Who
is an Historic Seventh-day Adventist?
Today,
our people are being taunted with: “You people call yourselves
‘Historic Seventh-day Adventists,’ but you don’t even know
what being an historic Seventh-day Adventist really is.” Sooner
or later someone is going to ask you this question and you
have to have something to say, so let us look at, “What is
an Historic Seventh-day Adventist?”.
If you
are not familiar with the little book Issues: The Letter
the NAD Officers Did not Publish, The Church, it is part
two of the Issues books printed by Steps to Life. The
first half is a letter to the NAD, and the last is material
written by John Grosboll. There is a section in the back called
“Fundamental Principles.” The material contained there first
appeared in an article by James White in the Signs of the
Times in 1874. In this article, he outlined the beliefs
of Historic Seventh-day Adventists.
It should
also be said that an Historic Seventh-day Adventist believes
Ellen G. White to have been a prophet of God and that her
writings have divine authority. Therefore, an Historic Seventh-day
Adventist will give precedence to God’s last day prophet,
to his last day church, over his own opinion. An Historic
Seventh-day Adventist will never say, “Well, she did not know
what she was talking about,” or “You know, she didn’t understand
everything.” You see, God does not have junior prophets—a
prophet of God is a prophet of God. There are no percentage
scales; either you are a prophet of God or you are not. Either
Ellen White was a prophet of God on the same par as the Biblical
prophets or she was not a prophet at all.
Fundamental
Principles
By
James White
[Comments
in brackets and italicized]
In presenting
to the public this synopsis of our faith, we wish to have
it distinctly understood that we have no articles of faith,
creed, or discipline aside from the Bible.
[So,
an Historic Seventh-day Adventist absolutely has no creed
outside of Inspiration—bottom line. Now, if you take any other
book of spiritual significance, aside from Inspiration, then
you are not a Historic Seventh-day Adventist. If you take
any other book and place it on a par, or pattern your life
or the church, or anything else after it, then you are not
an Historic Seventh-day Adventist.]
We do
not put forth this as having authority with our people, nor
is it designed to secure uniformity among them, as a system
of faith, but is a brief statement of what is, and has been,
with great unanimity, held by them. We often find it necessary
to meet inquiries on this subject, and sometimes to correct
false statements circulated against us, and to remove erroneous
impressions which have obtained with those who have not had
an opportunity to become acquainted with our faith and practice.
Our only object is to meet this necessity.
With these
remarks, we ask the attention of the reader to the following
propositions which aim to be a concise statement of the more
prominent features of our faith.
1.
That there is one God, a personal, spiritual Being, the Creator
of all things, omnipotent, omniscient, and eternal, infinite
in wisdom, holiness, justice, goodness, truth, and mercy;
unchangeable, and everywhere present by his representative,
the Holy Spirit. Psalms 139:7.
2.
That there is one Lord Jesus Christ, and Son of the Eternal
Father, the One by whom God created all things, and by whom
they do consist; that He took on Him the nature of the seed
of Abraham for the redemption of our fallen race; that He
dwelt among men, full of grace and truth, lived our example,
died our sacrifice, was raised for our justification, ascended
on high to be our only Mediator in the sanctuary in heaven,
where, with His own blood, he makes atonement for our sins;
which atonement, so far from being made on the cross, which
was but the offering of the sacrifice, is the very last portion
of His work as priest, according to the example of the Levitical
priesthood, which foreshadowed and prefigured the ministry
of our Lord in heaven. See Leviticus 16; Hebrews 8:4,5; 9:6,7;
etc.
[Now,
what this is saying is that we believe in the Lord Jesus Christ
as the Son of God. His life was our example; in his death
he was our substitute—he died as our Sacrifice. He is now
acting as our High Priest in heaven, pleading his blood for
the forgiveness of our sin. Do you believe that? Amen.]
3.
That the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments were
given by inspiration of God, contain a full revelation of
His will to man, and are the only infallible rule of faith
and practice.
4.
That baptism is an ordinance of the Christian church, to follow
faith and repentance, an ordinance by which we commemorate
the resurrection of Christ, as by this act we show our faith
in His burial and resurrection, and, through that, of the
resurrection of all the saints at the last day; and that no
other mode fitly represents these facts than that which the
Scriptures prescribe, namely, immersion. Romans 6:3-5; Colossians
2:12.
