XXXVI - 1(03) “Watchman, what of the night?” "The hour has come, the
hour is striking and striking at you,
The Hand of God - 1 Page 2 They Lied Page 4 Divine Intervention Page 5 Dialogue with Rome Page 7
Editor's Preface
One of the most
critical and sensitive issues facing the Adventist Community at the present is
the religiopolitical agenda of the Religious Right. Already a committee has
been formed to be chaired by a Jesuit priest for the purpose of formulating
legislation to create a National Day of Rest. The committee will also include
an Adventist minister. It was back in March of last year that an Action Alert
was sent from the Christian Coalition indicating that they planned to make such
a law a part of their legislative agenda for 2002. Then, there was a turn
around; and when inquiry was made about this planned agenda, the announcement
was denied and they charged an unidentified individual with fraud and forgery.
Note carefully the article - "They Lied." Observe,
the legislation will be termed simply, "A National Day of Rest." It
will be promoted as a "Family" day; however, the Alert emphasized the
religious thinking behind the proposed legislation. Further, the connection
between the Coalition and Orthodox Jewry is not without significance. In this issue we note
the dialogue which has been taking place between the Adventist Biblical
Research Institute scholars and Papal theologians for the past several years.
The Adventist News Network indicated that "in the most recent meeting,
(May, 2002), several other topics for possible conversations were
identified," This means more dialogue. While papers on the Sabbath and the
27 Fundamental Statements of Beliefs have already been presented - we comment
in this issue on a bemusing observation made in the paper on the Fundamental
Beliefs. - There is more that can be said and, as space permits, will be said
regarding the Statements of Belief paper.
Page 2 The
Hand of God -- 1 When God appeared to
Moses in the burning bush at Centuries later,
another king defied the God of heaven. Making a great feast "to a thousand
of his lords," he brought forth "the golden vessels that were taken
out of the temple of the house of God which was at The king, and
his princes, his wives, and his concubines, drank in them. They drank wine and
praised the gods of gold, and of silver, of brass, of iron, of wood, and of
stone. (Dan. 5:3-4). Then --- In the same
hour came forth fingers of a man's hand, and wrote over against the candlestick
upon the plaster of the wall of the king's palace: and the king saw the part of
the hand that wrote. (v. 5). The probation of
another nation was closing. The seventy years, which Jeremiah prophesied would
be the duration of the servitude of Again after the passing
of centuries, the One who came down to deliver As Jesus left the
Both Matthew and Mark report Jesus' reference to the prophecy of Daniel: When ye
therefore shall see the abomination of desolation, spoken of by Daniel the
prophet, stand in the holy place, . . . then let them
which be in Luke interprets, for
his patron Theophilus, these words of Jesus referring to the prophecy of
Daniel, writing, "When ye shall see In the summer of AD 66,
the Jews revolted against the Roman rule. They captured from the Romans the
fortress of
Page 3 The Jewish forces
followed and fell upon the retreating Romans to the point of producing a near
rout. This defeat and withdrawal of Cestius permitted the Christians in the
city to flee and find refuge at To note a probable
answer, we will need to observe certain facts given in Scripture and history
for the years immediately prior to AD 66. When Paul completed his third
missionary tour, a decade earlier, he reported to the elders at
Besides the
It was inevitable that, as soon, as the church engaged
in worldwide missionary work, a serious difficulty and misunderstanding should
arise within its membership. The first Christians were Jews. They knew the
Jewish faith as the only true faith, and the God it worshiped as the only true
God. They believed thoroughly in the inspiration and spiritual authority of the
Scriptures that had come down to them from their fathers. They knew of
proselyting, but that meant bringing Gentiles into the Jewish church, with the
understanding that such converts should observe all things required of the
Jews. Jesus had based His program and teachings upon the Scriptures. While He had criticized the
traditional
Page 4 accretions, formalities,
externalities, and hypocrisies of the religious leaders He met, Jesus insisted
that He had not come to change the Law or the Prophets, but rather to make
their teachings successful as a spiritual fact in the experience of the people.
