Title: Concepts of Revelation and Inspiration
1Concepts of Revelation and Inspiration
- Denis Fortin
- Writings of Ellen G. White
2The Issues
- Most difficulties with the writings of Ellen
White stem often from a faulty understanding of
how God gave her messages and how her writings
are inspired. - Thus, people not well informed regarding the
processes of revelation and inspiration are more
vulnerable to a loss of confidence in her
ministry when they discover information contrary
to their views.
3Ellen Whites view of her ministry
- Introduction to the Great Controversy
- "In harmony with the word of God, His Spirit was
to continue its work throughout the period of the
gospel dispensation. During the ages while the
Scriptures of both the Old and the New Testament
were being given, the Holy Spirit did not cease
to communicate light to individual minds, apart
from the revelations to be embodied in the Sacred
Canon.
4Ellen Whites view of her ministry
- "The Bible itself relates how, through the Holy
Spirit, men received warning, reproof, counsel,
and instruction, in matters in no way relating to
the giving of the Scriptures. And mention is made
of prophets in different ages, of whose
utterances nothing is recorded. In like manner,
after the close of the canon of the Scripture,
the Holy Spirit was still to continue its work,
to enlighten, warn, and comfort the children of
God." (GC viii)
5Ellen Whites view of her ministry
- "The Spirit i.e. the gift of prophecy was not
given--nor can it ever be bestowed-- to supersede
the Bible for the Scriptures explicitly state
that the word of God is the standard by which all
teaching and experience must be tested." (GC vii)
6Modes of Revelation
- 1. Visions
- In her early years of ministry, Ellen White
received visions often attended by striking
physical phenomena. - Unconscious of earthly surroundings
- Temporary cessation of breathing
- Unblinking eyelids
- Supernatural strength
7Ellen White's first vision
- "While I was praying at the family altar, the
Holy Ghost fell upon me, and I seemed to be
rising higher and higher, far above the dark
world. I turned to look for the Advent people in
the world, but could not find them, when a voice
said to me, "Look again, and look a little
higher." At this I raised my eyes, and saw a
straight and narrow path, cast up high above the
world. On this path the Advent people were
traveling to the city, which was at the farther
end of the path." (EW 14)
8Modes of Revelation
- 2. Prophetic Dreams
- These were visions received during her sleep.
9San Francisco Earthquake
- "While at Loma Linda, California, April 16, 1906,
there passed before me a most wonderful
representation. During a vision of the night, I
stood on an eminence, from which I could see
houses shaken like a reed in the wind. Buildings,
great and small, were falling to the ground.
Pleasure resorts, theaters, hotels, and the homes
of the wealthy were shaken and shattered. Many
lives were blotted out of existence, and the air
was filled with the shrieks of the injured and
the terrified. . . . The awfulness of the scenes
that passed before me I cannot find words to
describe. It seemed that the forbearance of God
was exhausted, and that the judgment day had
come. Terrible as was the representation that
passed before me, that which impressed itself
most vividly upon my mind was the instruction
given in connection with it." (3SM 40-41)
10Natural Dreams
- Prophetic dreams must be distinguished from
natural dreams - by the information and content
- by the presence of the same angel as in prophetic
daytime visions
11Genuine visions and dreams
- "I would call especial attention to the
remarkable dreams given in this little work, all
with harmony and distinctness illustrating the
same things. The multitude of dreams arise from
the common things of life, with which the Spirit
of God has nothing to do. There are also false
dreams, as well as false visions, which are
inspired by the spirit of Satan. But dreams from
the Lord are classed in the word of God with
visions and are as truly the fruits of the spirit
of prophecy as visions. Such dreams, taking into
the account the persons who have them and the
circumstances under which they are given, contain
their own proofs of their genuineness." (1T
569-570 1867)
12Modes of Revelation
- 3. Short visions during periods of prayer or
writing - Well, while I was praying and was sending up my
petition, there was, as has been a hundred times
or more, a soft light circling around in the
room, and a fragrance like the fragrance of
flowers, of a beautiful scent of flowers. (Ms
43a, 1901)
13Modes of Revelation
- 4. Precognitions
- Literal eyewitness-style revelations of persons
she did not know or events that had not yet
happened. - "Sometimes the things which I have seen are hid
from me after I come out of vision, and I cannot
call them to mind until I am brought before a
company where that vision applies, then the
things which I have seen come to my mind with
force." (2SG 292-293)
14Modes of Revelation
- 5. Impressions
- When I am speaking to the people I say much
that I have not premeditated. The Spirit of the
Lord frequently comes upon me. I seem to be
carried out of, and away from, myself the life
and character of different persons are clearly
presented before my mind. I see their errors and
dangers, and feel compelled to speak of what is
thus brought before me. I dare not resist the
Spirit of God. (5T 20)
15Function of Inspiration
- In contrast to revelation, which is a process of
wholly divine initiative and control, the process
of inspiration involves a union of divine and
human elements. - Inspiration is the work of the Holy Spirit upon
the prophet.
