F
from scratch
Guest
And there still isn't. An SDA who I've had personal interaction with tried to convince me that Jesus is merely another of the prophets and in His sojourn on this planet wasn't in fact God (incarnate or otherwise). IOW what they were really saying is Mary is the Mother of God to a man who wasn't God but became God. What a bunch of hughey.Recycled material relevant to your post:
Dr. Martin and Dr. Barnhouse concluded their interviews with GC officials with two major complaints, revolving around Ellen White's status as "a continuing and authoritative source of truth" (SDA FB #18), and the Investigative Judgment (SDA FB #24). They concluded that the SDA church needed to drop these from their Fundamental Beliefs, consistent with their embracing Questions on Doctrine that Dr. Martin preferred to accept as representative of Adventist doctrine over their other writings.
Before the GC discussions and the publication of Kingdom of the Cults, Dr. Walter Martin's earlier book The Rise of the Cults classified the SDA church as a cult. Based on QoD, he chose to remove that classification and codify that conclusion in Kingdom of the Cults.
His reliance on QoD as the sole determinant for that reclassification becomes more clear in his comments made in 1983:
Now, the result today is that QoD isn't accepted and does not reflect Adventist doctrine. I just looked up the list of SDA Fundamental Beliefs on their official website; #18 still claims Ellen White to be "the Lord's messenger", and #24 still claims that Jesus "entered the second and last phase of His atoning ministry" in 1844. The Adventist publication of Questions on Doctrine has been relegated to the trash, and Dr. Martin noted this in 1983 in the same interview as above:
There has been no change in Adventism, as Dr. Walter Martin thought possible in 1965. It is still properly classified as a cult, as he originally determined in his book The Rise of the Cults.
Upvote
0