The error of assuming that "we" accepted the message of 1888 stems from a still
deeper error of misunderstanding, that is, what the message really was.
The officially endorsed view that it was accepted also must assume that there was
nothing uniquely Adventist about it. The message is evaluated as "the doctrine of
righteousness by faith," that is, the same "doctrine" that Protestants have believed for
hundreds of years. The following from one of our esteemed authors, a General Conference
vice-president, is typical of this widely accepted view of the message:
Some may ask, What was this teaching of righteousness by faith which became the mainspring of the great 1888 Adventist revival, as taught and emphasized by Mrs. White and others? It was the same doctrine that Luther, Wesley, and many other servants of God had been teaching (L. H. Christian, The Fruitage of Spiritual Gifts, p. 239).It would be grossly humiliating to confess that "we" rejected "the same doctrine that Luther, Wesley, and many other servants of God had been teaching." Hence we must say that we accepted "the doctrine" in and after 1888.
Men outside the Advent Movement--[had] the same general burden and emphasis, and arising at about the same time.... The impulse manifestly came from the same Source. And in timing, Righteousness by Faith centered in the year 1888.The conclusion is logical and inescapable: we should go to these sources to get the "doctrine" and to learn how to teach righteousness by faith. And we have done so, for decades, in spite of the fact that the constant trend of this view of righteousness by faith is antinomian.
For example, the renowned Keswick Conferences of Britain were founded to "promote practical holiness."... Some fifty men could easily be listed in the closing decades of the nineteenth and the opening decades of the twentieth centuries ... all giving this general emphasis (Froom, Movement of Destiny, pp. 319, 320; emphasis original).
The Re-emphasis View of 1888
Another highly endorsed view of the 1888 message is that it was a mere "re-emphasis" of what the Adventist pioneers had believed from our very beginning, a recovery of a homiletical balance in doctrine and preaching temporarily lost between 1844 and 1888. This view has come to be very widely believed. A few examples must suffice:This conference [1888] ... proved to be the beginning of a re-emphasis of this glorious truth, which resulted in a spiritual awakening among our people (M. E. Kern, RH, August 3, 1950).If this "re-emphasis" (or "emphasis") view is correct, some further questions arise:
The greatest event of the eighties in the experience of Seventh-day Adventists was the recovery, or the restatement and new consciousness, of their faith in the basic doctrine of Christianity, "Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ" (A. W. Spalding, Captains of the Host, p. 583).
There were those who accepted the [1888] emphasis on righteousness by faith; on the other extreme were those who thought this emphasis threatened the "old landmarks."...
The reaction of the church during the nineties to the new emphasis on justification ... was mixed (N. F. Pease, The Faith That Saves, pp. 40, 45; 1969).
What Ellen White Saw in the Message of 1888
As soon as she had heard a little of Dr. Waggoner's message at Minneapolis (for the first time, incidentally), she recognized it to be "precious light" in harmony with what she had been "trying to present" during the previous 45 years. She knew no jealousy, but welcomed the messengers and their message. It was a further development in full harmony with past light, but never clearly preached before:I see the beauty of truth in the presentation of the righteousness of Christ in relation to the law as the Doctor has placed it before us. You say, many of you, that it is light and truth. Yet you have not presented it in its light heretofore.... That which has been presented harmonizes perfectly with the light which God has been pleased to give me during all the years of my experience. If our ministering brethren would accept the doctrine which has been presented so clearly ... the people would be fed with their portion of the meat in due season (Ms. 15, 1888; Olson, op. cit., pp. 294, 295).The brethren at Minneapolis themselves understood the message to be a revelation of new light, rather than a re-emphasis of what they had formerly preached. This is implied as follows:
One brother asked me if I thought there was any new light that we should have, or any new truths? ... Well, shall we stop searching the Scriptures because we have the light on the law of God, and the testimony of His Spirit? No, brethren (Ms. 9, 1888; Olson, pp. 292, 293).Thus the message of 1888 was something which the brethren had not previously comprehended. There was a failure to appreciate the heart and verity of the third angel's message, the outward forms of which alone they understood:
There are but few, even of those who claim to believe it, that comprehend the third angel's message; and yet this is the message for this time. It is present truth. But how few take up this message in its true bearing and present it to the people in its power. With many it has but little force. Said my guide, "There is much light yet to shine forth from the law of God and the gospel of righteousness. This message understood in its true character, and proclaimed in the Spirit will lighten the earth with its glory" (Ms. 15, 1888; Olson, p. 296).Ellen White never at any time used the word "re-emphasis" or even "emphasis" in respect of the 1888 message. Clearly, it appeared to be new light which contradicted ideas held by the brethren, just as the Jews thought that Christ contradicted Moses when in fact His message fulfilled Moses. Her context is the message and its reception:
The peculiar work of the third angel has not been seen in its importance. God meant that His people should be far in advance of the position which they occupy to-day.... It is not in the order of God that light has been kept from our people--the very present truth which they needed for this time. Not all our ministers who are giving the third angel's message, really understand what constitutes that message (5T 714, 715).
