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Hec
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Posted on Thursday, April 22, 2010 - 9:19 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

In spite of what the organization might say, the rank and file is well trained to believe that EGW is the same as the Bible. In a FB page, someone asked if it was good that the comments of EGW be put alongside the Bible text (referring to the Remnant Study Bible.) I replied that it was not, and there are a few replies to my comment. One of the replies besides several quotations of EGW herself about how she would be doubted in the last days by those who would be lost, there is he following comment which clearly shows what the SDA believe about EGW:


quote:

Ellen White was just as inspired as John the Revelator, as Moses, as Elijah.Her writings are just as necessary as any other Bible-writer's are. Unless we are saying that God did NOT speak to and through her her. She cannot be 'less important' God doesn't change. His words don't ever lose their importance.EVERYTHING He says is for our spiritual growth.I can be saved by the scriptures alone, but if I have access to her writings and reject them, I will NOT be saved because I have rejected God's Word.This is the original belief of the pioneers. Please let us not forsake the old paths.



Hec
Flyinglady
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Posted on Thursday, April 22, 2010 - 10:13 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

If you will go to CARM and read the comments there you will quickly see which are sda and one in particular that upholds egw like that. All I can do is pray for them.
Diana L
Jonvil
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Posted on Friday, April 23, 2010 - 7:35 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

In my experience most Adventist’s ‘belief’ in Ellen is an ignorantly accepted concept (She is THE SOP!!),
their exposure consists mainly of quotations in the SS Quarterly, which they do not question.

However, in the last small (maybe 45 members) church I attended there were three angry Ellen thumpers who alienated everyone with their unstable personalities and antagonistic criticisms, they have all stopped attending.

Is it ‘The chicken or the egg’?

Does the study of Ellen create dysfunctional people or are dysfunctional people drawn to Ellenology?
Skeeter
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Posted on Friday, April 23, 2010 - 9:00 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

jonvil: "Does the study of Ellen create dysfunctional people or are dysfunctional people drawn to Ellenology? "

I say BOTH!
Foofighter
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Posted on Friday, April 23, 2010 - 9:14 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

I think Ellen/Adventism creates dysfunctional people, because I would think, that fewer dysfunctional people are really exposed to this system. Thankfully, most people don't know of Adventism or Ellen, and the number of people that are brought into the church each year, at least in North America, is really pretty small. So, I think the dysfunction, for the most part, comes from within, from years of exposure and the availabily of EGW's writings.

Carol
River
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Posted on Friday, April 23, 2010 - 9:32 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

I'm going with Carol on it. Too much evidence not too.
Flyinglady
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Posted on Friday, April 23, 2010 - 9:36 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

I came from a very dysfunctional family. When I got into my 12 step program I did not know or even think about what it would do with my beliefs of adventism. When I left adventism for good, it was then I saw that the 12 steps had cleared my brain of the adventist cobwebs and I accepted Jesus Christ immediately, when He called me.
I was dysfunctional b/c of my beliefs and my family background. Today my life is an open book to God and my friends and I have no more secrets. Thank you awesome God.
Diana L

ps Ellen's writings on sex helped ruin my marriage along with the attitudes I acquired from my Mom. When I realized, in my 12 step program that I am responsible for my attitudes and can no longer blame my Mom, I was thankful that now I could get rid of them. God has changed by attitude now and I am for ever grateful.

(Message edited by Flyinglady on April 23, 2010)
Skeeter
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Posted on Friday, April 23, 2010 - 12:58 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

I said "both" from personal experience....
I was not born into Adventism, but brought in by marrying my husband who was raised SDA... (we married as teens just out of high school)I learned and accepted and thus became dysfunctional because of accepting the errors as "truth" through exposure. I had been raised in a loving home where I was taught moral values of right and wrong but we did not attend any church. I always "believed" in God even though I did not really "know" Him on a personal level.
We were taught to treat others like we wanted to be treated and to do those things that were right, simply because they were right.
I was probably better off then.. as after accepting the "truths" of Adventism, the doing of right went from being a just because it is right thing to a feeling of making CONSCIOUS DECISIONS of right and wrong and the fear of the wrath of God if I did NOT do those things that were right.

There are some persons and even whole families that I personally have known who are SDA because of their willingness to accept ANY "gospel" at least in part because of their (how do I say this kindly?) limited intelligence.... bordering on and including some degree of mental illness.
Skeeter
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Posted on Friday, April 23, 2010 - 3:07 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

I hope that didnt sound really judgmental or mean.... but I think it is maybe easy for the SDA to bring in those with limited reasoning ability because they tend to accept what they are told without questioning.
I realize there are also many highly educated people in Adventism, doctors, attorneys, teachers, etc etc... so I am not saying that anyone who believes Adventism is somehow not mentally all there..... but it is just a fact in some of the smaller churches (that I have attended) over the years that SDA seems to have a disporportinate (sp) percentage of members with mental issues.
Sorry, I just dont know of any "nice" way of saying it.
Jonvil
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Posted on Friday, April 23, 2010 - 3:32 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Skeeter (why does your name give me an itch?)