5.
That the new birth comprises the entire change necessary to
fit us for the kingdom of God, and consists of two parts:
First, a moral change, wrought by conversion and a Christian
life; second, a physical change at the second coming of Christ,
whereby, if dead, we are raised incorruptible, and, if living,
are changed to immortality in a moment in the twinkling of
an eye. John 3:3,5; Luke 20:36.
6.
We believe that prophecy is a part of God’s revelation to
man; that it is included in that Scripture which is profitable
for instruction (2 Timothy 3:16); that it is designed for
us and our children (Deuteronomy 29;29); that so far from
being enshrouded in impenetrable mystery, it is that which
especially constitutes the Word of God a lamp to our feet
and a light to our path (Psalm 119:105; 2 Peter 1:19); that
a blessing is pronounced upon those who study it (Revelation
1:1-3); and that, consequently, it is to be understood by
the people of God, sufficiently to show them their position
in the world’s history, and the special duties required at
their hands.
[As
Historic Seventh-day Adventists, we not only believe in all
of Scripture, but especially in the books of Daniel and Revelation.
We do not believe the book of Revelation is a sealed book,
but that it is very important, revealing to us where we are
in earth’s history and outlining the place of God’s church
in the last days.]
7.
That the world’s history from specified dates in the past,
the rise and fall of empires, and the chronological succession
of events down to the setting up of God’s everlasting kingdom,
are outlined in numerous great chains of prophecy; and that
these prophecies are now all fulfilled except the closing
scenes.
[So,
if you are going to be an Historic Seventh-day Adventist,
you not only have to believe in prophecy, you must also understand
and believe the true applications of prophecy, including the
day for a year principle. See Numbers 14:34, Ezekiel 4:6]
8.
That the doctrine of the world’s conversion and temporal millennium
is a fable of these last days, calculated to lull men into
a state of carnal security, and cause them to be overtaken
by the great day of the Lord as by a thief in the night; that
the second coming of Christ is to precede, not follow the
millennium; for until the Lord appears, the papal power, with
all its abomination, is to continue, the wheat and tares grow
together, and evil men and seducers wax worse and worse, as
the Word of God declares.
9.
That the mistake of Adventists in 1844 pertained to the nature
of the event then to transpire, not to the time; that no prophetic
period is given to reach to the second advent, but that the
longest one, the two thousand and three hundred days of Daniel
8:14, terminated in that year, and brought us to an event
called the cleansing of the sanctuary.
[Everyone
who calls himself an Historic Seventh-day Adventist ought
to be listening to what the husband of God’s prophet wrote
in 1874, when he wrote that all time prophecy came to an end
in 1844. Just a short time before this, his little wife had
said exactly the same thing. If you do not believe that, you
do not believe in Historic Adventism.]
10.That
the sanctuary of the new covenant is the tabernacle of God
in heaven, of which Paul speaks in Hebrews 8, and onward,
of which our Lord, as great High Priest, is minister; that
this sanctuary is the antitype of the Mosaic tabernacle, and
that the priestly work of our Lord, connected therewith, is
the antitype of the work of the Jewish priests of the former
dispensation (Hebrews 8:1-5, etc.); that this is the sanctuary
to be cleansed at the end of the 2300 days; what is termed
its cleansing being in this case, as in the type, simply the
entrance of the High Priest into the Most Holy Place, to finish
the round of service connected therewith, by blotting out
and removing from the sanctuary the sins which had been transferred
to it by means of the ministration in the first apartment
(Hebrews 9:22,23); and that this work, in the antitype, commencing
in 1844, occupies a brief but indefinite space, at the conclusion
of which the work of mercy for the world is finished.
11.That
God’s moral requirements are the same upon all men in all
dispensations; that these are summarily contained in the commandments
spoken by Jehovah from Sinai, engraved on the tables of stone,
and deposited in the ark, which was in consequence called
the “ark of the covenant,” or testament for under the sounding
of the seventh trumpet we are told that “the temple of God
was opened in heaven, and there was seen in his temple the
ark of his testament” (Revelation 11:19).