We see that the God of heaven sometimes commissions men to teach that which is regarded as contrary to the established doctrines. Because those who were once the depositaries of truth became unfaithful to their sacred trust, the Lord chose others who would receive the bright beams of the Sun of righteousness, and would advocate truths that were not in accordance with the ideas of the religious leaders....There was a principle which made an advance revelation of "new light" necessary in 1888. This is stated in one of Ellen White's sermons at Minneapolis:
Even Seventh-day Adventists are in danger of closing their eyes to truth as it is in Jesus, because it contradicts something which they have taken for granted as truth but which the Holy Spirit teaches is not truth (May 30, 1896; TM pp. 69, 70).
The Lord has need of men who are ... worked by the Holy Spirit, who are certainly receiving manna fresh from heaven. Upon the minds of such, God's word flashes light...There was a distinct difference in her mind between the message of righteousness by faith as presented in 1888 and the "past message" the Lord sent prior to 1888. While there was to be no contradiction, there must be further development: "We want the past message and the fresh message" (RH, March 18, 1890). (But her appeals are not a license to fanaticism or novel ideas irresponsibly proclaimed).
That which God gives His servants to speak to-day would not perhaps have been present truth twenty years ago, but it is God's message for this time (Ms. 8a, 1888; Olson, pp. 273, 274).
We are in the day of atonement, and we are to work in harmony with Christ's work of cleansing the sanctuary.... We must now set before the people the work which by faith we see our great High-priest accomplishing in the heavenly sanctuary (RH January 21, 1890).Thus it is evident:
The mediatorial work of Christ, the grand and holy mysteries of redemption, are not studied or comprehended by the people who claim to have light in advance of every other people on the face of the earth. Were Jesus personally upon earth, He would address a large number who claim to believe present truth with the words He addressed to the Pharisees: "Ye do err, not knowing the Scriptures, or the power of God."...
There are old, yet new truths still to be added to the treasures of our knowledge. We do not understand or exercise faith as we should.... We are not called to worship and serve God by the use of the means employed in former years. God requires higher service now than ever before. He requires the improvement of the heavenly gifts. He has brought us into a position where we need higher and better things than have ever been needed before (ibid., February 25, 1890).
We have been hearing His voice more distinctly in the message that has been going for the last two years.... We have only just begun to get a little glimmering of what faith is (ibid., March 11, 1890).
The Light of 1888 the Beginning of Greater Light
Ellen White often spoke of the certainty of the Lord sending new light, if and when His people were willing to receive it. The tragic "if and when" are necessary only because the new wine must have new bottles, and that means a crucifixion of self (cf. Matthew 9:16, 17):If through the grace of Christ His people will become new bottles, He will fill them with the new wine. God will give additional light, and old truths will be recovered, and replaced in the framework of truth; and wherever the laborers go, they will triumph. As God's ambassadors, they are to search the Scriptures, to seek for the truths that have been hidden beneath the rubbish of error (ibid., December 23, 1890).Can there be any question that the message of 1888 was the beginning of that fourth angel's message, who joins his voice with the third angel? Neither The Fruitage of Spiritual Gifts (Christian), Captains of the Host (Spalding), Through Crisis to Victory (Olson), The Lonely Years (A. L. White), nor the recent White Estate "Statement" inserted in Selected Messages, Volume 3, (pp. 156-163), makes a single allusion to this fact. The same is true of the article on the 1888 conference in the Spring 1985 issue of Adventist Heritage. Our Seventh-day Adventist Encyclopedia discusses the 1888 message in several articles, but never recognizes it for what it was (pp. 634, 635, 1086, 1201, 1385).
A great work is to be done, and God sees that our leading men have need of greater light, that they might unite harmoniously with the messengers whom He will send to accomplish the work that He designs they should (ibid., July 26, 1892).
Several have written to me, inquiring if the [1888] message of justification by faith is the third angel's message, and I have answered, "It is the third angel's message in verity." The prophet declares, "And after these things I saw another angel come down from heaven, having great power; and the earth was lightened with his glory" [Revelation 18:1] (RH, April 1, 1890).If that wondrous message is to be proclaimed by the popular Protestant revivalists, we have no reason to exist as a people.
The loud cry of the third angel has already begun in the revelation of the righteousness of Christ.... This is the beginning of the light of the angel whose glory shall fill the whole earth (ibid., November 22, 1892).