16Union of Divine and Human Elements
- "The Ten Commandments were spoken by God Himself,
and were written by His own hand. They are of
divine, and not of human composition. But the
Bible, with its God-given truths expressed in the
language of men, presents a union of the divine
and the human. Such a union existed in the
nature of Christ, who was the Son of God and the
Son of man. Thus it is true of the Bible, as it
was of Christ, that 'the Word was made flesh, and
dwelt among us.' John 114." (GC v-vi)
17Role of the Holy Spirit
- "Each Bible writer, under the guidance of the
Holy Spirit, presents what is most forcibly
impressed upon his own mind--a different aspect
of the truth in each, but a perfect harmony
through all." (GC vi)
18Role of the Holy Spirit
- "God has been pleased to communicate His truth to
the world by human agencies, and He Himself, by
His Holy Spirit, qualified men and enabled them
to do this work. He guided the mind in the
selection of what to speak and what to write."
(GC vi)
19Role of the Holy Spirit
- "I am trying to catch the very words and
expressions that were made in reference to this
matter, and as my pen hesitates a moment, the
appropriate words come to my mind." (Letter 123,
1904 8MR 35)
20Role of the Holy Spirit
- "I have all faith in God .... He works at my
right hand and at my left. While I am writing out
important matter, He is beside me, helping me. He
lays out my work before me, and when I am puzzled
for a fit word with which to express my thought,
He brings it clearly and distinctly to my mind. I
feel that every time I ask, even while I am still
speaking, He responds, "Here am I." (Letter 127,
1902 2MR 156-157)
21Role of the Holy Spirit
- "Through the inspiration of His Spirit the Lord
gave His apostles truth, to be expressed
according to the development of their minds by
the Holy Spirit. But the mind is not cramped, as
if forced into a certain mold." (Letter 53, 1900
in 1SM 22)
22Where does this divine-human union occur?
- The dictation theory of inspiration virtually
asserts that the earliest point at which a human
element becomes part of the writing is at the
pen. - In other words, every word and detail is
pre-selected and dictated by God and the only
part of the prophet really involved is the
prophet's hand.
23Where does this divine-human union occur?
- The term "verbal inspiration" has today such a
wide range of interpretations that it has lost
much of its precision. - As understood by early Adventists, however, it
denoted the idea that every word of the prophet's
utterance was pre-selected by God without any
human participation, hence could not subsequently
be altered, even by the prophet.
24Where does this divine-human union occur?
- The verbal/dictation view was specifically
rejected by the 1883 General Conference, in a
resolution offered by W.C. White, and clearly
representing Ellen White's understanding of
inspiration. - The context for this resolution was the need of
reprinting Ellen White's Testimonies for the
Church which had gone out of print.
25Where does this divine-human union occur?
- Whereas, We believe the light given by God to His
servants is by the enlightenment of the mind,
thus imparting the thoughts, and not (except in
rare cases) the very words in which the ideas
should be expressed therefore - Resolved, That
in the re-publication of these volumes such
verbal changes be made as to remove the
above-named imperfection, as far as possible,
without in any measure changing the thought and,
further - Resolved, That this body appoint a
committee of five to take charge of the
republication of these volumes. (Review and
Herald, November 27, 1883, p. 741 see also 3Bio
217-219)
26Conceptual or Thought Inspiration
- Ellen White taught that the union of the divine
and human in the process of inspiration took
place at the level of the "mind and will."
