It was enough to prove you dead wrong about Ellen White's "peculiar teaching", so it's good enough for me.
Pride cometh before the fall.
Peace out. I'm done with you.
Lainie, Ellen White has been passed off as being an inspired prophet of God. Indeed, many of her earlier writings are peppered throughout with statements claiming "I saw", "my accompanying angel told me/showed me", and stuff like that. If that were true, then Ellen's message should have no difficulty lining up with the Scriptures.
But it does. Constantly.
Ellen White wrote as a product of her time. Her statements regarding old Jerusalem never being built again (published in 1851) flies directly against the statement Jesus made of His expectation that Jerusalem would return to its original owners after the
Diaspora had completed (see Luke 21:24).
The heresy of Arianism was rampant during the mid-19th century as well, and was the impetus for similar groups such as the JW's and Mormons coming onto the scene. Ellen wrote of her
vision about the plan of salvation being devised
after the fall of Adam (contrast against 1 Peter 1:18-20) and portrayed Jesus as a disparate individual from the Father, showing her Arian influence. The SDA church did not adopt a trinitarian stance until the 1880's.
Likewise, the ideas she had regarding the covenants was influenced from her environment. God isn't influenced by groups of people inventing whatever doctrine suits their taste. Visions from Him wouldn't be, either. That there was an existing body of thought that could be garnered from the SDB's instead of Scripture and the Spirit of God is a testimony that Ellen wasn't divinely inspired in her thoughts. We don't need to document where Ellen got her inspiration; if it wasn't from God, the exercise of testing a prophet is completed.
With that said, I still stand behind my earlier post
law of love = ministration of death:
The foundation for the thought you present isn't coming from the Scriptures - it is coming from Ellen White. Even though you haven't read her writings (as you have claimed before), you are instructed according to the
fundamental beliefs of the SDA church. Imbedded in Fundamental Belief #10 is the undefined coded phrase "law of love". You can search the Bible from cover to cover and never figure out what this means. However, this joins several other fundies that are rooted in Ellen
instead of the Bible:
The yoke that binds to service is the law of God. The great law of love revealed in Eden, proclaimed upon Sinai, and in the new covenant written in the heart, is that which binds the human worker to the will of God. If we were left to follow our own inclinations, to go just where our will would lead us, we should fall into Satan's snare, and become possessors of his attributes. Therefore, God confines us to His will, which is high, noble, elevating. He desires that we shall patiently and wisely take up the duties of service. {ST, June 29, 1904 par. 4}
It isn't hard to identify this "law of love" as the ten commandments, from the qualification that it was proclaimed at Sinai. This same "law of love" is what Paul called the "ministration of death" in 2 Corinthians 3:7, which makes Ellen hard to reconcile with Paul.
According to Ellen, the covenant proclaimed at Sinai existed in Eden.
Deuteronomy 5:2-3
2: The LORD our God made a covenant with us in Horeb.
3:
The LORD made not this covenant with our fathers, but with us, even us, who are all of us here alive this day.
According to Moses' own words, Ellen was wrong.
According to Ellen, the covenant proclaimed at Sinai is what's transferred into the hearts of the believer in the new covenant.
Jeremiah 31:31-32
31: Behold, the days come, saith the LORD, that I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah:
32:
Not according to the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day that I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt; which my covenant they brake, although I was an husband unto them, saith the LORD.
According to Jeremiah and the Word he received as "thus saith the LORD", Ellen was wrong. The new covenant isn't related to the old one from Sinai, the one taken away according to Hebrews 10:9.
Ezekiel reversed the role of the law and God's Spirit, saying that His Spirit was to enter us, and from that we would follow His judgments (Ezekiel 36:27). Yet it is an allusion to the same prophecy given to Jeremiah and quoted in Hebrews.
These are all points I had mentioned in my original post.
Yet you haven't addressed these.
Instead, you defend the writings of Ellen White that you were taught as a new Adventist, and you weren't told where these peculiar teachings came from.
Needless to say, they aren't Biblical.
Victor