I have to agree, I've noticed a 'dullness' when I've attempted to discuss issues pertaining to the current political/economical/Muslim... disaster. Most of these folks just don't think for themselves and are unable to connect the dots.

Could it be that a lack or avoidance (of which I was guilty) of critical thinking result in an unquestioning submission to 'authority'? Could this be a prerequisite to being a 'good' Adventist (or JW or Mormon or...)?

John
Colleentinker
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Posted on Friday, April 23, 2010 - 4:00 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

I actually think Adventism appeals to people with addictive or abusive "issues". A local former Adventist whose husband, also a former, is a well-known physician, told me that several years ago her brother, a psychologist who is, as far as I know, a non-practicing SDA and perhaps is on the agnostic side, conducted a personal study.

He gave some sort of standard personality inventory to a group of Adventists (I don't know how he selected his study group...). At any rate, they consistently yielded results which looked like classic alcoholic personalities.

Adventism attracts people with "issues" and also creates them, I am convinced.

Colleen
Blessed
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Posted on Friday, April 23, 2010 - 7:12 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Amen Colleen
Surfy
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Posted on Saturday, April 24, 2010 - 7:37 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

I have a lot of sda friends from the last church I attended. That church has always been very liberal in their adventist beliefs. Most of them believe that egw was an inspired writer...FOR HER DAY but that most of it doesn't apply to us today.

That is their way of ignoring her and her writings. I was in that sda church for over 15 years and I know of no one, in all that time, who has read any of her stuff.

Still, I think this view is a very dangerous one because it keeps them from seeing her for who she really was.

They put her on the back of the bus instead of throwing her under it and moving on.

Surfy
Helovesme2
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Posted on Saturday, April 24, 2010 - 7:48 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Yes, it is also dangerous because it means that if an 'inspired writer' is just 'inspired for his/her day' then what about the inspired Bible? How much of it was inspired, but 'just for its day?'

Now there's a slippery slope!

(Message edited by helovesme2 on April 24, 2010)
Colleentinker
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Posted on Saturday, April 24, 2010 - 11:39 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Mary, great point!

Colleen
Foofighter
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Posted on Sunday, April 25, 2010 - 11:59 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Hi Skeeter,

It sounds like we have a similar background story. I wasn't raised SDA either, and came from what sounds like much the same type of home life. After a few crazy years in the very late 60's and early 70's, my best friend and I were looking for a more spiritual path, wanting to know and find God. My friend, Pam, was involved in a near fatal car accident. The ER doctor on duty that night was an Adventist, they became friends, she became an Adventist, and in a few months or so, I joined too. This was 1976. I met my husband at church after just a few months as an SDA, he started working for the church as a teacher, and off we went. He was a several generation Adventist, well grounded in "the truth". I just condensed about 3 years or so in a couple of sentences!

I was really drinking in all the new knowledge I had from this amazing woman/prophet who wrote all these books with a third grade education!!!! Thankfully, nowadays people have more tools, especially the internet, to check things out!!! I was so naive concerning spiritual things. I'm sure that I had never even heard the word "cult", or imagined that people associated with a church would be dishonest in any way. I had never heard of Seventh day Adventists either. It was all new.

Thankfully, because of my previous life, I didn't become as unbalanced as some people can become. But, when we wanted to really get our spiritual lives together, it always involved diet, spending that "thoughtful" hour a day (of course it had to be early in the morning, somehow it didn't seem to count , otherwise). Well, these exercises in works based spiritually never lasted long of course, and I would go back to feeling guilty, not good enough, or just a plain failure. Ahhh, the joys of Adventism!

I do agree with all the other comments, as well. I had never encountered so many weird, dysfunctional folks. I began to wonder why, or even if, the lifers noticed this, or just thought it was normal in all churches. That seems to be the new response to some of the critiques of Adventism, at least with some I know. Now, it's "well, it's like that in all the churches". How would they even know? How many SDA's have ever stepped foot in a Sunday church, much less spent any time, on a regular enough basis, to know anything about what it's like in other denominations. But that's Adventism...they know everything about everything. It's so mind boggling because they know so very little about the world in general. So smug and secure in their tiny bubble.
Freedom55
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Posted on Sunday, May 02, 2010 - 6:49 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

From my experience, I have found that those who focus primarily on EGW tend to become unbalanced and downright dysfunctional. I even made the statement to my wife a few years ago that too much Ellen White makes people crazy!
Philharris
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Posted on Sunday, May 02, 2010 - 8:27 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Freedom55,

You just made a good observation that parallels my own experiences.

