From a short over view that Dr. Jerry Moon uses in one of his classes:
"And while they went to buy, the bridegroom came; and they that were ready went in with him to the marriage: and the door was shut. Afterward came also the other virgins, saying, Lord, Lord, open to us. But he answered and said, Verily I say unto you, I know you not."
Here the term refers to a "close of probation."
2. November 1844: Millerites believe door is shut.
William Miller: "We have done our work in warning sinners, and in trying to awake[n] a formal church. God in His providence has shut the door; we can only stir one another up to be patient, and be diligent to make our calling and election sure" (Advent Herald, Dec. 11, 1844, quoted by A. L. White in Ellen G. White 1:60 [1 Bio 60]).
Here the term "shut door" refers to the beliefs that (1) the 2300-day prophecy ended on Oct. 22, 1844; and (2) probation for sinners did close on October 22, 1844.
3. December 1844: Millerites have given up their belief that the door is shut. "James White reported in 1847 that: "When she [Ellen] received her first vision, December 1844, she and all the band [the group of Advent believers] in Portland, Maine . . . had given up the midnight cry, and shut door, as being in the past" (Word to the Little Flock, p. 22). In other words, they assumed that the 2300 days had not ended yet. Writing to Joseph Bates on July 13, 1847, Ellen White declared: "At the time I had the vision of the midnight cry [December 1844], I had given it up [as having occured] in the past and thought it future, as also most of the band had" (Letter 3, 1847, quoted by A. L. White, 1 Bio 60-61).
Here the term refers to two concepts that were held as one: (1) that the 2300 days had ended October 22, 1844; and (2) that probation closed October 22, 1844.
By December 1844, Ellen Harmon, James White, and most of the Millerites had given up both these aspects of their Advent experience.
4. December, 1844: Ellen Harmon's first vision convinced her that #(1) above was true, and she apparently assumed that therefore #(2) was true also.
5. February 1845: Ellen Harmon's "Bridegroom Vision" led her to begin differentiating the two earlier meanings of the "Shut Door."
(1) She continued to believe that a genuine fulfillment of prophecy had occurred on October 22, 1844 and that those who had deliberately and knowingly rejected that message had been "left in darkness."
(2) She now believed, however, that for those who had never heard the Advent message with convicting power, probation was still open. Here is Marion Stowell's report of a conversation with Ellen Harmon in 1845:
"During Miss Harmon's (now Mrs. White's) visit to Paris, Maine, in the summer of 1845, I stated to her the particulars of a dear friend of mine whose father had prevented her attending our meetings; consequently she had not rejected light. She smilingly replied, `God never has shown me that there is no salvation for such persons. It is only those who have had the light of truth presented to them and knowingly rejected it" [to whom the door is shut] (1 Bio 96-97).
It appears that the idea of a general close of probation in 1844 was given up by Ellen White at least by the summer of 1845, but she did not reach a fuller understanding of the "shut door" until 1849.
6. March 24, 1849. Vision of "The Open and the Shut Door," Early Writings, 42-45.
Quoting Rev 3:7-8, she said that "Jesus had shut the door of the holy place" and "opened the door into the most holy" (EW 42). On October 22, 1844, His most-holy-place ministry began. This involved increased light and increased responsibility (cf. GC 424-425). Now the term "shut door" is connected with Rev 3:7-8 and refers to the change of Christ's heavenly ministry from the holy place to the most holy place.
7. 1849-1850: Conversions of persons who had not previously been Millerites reinforced the conviction that October 22, 1844, had not witnessed a general close of probation. These individuals included Hiram and Mrs. Patch, Heman Churchill, and J. H. Waggoner in 1850 (1 Bio 263-266).
8. 1874: Miles Grant, a first-day Adventist minister, charged that E. G. White "had declared on the basis of the visions that probation for the world had closed." She replied that "with my brethren and sisters, after the time passed in `44 I did believe that no more sinners would be converted. But I never had a vision that no more sinners would be converted" (Letter 2, 1874, quoted in 1 Bio 259, emphasis supplied). To the contrary, it was her visions that "led [the early Adventists] out of the extreme view of the shut door" (J. N. Loughborough, Review and Herald, Sept. 25, 1866, cited in 1 Bio 264).