12.That
the fourth commandment of this law requires that we devote
the seventh day of each week, commonly called Saturday, to
abstinence from our own labor, and to the performance of sacred
and religious duties; that this is the only weekly Sabbath
known to the Bible, being the day that was set apart before
Paradise was lost (Genesis 2:2,3), and which will be observed
in Paradise restored (Isaiah 66:22,23); that the facts upon
which the Sabbath institution is based confine it to the seventh
day, as they are not true of any other day; and that the terms
Jewish Sabbath and Christian Sabbath , as applied to the weekly
rest day, are names of human invention, un-Scriptural in fact,
and false in meaning.
13.That,
as the man of sin, the papacy has thought to change times
and laws (the laws of God, Daniel 7:25), and has misled almost
all Christendom in regard to the fourth commandment; we find
a prophecy of a reform in this respect to be wrought among
believers just before the coming of Christ, Isaiah 56:1,2;
1 Peter 1:5; Revelation 14:12, etc.
[Do
you believe that God’s people in the last days are going to
stand up and expose the man of sin, the papacy, and how he
has changed the seventh day Sabbath? This is Historic Adventism.]
14.That,
as the natural or carnal heart is at enmity with God and His
law, this enmity can be subdued only by a radical transformation
of the affections, the exchange of unholy for holy principles;
that this transformation follows repentance and faith, is
the special work of the Holy Spirit, and constitutes regeneration
or conversion.
[This
means that you are going to have a lifestyle change. When
a person gives their heart to the Lord Jesus Christ, they
change; they are a new creature in Jesus Christ.]
15.That,
as all have violated the law of God, and cannot of themselves
render obedience to His just requirements, we are dependent
on Christ, first for justification from our past offenses,
and, secondly, for grace whereby to render acceptable obedience
to His holy law in time to come.
[Through
the power and strength of Jesus Christ, you can be victorious
over all sin in your life. Do you believe that?]
16.That
the Spirit of God was promised to manifest itself in the church
through certain gifts, enumerated especially in 1 Corinthians
12 and Ephesians 4; that these gifts are not designed to supersede,
or take the place of, the Bible, which is sufficient to make
us wise unto salvation, any more than the Bible can take the
place of the Holy Spirit; that in specifying the various channels
of its operation, that Spirit has simply made provision for
its own existence and presence with the people of God to the
end of time, to lead to an understanding of that Word which
it had inspired, to convince of sin, and work a transformation
in the heart and life; and that those who deny to the Spirit
its place and operation do plainly deny that part of the Bible
which assigns to it this work and position.
17.That
God, in accordance with His uniform dealings with the race,
sends forth a proclamation of the approach of the second advent
of Christ; that this work is symbolized by the three messages
of Revelation 14, the last one bringing to view the work of
reform on the law of God, that His people may acquire a complete
readiness for that event.
[If
you are not willing to stand up, proclaim, teach and believe
in the three angels of Revelation 14, you are not an historic
Seventh-day Adventist.]
18.That
the time of the cleansing of the sanctuary (see proposition
10), synchronizing with the time of the proclamation of the
third message, is a time of investigative judgment, first,
with reference to the dead, and, at the close of probation,
with reference to the living, to determine who of the myriads
now sleeping in the dust of the earth are worthy of a part
in the first resurrection, and who of its living multitudes
are worthy of translation—points which must be determined
before the Lord appears.
19.That
the grave, whither we all tend, expressed by the Hebrew sheol
and the Greek hades, is a place of darkness in
which there is no work, device, wisdom, or knowledge. Ecclesiastes
9:10.
[The
grave is a place of sleep where the dead know not anything—waiting
for the resurrection. What a beautiful message that is.]
20.That
the state to which we are reduced by death is one of silence,
inactivity and entire unconsciousness. Psalm 146:4; Ecclesiastes
9:5,6; Daniel 12:2; etc.
21.That
out of this prison house of the grave, mankind are to be brought
by a bodily resurrection; the righteous having part in the
first resurrection, which takes place at the second resurrection,
which takes place a thousand years thereafter. Revelation
20:4-6.