When I left the Adventist church to simply 'join the world of sin' nobody, including family, ever asked me why I had done what I did or encourage me to return to the church or the Lord.

But, when my life was turned around and I joined a 'Sunday Church' instead of returning to the Adventist church where much of my extended family and my membership was located, I was asked by an aunt of mine why I wasn't where she thought I belonged.

Now, my aunt had not darkened the doors of the Adventist church herself and was leading a very worldly life, but she became enraged with my response to her question:

I simply said that; "I believed Ellen White was a false prophet". Her reaction to my answer shocked me, partly because she was one of the favorite people in my life. Her unspoken message seemed to be that we could live any way we wanted to, but never never attack 'the prophet'.

She never attacked my dad for 'smoking, drinking and whoring around'. She never was critical of her other brothers including the youngest who had adopted Shinto beliefs. But, attacking Ellen was abviously a 'mortal sin' to her.

Fearless Phil
Colleentinker
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Posted on Monday, May 03, 2010 - 12:10 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

So, so true, Freedom and Phil.

Here's an excerpt from an email exchange I had over the past couple of days with an Adventist. First I'll post my response to her, then her response to my response:


quote:

The Bible teaches us that those who are saved are those who are born of the Spirit--born again; "flesh gives birth to flesh, but spirit gives birth to spirit" (John 3:3-5). God saves those who are hidden with Christ in God (Colossians 3:3). Only those who are indwelt by the Holy Spirit are those who are saved (Romans 8:1-16). The Bible never tells us that God looks at our character to see if we will be saved. Rather, He looks at us to see if we "know" Him--if we have His personal righteousness attributed to our "account". Romans 3:26 says Jesus offered propitiation in His blood for all who believe in Him. Only those who place their faith in Jesus alone and accept the "righteousness of God" substituting for their own works will be saved. (Romans 10:4: "For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes.")

John 4:24-25 tells us that "God is spirit," and true worshipers worship Him in spirit and in truth. In other words, "spirit" is not a metaphor for feelings or personality. It is something literal but immaterial, and God "IS" spirit--and we have spirits that can know and worship Him. 2 Corinthians 5:1-10 explain what happens to this essential part of us when we die. 1 Corinthians 2 explains how our spirit, indwelt by the Holy Spirit, can know and understand spiritual things--the things of God.

Hebrews 1:1-3 defines the "last days"--they began with Jesus and continue until His return. Peter also defined the last days in Acts 2 when he declared that Pentecost was the fulfillment of the prophecy in Joel 2 that in the last days God would pour out His Spirit, and young and old would receive visions, dreams, and prophecy from Him. These prophecies, though, are nothing new about God or about salvation; Jesus was the final revelation of God's truth to us according to Hebrews 1:1-3.

The Bible is clear that we are never to listen to prophets who claim to speak for God but who have failed prophecies. Since we as Christians have Scripture, there is no need (nor is it even spiritually wise) to glean whatever we can from Jean Dixon or even Nostradamus. False prophets do not give us words to live by. God gives us truth, and we do not need to look to the "dark side" or to those whose messages are confused in order to find truth.

You are free to believe whatever you wish to believe. God is calling you, though, to take His word totally seriously and to ask Him to teach you what is real and true--and to be willing to know if what you believe is really true or not.

In Jesus,
Colleen




Her response back:

quote:

That's what I meant by character! I meant how we show God through our actions. So long as our lives/actions agree with WWJD it's all good.

I don't know about this false prophets thing because some of Ellen White's prophecies hve come true and she was definetly smart in the health area, far ahead of her time. And honestly, even Hitler said somethings that were decent. There is hardly a person on this Earth who is not worth learning from.

And the difference in Christian religions is not that we don't see the Bible and read it but that we all have different interpretations of it. God will judge us based on our knowledge, and I don't think that anyone I know would still believe what they were taught to believe if they knew they were wrong. So we're not purposefully believing anything that we think is a lie, we honestly believe our different doctrines.




There's just nowhere to go with this...except to make general statements here:

We are not judged on the basis of our knowledge.

WWJD is not the biblical mandate for our decisions and behaviors.

The Bible never advocates "learning" from evil people.

The differences between "Christian" religions is not "interpretation". First, true Christianity is not a "religion" and is consistent for the past 2,000 years. Second, Adventism is not Christian in the biblical sense. Third, the difference between Adventism and Christianity is the nature of and identity of God and the means of salvation: new birth or perfect obedience.

The fact that people do not see that they are wrong does not make them right. Denial and deception blind people, and the Lord Jesus removes the blinders.