9. The Principle
Early Writings, 45: "It is a fearful thing to treat lightly the truth which has convinced our understanding and touched our hearts. We cannot with impunity reject the warnings which God in mercy sends us." [Examples: the flood in Noah's day, the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, the words of Christ, Your house is left unto you desolate, and the warning of 2 Thess 2:10-12.] "As they reject the teachings of His Word, God withdraws His Spirit, and leaves them to the deceptions which they love" (emphasis supplied). The operative condition is the first sentence of this paragraph: "It is a fearful thing" to "reject" that which we consciously recognize to be truth.
On the other hand, there are those who have rejected information which they sincerely believed to be error, and this, though unfortunate, does not involve guilt. "The Lord has His representatives in all the churches. These persons have not had the special testing truths for these last days presented to them under circumstances that brought conviction to heart and mind; therefore they have not, by rejecting light, severed their connection with God. Many there are who have faithfully walked in the light that has shone upon their pathway. They hunger to know more of the ways and works of God. All over the world men and women are looking wistfully to heaven. Prayers and tears and inquiries go up from souls longing for light, for grace, for the Holy Spirit. Many are on the very verge of the kingdom, waiting only to be gathered in" (Testimonies, 6:70-71, emphasis supplied).
"The Lord desires His chosen servants to learn how to unite together in harmonious effort. It may seem to some that the contrast between their gifts and the gifts of a fellow laborer is too great to allow them to unite in harmonious effort; but when they remember that there are varied minds to be reached, and that some will reject the truth as it is presented by one laborer, only to open their hearts to Gods truth as it is presented in a different manner by another laborer, they will hopefully endeavor to labor together in unity" (Testimonies, 9:145, emphasis supplied).
10. Further study:
A. L. White, Ellen G. White, 1:256-270 (1 Bio 256-270), also 60-61, 78, 96, 140, 160-161, 191-192.
F. D. Nichol, Ellen G. White and Her Critics, 161-252.
SDA Encyclopedia, "Open and Shut Door."
Herbert E. Douglass, Messenger of the Lord, 500-512, 549-569 -- web links previously given on a different thread
E. G. White, Great Controversy, 428-431.
STEPS IN THE CHANGING USAGE OF THE TERM "SHUT DOOR"
Jerry Moon, revised 2002
1. Origin: Matt. 25:10-12."And while they went to buy, the bridegroom came; and they that were ready went in with him to the marriage: and the door was shut. Afterward came also the other virgins, saying, Lord, Lord, open to us. But he answered and said, Verily I say unto you, I know you not."
Here the term refers to a "close of probation."
2. November 1844: Millerites believe door is shut.
William Miller: "We have done our work in warning sinners, and in trying to awake[n] a formal church. God in His providence has shut the door; we can only stir one another up to be patient, and be diligent to make our calling and election sure" (Advent Herald, Dec. 11, 1844, quoted by A. L. White in Ellen G. White 1:60 [1 Bio 60]).
Here the term "shut door" refers to the beliefs that (1) the 2300-day prophecy ended on Oct. 22, 1844; and (2) probation for sinners did close on October 22, 1844.
3. December 1844: Millerites have given up their belief that the door is shut. "James White reported in 1847 that: "When she [Ellen] received her first vision, December 1844, she and all the band [the group of Advent believers] in Portland, Maine . . . had given up the midnight cry, and shut door, as being in the past" (Word to the Little Flock, p. 22). In other words, they assumed that the 2300 days had not ended yet. Writing to Joseph Bates on July 13, 1847, Ellen White declared: "At the time I had the vision of the midnight cry [December 1844], I had given it up [as having occured] in the past and thought it future, as also most of the band had" (Letter 3, 1847, quoted by A. L. White, 1 Bio 60-61).
Here the term refers to two concepts that were held as one: (1) that the 2300 days had ended October 22, 1844; and (2) that probation closed October 22, 1844.
By December 1844, Ellen Harmon, James White, and most of the Millerites had given up both these aspects of their Advent experience.
4. December, 1844: Ellen Harmon's first vision convinced her that #(1) above was true, and she apparently assumed that therefore #(2) was true also.
5. February 1845: Ellen Harmon's "Bridegroom Vision" led her to begin differentiating the two earlier meanings of the "Shut Door."