The Jews who followed Christ mistakenly concluded that those who were brought
in line with Jesus' teachings would also follow the practices of the Jewish
church. If they were to become members of the Christian sect, they must also
become members of the great body of Judaism. ( The
sign that Jesus gave - They Lied In the September issue
of WWN last year, we carried an article captioned, "A National Day of
Rest?" Earlier in the year we had received from several sources a copy of
an "action alert," dated While preparing the
September issue for publication, we received from a reader in During the week-end
meeting of October 11-13 in Washington DC, Deason was asked why there was the
denial of what was originally sent out in regard to the legislative agenda that
had been anticipated. His reply was - "the Jews." Friday was marked
by a pro-Israel rally as well as a videotaped message from President Bush
assuring the delegates that his administration would advocate the Coalition's
key agenda items. The mayor of The Coalition press
release from which the above data was taken, also focused on the issue of
separation of church and state calling the policies advocated to assure such a
separation, "a deception of Satan." One who attended the conference
as an observer was impressed with the emphasis on the Ten Commandments. This is
interesting in the light of the commandment which says, "Thou shalt not
bear false witness," and the denial of the "Action Alert" sent
by a member of the staff of the Coalition calling for a National Sunday Law. Truth does not need to
garb itself in a cloak of falsehood. To promote the Ten Commandments and then
to advocate a National Sunday Law is incongruous. To seek to promote a
pro-Israel
Page 5 stand so as to receive the accolade as a "lover of
Tragically, this is not
limited to the Christian Coalition of Divine Intervention In the December issue
of WWN, giving an historical review of the doctrine of the Incarnation as has
been taught in Adventism, we observed that the leaders of the Holy Flesh
Movement in Indiana based their aberrant view on an interpretation of Hebrews
2:11: "For both He that sanctifieth, and they who are sanctified, are all
of one: for which cause He is not ashamed to call them brethren." R. S.
Donnell, president of the Indiana Conference and titular head of what has been
dubbed, the Holy Flesh Movement, in a series of articles in the Indiana Reporter, wrote: Now, Christ stood where Adam stood, and Adam stood
without a taint of sin. So Christ must have stood where Adam stood before his
fall - that is, without a taint of sin. This must be so, for Paul continues the
subject, and in verse 11 he says: "For both He that sanctifieth and they
that are sanctified (not those He is going to sanctify, but they who are
sanctified) are all of one: for which cause He is not ashamed to call them
brethren." Notice that it is the sanctified who He is not ashamed to call
brethren. Further, it is the sanctified ones of whose flesh He partakes.
"Forasmuch, then, as the children (or brethren, sanctified ones) are
partakers of flesh and blood, He also Himself likewise (just as the sanctified
ones are partakers) took part of the same: that through death He might destroy
him that had the power of death, that is the devil." Heb. 2:14. (What I Taught in Indiana, art. 1,
pp. 4, 5) In his second article,
Donnell returns to these verses. He wrote: When we closed [the first article] we were considering
the fact that Christ Himself took part of flesh and blood, just as the children
did. That is, He took part of the same flesh that the children possessed. We
found, also, that the children are the sanctified ones. Now the sanctified ones
are surely those upon whom the truth of God and power of His Holy Spirit has
wrought - the ones who are new creatures in Christ Jesus, those who have been
created unto good works, the same which God hath before ordained that they
should walk in. (ibid.,p. 5) Simply stated, the
advocates of the Holy Flesh teaching believed that Christ partook of the flesh
of those who have been "born again." The question would follow,
wherein then does the flesh of a "born again" person differ from the
flesh of a "sinner"? This would lead to a discussion beyond the scope
of this study. Observe that Donnell
bases his concept of the Incarnation squarely on Hebrews 2. In spite of the
fact that Ellen G. White told the constituency meeting of the Indiana
Conference at the time of its restructuring in 1901 that "none are to pick
up any points of this doctrine and call it truth," yet in 1979, Thomas A.
Davis, serving in the book department of the Review and Herald Publishing
Association, authored a book which questioned, Was Jesus Really Like Us?
