (1943), pp. 35-6], which was by no means an outlier, the author maintained the stereotypes of Jews as “bloodhounds”, “vermin”, “alien”, “intruder[s] who with unparalleled ruthlessness and characteristic slyness began to undermine the German soul.”  
Matthew Quartey. "THE IMMORALITY OF SILENCE: ADVENTIST LEADERSHIP IN TIMES OF CONFLICT"Spectrum Magazine. Published 21 Nov 2019. Retrieved 07/21/2020 from: https://spectrummagazine.org/views/2019/immorality-silence-adventist-leadership-times-conflict

7th Day Adventist says Nazi supporting German church had "tacit" approval from main headquarters



While the German 7th Day Adventist church collaborated with the Nazis, the General Conference of the church remained silent, giving them "tacit"support.
"In a calculated effort to ingratiate itself with the Nazi regime, leaders of the official church in Germany, with “tacit” approval from the General Conference (GC) in Washington, would betray fellow Adventists to Hitler’s henchmen. The ostensible reason for this betrayal was to prevent the regime from banning the church as they had done to many small denominations at the time. And having started on this cooperating arrangement with Hitler, it was only a matter of time before the church would accommodate him further, by making official publications align with the government." 

Matthew Quartey. "THE IMMORALITY OF SILENCE: ADVENTIST LEADERSHIP IN TIMES OF CONFLICT"Spectrum Magazine. Published 21 Nov 2019. Retrieved 07/21/2020 from: https://spectrummagazine.org/views/2019/immorality-silence-adventist-leadership-times-conflict

The German 7th Day Adventist church refused to denounce their alliance with Hitler after the war



The German 7th Day Adventist church refused to denounce their alliance with Hitler after the war.


Fatal Flirting:
The Nazi State and the Seventh-day Adventist Church
HAROLD ALOMÍA


Pg. 10

After the war, the Adventist German leadership reacted by closing ranks and resisted all outside pressures from the General Conference to denounce or proscribe their perceived errors. It appears that the actions taken were wholly justified by the German leadership. In a letter to the General Conference President, J. L. McElhany, Adolf Minck expressed this sentiment of self-defense by rationalizing that they had followed church policy, they had maintained the structure of the church, and also that they had had to adapt to living the commandments according to the times they lived in, times of war, and not peace, nonetheless maintaining in their minds the holiness of the Decalogue (Minck 1994:277).

7th Day Adventist Church adapted its teachings to placate the Nazis



The 7th Day Adventist church cannot be let off the hook for changing its teachings to adapt to Nazi demands on light of persecution, such as not taking sabbath on Saturdays. Other religions like Jehovah's Witnesses would rather be banned then change their spirituality for Hitler, the 7th Day Adventist Church wanted to remain in Nazi good graces. 

Fatal Flirting:
The Nazi State and the Seventh-day Adventist Church
HAROLD ALOMÍA


Pg. 9-10

These demonstrations of loyalty however did not satisfy the state, and its pressure grew even greater on the church especially in the issue of Sabbath keeping. The church appealed to its long championed principle of religious freedom to no avail. In the Rhineland members were pressured to work on Sabbath, especially in industries pertaining to the war. Adolf Minck was called to the central Gestapo offices, and was persuaded to address the issue. As a result the leadership of the Adventist Church recommended that their members should submit to the authorities and not bring any problems among themselves or the church (Blaich 1994:270). As the state regulations against religion increased year after year, the church obeyed them closely in order to avoid a second banishment at the hands of the regime (Pratt 1977:4).

The 7th Day Adventist church publically supporter Hitler as late as 1941



The 7th Day Adventist church publically supporter Hitler as late as 1941.

Fatal Flirting:
The Nazi State and the Seventh-day Adventist Church
HAROLD ALOMÍA


Pg. 9

The church’s public endorsement of the Nazi regime continued as late as 1941 when Adolf Minck wrote, in a June 24 letter to the Gauleiter (District Leader of Nazi Germany who served as a provincial governor) of Danzig-Westpreussen: “At this occasion I may once again assure you that the members of our denomination stand loyally by the Fuhrer and the Reich. They are continually encouraged and supported in their basic attitude. The leadership of the denomination considers this as one of its most noble duties” (Minck 1994:264).

7th Day Adventist church allowed Nazis to publish pro-sterilization articles in their journals



The 7th Day Adventist church allows the Nazi party to publish pro-sterilization articles in their journals and remained silent in regards to the campaign.

Fatal Flirting:
The Nazi State and the Seventh-day Adventist Church
HAROLD ALOMÍA


Pg. 9

Furthering its compromise the Adventist Church also agreed with the forced sterilization policy, also known as the Eugenics Laws (Blaich 2002:176). At first the opposition to such policies was open and general among the church members and leadership as it was viewed to be a violation of Christian principles. However in response to this resistance the government responded with an educational campaign that used Adventist journals to defend the new eugenics laws. Again, hermeneutical acrobatics were used to defend the government’s position that was based on principles that were completely antagonistic to Adventist beliefs. The farfetched explanation suggested the notion that Christians should “not [be] interfering with nature’s process of cleansing the nation’s racial pool” (Blaich 2002:177). As the eugenics policies became law the opposition to such concepts and legislation was silenced from Adventist publications. Sterilization was only a first step in this racial attack; the next step involved the elimination of those who were deemed to be hazardous elements to the German gene pool. Those who opposed euthanasia were Catholics and Lutherans, while Adventists remained silent (Blaich 2002:180).