(1) She continued to believe that a genuine fulfillment of prophecy had occurred on October 22, 1844 and that those who had deliberately and knowingly rejected that message had been "left in darkness."
(2) She now believed, however, that for those who had never heard the Advent message with convicting power, probation was still open. Here is Marion Stowell's report of a conversation with Ellen Harmon in 1845:
"During Miss Harmon's (now Mrs. White's) visit to Paris, Maine, in the summer of 1845, I stated to her the particulars of a dear friend of mine whose father had prevented her attending our meetings; consequently she had not rejected light. She smilingly replied, `God never has shown me that there is no salvation for such persons. It is only those who have had the light of truth presented to them and knowingly rejected it" [to whom the door is shut] (1 Bio 96-97).
It appears that the idea of a general close of probation in 1844 was given up by Ellen White at least by the summer of 1845, but she did not reach a fuller understanding of the "shut door" until 1849.
6. March 24, 1849. Vision of "The Open and the Shut Door," Early Writings, 42-45.
Quoting Rev 3:7-8, she said that "Jesus had shut the door of the holy place" and "opened the door into the most holy" (EW 42). On October 22, 1844, His most-holy-place ministry began. This involved increased light and increased responsibility (cf. GC 424-425). Now the term "shut door" is connected with Rev 3:7-8 and refers to the change of Christ's heavenly ministry from the holy place to the most holy place.
7. 1849-1850: Conversions of persons who had not previously been Millerites reinforced the conviction that October 22, 1844, had not witnessed a general close of probation. These individuals included Hiram and Mrs. Patch, Heman Churchill, and J. H. Waggoner in 1850 (1 Bio 263-266).
8. 1874: Miles Grant, a first-day Adventist minister, charged that E. G. White "had declared on the basis of the visions that probation for the world had closed." She replied that "with my brethren and sisters, after the time passed in `44 I did believe that no more sinners would be converted. But I never had a vision that no more sinners would be converted" (Letter 2, 1874, quoted in 1 Bio 259, emphasis supplied). To the contrary, it was her visions that "led [the early Adventists] out of the extreme view of the shut door" (J. N. Loughborough, Review and Herald, Sept. 25, 1866, cited in 1 Bio 264).
9. The Principle
Early Writings, 45: "It is a fearful thing to treat lightly the truth which has convinced our understanding and touched our hearts. We cannot with impunity reject the warnings which God in mercy sends us." [Examples: the flood in Noah's day, the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, the words of Christ, Your house is left unto you desolate, and the warning of 2 Thess 2:10-12.] "As they reject the teachings of His Word, God withdraws His Spirit, and leaves them to the deceptions which they love" (emphasis supplied). The operative condition is the first sentence of this paragraph: "It is a fearful thing" to "reject" that which we consciously recognize to be truth.
On the other hand, there are those who have rejected information which they sincerely believed to be error, and this, though unfortunate, does not involve guilt. "The Lord has His representatives in all the churches. These persons have not had the special testing truths for these last days presented to them under circumstances that brought conviction to heart and mind; therefore they have not, by rejecting light, severed their connection with God. Many there are who have faithfully walked in the light that has shone upon their pathway. They hunger to know more of the ways and works of God. All over the world men and women are looking wistfully to heaven. Prayers and tears and inquiries go up from souls longing for light, for grace, for the Holy Spirit. Many are on the very verge of the kingdom, waiting only to be gathered in" (Testimonies, 6:70-71, emphasis supplied).
"The Lord desires His chosen servants to learn how to unite together in harmonious effort. It may seem to some that the contrast between their gifts and the gifts of a fellow laborer is too great to allow them to unite in harmonious effort; but when they remember that there are varied minds to be reached, and that some will reject the truth as it is presented by one laborer, only to open their hearts to Gods truth as it is presented in a different manner by another laborer, they will hopefully endeavor to labor together in unity" (Testimonies, 9:145, emphasis supplied).
10. Further study:
A. L. White, Ellen G. White, 1:256-270 (1 Bio 256-270), also 60-61, 78, 96, 140, 160-161, 191-192.
F. D. Nichol, Ellen G. White and Her Critics, 161-252.
SDA Encyclopedia, "Open and Shut Door."
Herbert E. Douglass, Messenger of the Lord, 500-512, 549-569 -- web links previously given on a different thread
E. G. White, Great Controversy, 428-431.