The Light of the Loud Cry Turned Off
The Lord is merciful and long-suffering, and ready to forgive. He restores that which was lost on condition of repentance. But we must not allow confusion to neutralize the parable of 1888.But here a state of unbelief arises, Is not this Joseph's son? ... What did they do in their madness? "They rose up and thrust Him out of the city." Here I want to tell you what a terrible thing it is if God gives light, and it is impressed on your heart and spirit.... Why, God will withdraw His Spirit unless His truth is accepted. But God was accepted at Nazareth by some; the witness was here that He was God; but a counter influence pressed in ... that would cause the hearts to disbelieve (Ms. 8, 1888; Olson, pp. 263, 264).That "counter influence" is a significant factor in our 1888 history. Two days before, she had warned that the steps of unbelief being taken would prove final for that generation so far as advanced light of the latter rain was concerned:
We are losing a great deal of blessing we might have had at this meeting [Minneapolis], because we do not take advance steps in the Christian life, as our duty is presented before us; and this will be an eternal loss (ibid., Olson, p. 257).Speaking of a meeting of minister-leaders in 1890, Ellen White revealed the pathetic picture of Jesus Christ being turned away as the bride-to-be in the Song of Solomon 5:2 turned her lover away: "Christ knocked for entrance but no room was made for Him, the door was not opened and the light of His glory, so nigh, was withdrawn" (Letter 73, 1890).
That light which is to fill the whole earth with its glory has been despised by some who claim to believe the present truth.... I know not but some have even now gone too far to return and repent (TM 89, 90; 1896).
If you wait for light to come in a way that will please every one, you will wait in vain. If you wait for louder calls or better opportunities, the light will be withdrawn, and you will be left in darkness (5T 720).
The Source of Reformationist Misunderstanding
Earnest efforts for decades to disparage the 1888 message as "new light" tend to deflect favorable attention from the message itself toward popular non-Adventist, Protestant concepts. This has been the case for some sixty years, beginning around the 1920's. A. G. Daniells' Christ Our Righteousness of 1926 saw nothing unique in the 1888 message, but mistakenly interpreted it as being "in perfect harmony with the best [non- Adventist] evangelical teaching" (Pease, By Faith Alone, p. 189).[The 1888] righteousness by faith was not new light. There are those who have entertained the mistaken idea that the message of the righteousness of Christ was an unknown truth to the advent movement up to the time of the Minneapolis meeting, but the fact is that our pioneers taught it from the very beginning of the advent church. As a young preacher, I often heard our veterans, such as J. G. Matteson and E. W. Farnsworth, declare that justification by faith was not a new teaching in our church (Christian, The Fruitage of Spiritual Gifts, pp. 225, 226).Sad to say, some of those "veterans" were not receptive to the increased 1888 light. This insistence that the 1888 message was not new light was the familiar insignia of the opposition of that time. Not long after the Minneapolis meeting, R. F. Cottrell wrote an article for the Review attacking the 1888 message, asking, "Where is the New Departure?" (RH April 22, 1890). W. H. Littlejohn likewise attacked the message with an article, January 16, 1894, entitled, "Justification by Faith Not a New Doctrine." Both failed to recognize what was happening in their day--the onset of the latter rain.
Elder E. J. Waggoner had the privilege [at Minneapolis] granted him of speaking plainly and presenting his views upon justification by faith and the righteousness of Christ in relation to the law. This was no new light, but it was old light placed where it should be in the third angel's message.... This was not new light to me, for it had come to me from higher authority for the last fortyfour years (Ms. 24, 1888; 3 SM 168; Olson, p. 48).These statements do not say that the 1888 message in its fulness was not the new light of the latter rain and the loud cry. In context, the Ms. 24, 1888 statement was written to refute the prejudice of opposing brethren who disparaged the message as merely human novelty. All light is eternal; none is ever strictly "new." But it was certainly new to our brethren in 1888 and to our congregations. And it would have been new to the world if we had proclaimed it!
Laborers in the cause of truth should present the righteousness of Christ, not as new light, but as precious light that has for a time been lost sight of by the people (RH March 20, 1894; Olson, p. 49).
Questions were asked at that time, "Sister White, do you think that the Lord has any new and increased light for us as a people?" I answered, "Most assuredly. I do not only think so, but can speak understandingly. I know that there is precious truth to be unfolded to us if we are the people that are to stand in the day of God's preparation (3 SM 174).Seventh-day Adventists are not to cultivate the reputation of being inventors of new doctrines, but repairers of the breach, the restorers of paths to dwell in, the discoverers of the old ways. Such a presentation will disarm prejudice, whereas presenting truth as something newly invented will arouse opposition.