27Conceptual or Thought Inspiration
- The Bible is written by inspired men, but it is
not God's mode of thought and expression. It is
that of humanity. God, as a writer, is not
represented. Men will often say such an
expression is not like God. But God has not put
Himself in words, in logic, in rhetoric, on trial
in the Bible. The writers of the Bible were God's
penmen, not His pen. Look at the different
writers.
28Conceptual or Thought Inspiration
- It is not the words of the Bible that are
inspired, but the men that were inspired.
Inspiration acts not on the man's words or his
expressions but on the man himself, who, under
the influence of the Holy Ghost, is imbued with
thoughts. But the words receive the impress of
the individual mind. The divine mind is diffused.
The divine mind and will is combined with the
human mind and will thus the utterances of the
man are the word of God (Manuscript 24, 1886 in
1SM 21).
29Implications of Conceptual Inspiration
- If the union of the divine and the human in
inspiration takes place at the level of
"thoughts," and involves a "combining" of "mind
and will," it follows that the faculties of both
understanding and choice were fully operant as
the prophet wrote.
30Implications of Conceptual Inspiration
- How the divine mind and will is combined with
the human mind and will remains a mystery, but
it suggests that in formulating or choosing
"words and expressions" to represent the
"thoughts" received from God, the prophet
exercised both human intellect and choice, in
cooperation with the "divine mind and will."
31Implications of Conceptual Inspiration
- Ellen White clearly understood this process to be
a live, dynamic one that continued as long as the
prophet remained under the influence of the Holy
Spirit. - She claimed full dependence of the Holy Spirit in
writing and that - she had full responsibility and freedom to choose
her words.
32Implications of Conceptual Inspiration
- "Although I am as dependent upon the Spirit of
God in writing my views as I am in receiving
them, yet the words I employ in describing what I
have seen are my own, unless they be those spoken
to me by an angel, which I always enclose in
marks of quotation." (RH, 8 Oct 1867, also in 1SM
37 and 3SM 278)
33Implications of Conceptual Inspiration
- In summary, Ellen White understood the
combination of the divine and human mind and will
to be an ongoing process in the prophet's
experience. - Inspiration guided the prophet as communicator,
not only in the initial formulation of thoughts
into words, but also in the subsequent
improvement of those expressions by herself or
with the help of others.
34Characteristics of divine-human writings
- Individual styles of writings and diversity (GC
vi 1SM 21-22) - Variety of viewpoints, yet perfect harmony
- "The Creator of all ideas may impress different
minds with the same thought, but each may express
it in a different way, yet without contradiction"
(1SM 22).
35Characteristics of divine-human writings
- Imperfect language, yet trustworthy message
- "The treasure was entrusted to earthen vessels,
yet it is, nonetheless, from Heaven. The
testimony is conveyed through the imperfect
expression of human language, yet it is the
testimony of God and the obedient, believing
child of God beholds in it the glory of a divine
power, full of grace and truth" (GC vi-vii).
36Characteristics of divine-human writings
- "The Bible is not given to us in grand,
superhuman language. Jesus, in order to reach man
where he is, took humanity. The Bible must be
given in the language of men. Everything that is
human is imperfect" (1SM 20).
37Characteristics of divine-human writings
- While Ellen White insists that God alone is
infallible yet she believed in the trustworthy
reliability of Scripture as a whole (1SM 17). - "In His word, God has committed to men the
knowledge necessary for salvation. The Holy
Scriptures are to be accepted as an
authoritative, infallible revelation of His will.
They are the standard of character, the revealer
of doctrines, and the test of experience" (GC
vii).
38Characteristics of divine-human writings
- While the human vessel of inspiration is fallible
and imperfect, the product of inspiration is
infallible albeit imperfect. - Divine inspired writings are not exempt from
insignificant mistakes due to limitations of
languages or of comprehension. But the message
is trustworthy and infallible.
39Characteristics of divine-human writings
- Erroneous concepts of inspiration lead inevitably
to misinterpretation and misuse of inspired
writings. - Overemphasis on the human elements in inspired
writings leads to diminished appreciation for
their true value and authority. - De-emphasis of the human elements leads to rigid,
inflexible, and authoritarian applications
confusion of rules and principles.