[Now
do you understand that? There are going to be two resurrections—the
righteous come forth when Christ comes; then there is the
thousand year millennium; and after the thousand year millenium,
the wicked come forth. Now the righteous come forth perfected,
changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye. The wicked,
when they come up a thousand years later, come up the same
way they went into the grave. Is that clear?]
22.That
at the last trump, the living righteous are to be changed
in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, and with the resurrected
righteous are to be caught up to meet the Lord in the air,
so forever to be with Lord.
23.That
these immortalized ones are taken to heaven, to the New Jerusalem,
the Father’s house in which there are many mansions (John
14:1-3), where they reign with Christ a thousand years, judging
the world and fallen angels, that is, apportioning the punishment
to be executed upon them at the close of the one thousand
years (Revelation 20:4; 1 Corinithians 6:2,3); that during
this time [thousand years] the earth lies in a desolated
and chaotic condition (Jeremiah 4:20-27), described, as in
the beginning, by the Greek term abussos, bottomless
pit (Septuagint of Genesis 1:2); and that here Satan is confined
during the thousand years (Revelation 20:1,2), and here finally
destroyed (Revelation 20:10; Malachi 4:1); the theater of
the ruin he has wrought in the universe, being appropriately
made for a time his gloomy prison house, and then the place
of his final execution.
[Christ
comes in the clouds of heaven, the righteous are taken, the
wicked are destroyed by the brightness of his coming. This
earth is desolate, as Scripture says in Jeremiah 4:22,23.
Satan is here with all his angels, but with no one to tempt.
They cannot go anywhere; they have to just sit there bound
with a great chain—a chain of circumstances—for a thousand
years and think about the desolation they have caused.
The
righteous living in heaven at this time are going over the
records of the wicked dead. This is when you are going to
be able to have your questions answered. If you have a question
about a loved one that did not make it to heaven, you can
see how the Holy Spirit worked on that person’s heart, but
how they rejected His work. You are going to have all of your
questions answered, and then your tears are going to be wiped
away. There are going to be some tears when your loved ones
do not make it to heaven; you are not going to have amnesia,
but your tears will be wiped away.]
24.That
at the end of the thousand years, the Lord descends with His
people and the New Jerusalem (Revelation 21:2), the wicked
dead are raised and come up upon the surface of the yet unrenewed
earth, and gather about the city, the camp of the saints (Revelation
20:9), and fire comes down from God out of heaven, and devours
them. They are then consumed root and branch (Malachi 4:1),
becoming as though they had not been (Obadiah 15, 16). In
this everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord
(2 Thessalonians 1:9), the wicked meet the everlasting punishment
threatened against them (Matthew 25:46). This is the perdition
of ungodly men, the fire which consumes them being the fire
for which “the heavens and the earth, which are now,” are
kept in store, which shall melt even the elements with its
intensity, and purge the earth from the deepest stains of
the curse of sin. 2 Peter 3:7-12.
[At
the end of the thousand years, the New Jerusalem will come
down. The wicked are resurrected and Satan says, “We can take
the city.” He is going to convince the wicked that they are
the righteous and that the Antichrist and the wicked are inside
the city, This is exactly what the secret rapture doctrine
teaches. The dear people who believe the secret rapture doctrine
believe that the Antichrist is going to have the Holy City
and that the wicked are inside and the righteous are outside.
They are being prepared to be deceived.
But,
when the wicked try to take the city, fire is going to come
down from God out of heaven and devour them. The Bible calls
this God’s strange work, but he has to purify the universe
of sin, once and for all, never to rise up again.
25.That
a new heavens and earth shall spring by the power of God from
the ashes of the old, to be, with the New Jerusalem for its
metropolis and capital, the eternal inheritance of the saints,
the place where the righteous shall evermore dwell. 2 Peter
3:13; Psalm 37:11, 29; Matthew 5:5.
[When
somebody asks: “What is an Historic Seventh-day Adventist?”
you may tell them: One who believes what our historic pioneers
believed and taught, what they struggled, prayed, and pled
with God to show them, and that which he confirmed for them
through the Spirit of Prophecy. This is what it means to be
an Historic Seventh-day Adventist.]
The
End