Sigh.

Colleen
Jrt
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Posted on Monday, May 03, 2010 - 4:19 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

So sad, Colleen. All you can do is share the gospel - and you did - very clearly I might add. You are right, only the Lord Jesus removes the blinders.

The statement this woman made, "God will judge us based on our knowledge" is so sad, but so stuck in the minds of Adventists. I shared with a never-been SDA this underlying "knowledge" theme in Adventism and that Adventists believe that people are judged by the "light they are given". This never-been SDA said, "But that is not Biblical. The Bible teaches that knowledge puffs up!" Hmmmmmm ....

Keri
River
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Posted on Monday, May 03, 2010 - 7:02 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Quote: So we're not purposefully believing anything that we think is a lie, we honestly believe our different doctrines.

The question is, does believing and teaching wrong doctrine denote innocence because we honestly believe what we are teaching? This person obviously thinks so.

Is any religion ok just as long as we are earnestly religious? Does earnestness automatically free us from reaping the result of wrong doctrine?

The Muslim is earnest in his beliefs, the Hindu is earnest in his beliefs, the Morman, Jehovahs Witness, New Ager, Atheist, the Christian is earnest in his beliefs. But does that free any of us wrong beliefs, and acting upon that belief?

What I mean is, does our earnestness free any of us from reaping the results of wrong beliefs and acting upon that belief? Or will we reap, either in this life or the life to come?

As far back as two years ago, many people right here on this forum was obvious in their belief that earnestness denoted innocence. ‘Oh, my Adventist bretheren are Christian, just deceived Christians.’ So somehow, because of this they will not have to reap the results of it, because they are earnest in their mistakenness.

If I have a child, and I warn him the stove is hot, if he touches it will it still burn his finger? Obviously he doesn’t believe it will, or he wouldn’t touch it.

Galatians 6:8 For he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption; but he that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting.

Is this true or false? Is the parable of the sower fact? Or does it not pertain to those who are in earnest?

Is misinterpretation of the word going to absolve us from reaping what is sown in our hearts wrongly? Any of us? Is disbelief or neglect of Gods word going to absolve us too innocence both here and in the life to come? Or will we reap what Gods word says is contrary to us?

River
Colleentinker
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Posted on Monday, May 03, 2010 - 3:20 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

River, you are absolutely correct.

Sincere wrong beliefs do not make us innocent. Sincerity does not equal innocence. We still reap the consequences of whatever we believe. If we believe a false Jesus, we are not believing unto salvation--to mildly paraphrase Paul Carden.

Colleen
Indy4now
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Posted on Tuesday, May 04, 2010 - 3:56 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

ha! I hadn't thought about this before... the fact that we are supposedly "held responsible for what we believe" gives an adventist an excuse to believe whatever because then they are not held to the standard of the Bible... but to the standard of what they believe. wow...

vivian
p.s. heading off to FB to update my status! :-)
8thday
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Posted on Tuesday, May 04, 2010 - 7:56 am:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

I can remember being taught in SDA school and through EGW that heathens who did not know Jesus would be saved if they lived a good life. God will only judge them on what they knew. Then in the next lesson we would learn that other Christians who believed in Jesus but did not accept the 10C and worship on Saturday could not be held innocent no matter how sincere their belief was. Putting these two teachings together - that you can be saved without Jesus, yet lost with Him - is to me very antichrist.

For an SDA to want other Christians to give them this leniency they are not willing to give in turn is ironic to me. Although most SDAs I know in person are not willing to come out and SAY that other Christians are lost for not keeping the Sabbath - their theology teaches it just the same.

Sondra
Colleentinker
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Posted on Tuesday, May 04, 2010 - 1:02 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Sondra, I never thought of that—that the SDA practice of teaching heathens can be saved without Jesus (if they're sincere) but Christians can be lost with Jesus if they don't accept the Sabbath is antichrist. But you're absolutely right.

The fives videos (I know they're on Netflix) called "More Than Dreams" that tell the story of Muslims who saw Jesus in dreams and became ardent Christ-followers has convinced me absolutely that God doesn't need for people to "hear" the name of Jesus from another human—necessarily. God reveals Himself to people, and we can trust Him with those who've "never heard of Jesus".

When Jesus said that the way to enter the kingdom of heaven is to be born again, He spoke the bottom-line truth. We can trust that He Himself will bring that new birth about in the lives of those who will be saved, whether or not they initially know the name of Jesus.

God is bigger than our human limitations.

Colleen
8thday
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Posted on Tuesday, May 04, 2010 - 3:35 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Amen!!! :-)
Flyinglady
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Posted on Tuesday, May 04, 2010 - 4:49 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Another AMEN!!!!!
Diana L

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