Citing a reference which reads - "The incarnation of
Christ has ever been, and ever will remain a mystery. That which is
revealed, is for us and for our children. . ." - In the next chapter of
his book, "Light from the Book of Hebrews," The point that presents itself so forcefully here is
that
Page 6 Jesus was not incarnated with a nature common to all
men. He did not come to this world to be in all respects like all men. The
human nature He was endowed with was not like that of unregenerate sinners. His
human nature was common only with those who have experienced a spiritual
rebirth. (Emphasis his) Let us express this another
way: Of Mary, Jesus was born "born again." (p. 30). As noted in the
previous issue of WWN, another added his voice to this teaching. In 1981, Ron
Spear published a 2nd Edition of his Waymarks
of Adventism in which he wrote - Christ "was born with the nature that
becomes ours when we are born again." (p. 39). This position demands, on
the part of God, a divine intervention. Either Mary was so vitalized that she
could pass on to Christ what no other mother can convey to her offspring, or
Christ was preserved free from any element of the fallen nature of Adam which
is the common heritage of all the other sons and daughters of the human race. At the evening meeting
of the 1901 General Conference Session prior to the break-up of the Holy Flesh
movement, E. J. Wagonner addressed the issue of the Incarnation. He asked: Was Christ, that holy thing which was born of the virgin Mary, born in sinful flesh? Did you ever hear of the
Roman Catholic doctrine of the immaculate conception?
And do you know what it is? Some of you possibly have supposed in hearing of it, that it meant that Jesus Christ was born sinless. That
is not the Catholic dogma at all. The doctrine of the immaculate
conception is that Mary, the mother of Jesus, was born sinless . . . We need to settle, everyone of
us, whether we are out of the church of Rome or not. There are a great many
that have got the marks yet . . . Do you not see that the idea that the flesh of Jesus
was not like ours (because we know ours is sinful) necessarily involves the
idea of the immaculate conception of the virgin Mary?
Mind you, in Him was no sin, but the mystery of God manifest in the flesh, the
marvel of the ages, the wonder of the angels, that thing which even now they
desire to understand, and which they can form no just idea of, only as they are
taught it by the church, is the perfect manifestation of the life of God in its
spotless purity in the midst of sinful flesh. O that is a marvel, is it not? (1901 GC Bulletin, p. 404) How then are we to
understand Hebrews 2:11? Back in 1986, a group
of "leading lights" in the community of Adventism assembled at
Hartland Institute in My reason for not attending the conference was that I
had received an advance copy of Tom Davis' paper and did not feel comfortable
with all of the views expressed in it. (Letter dated, With a request asking
that I correct my factual error, he enclosed a copy of his written response to
The text reads -
"For both He that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of
one." One what? Davis and the "holy flesh" men of
In line with the Greek
construction, there are two possible answers. The Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary supplied the word,
"Father," making it read "all out of one Father," meaning
Father-God. This would be in line with the context of verse 10 - "many
sons" and the "Captain of their salvation;" however,
Page 7 there is another name that can be supplied, which is also within the context of verses 14 and 17 of chapter two. A. T. Jones at the 1895 GC Session introduced his 13th study on "The Three Angel's Messages" with Hebrew 2:11. He commented: In His human nature, Christ came from the man whom we
all have come; so that the expression in this verse, "all of one," is
the same as "all from one," - as all coming forth from one. And the
genealogy of Christ, as one of us, runs to Adam. Luke 3:38. (p. 231). Dr. Larson summarized
his response to Thomas Davis as well as to the others - Colin Standish and Ron
Spear - who have adopted the teaching of "Holy Flesh" men of
These two views, that the one
is a reference to the Father-God; or that the one is a reference to the
common ancestor, Adam, are equally possible and legitimate insofar as the Greek
text is concerned. The context, however, would incline me to the opinion
that Jones' view is the more correct. But it must be emphasized that both these views are
faithful to the Greek text, which states that the sanctifier and the sanctified
are all out of one (Father-God or father Adam). I see no way that we can
be faithful to the text and read it all of one (nature). That is not
what the writer [of Hebrews] stated. And it would be equally difficult to interpret all
out of one to indicate a similarity between the nature of Christ and the
natures of His brethren. If the two entities are described as having a common
source and origin, then surely neither of these two entities can be that
source or origin. This would be like requiring a son to be the father of himself. (Emphasis his). Dialogue with According to the
Adventist News Network, in a release dated, Some of the
observations made by Dr. George W. Reid in his presentation of the Fundamental
Beliefs are interesting and a bit bemusing. In discussing #23, Christ's
Ministry in the Heavenly Sanctuary, Reid stated: "It is possible this
statement articulates the single doctrine most nearly unique to
Adventists." This is true. Then, after giving a brief historical
background in the historical development of this doctrine, he told the Catholic
theologians that "the complexity of this teaching, which requires
knowledge of both historical events and the prescribed ritual of the Hebrew
sanctuary, makes it difficult to grasp without considerable study." The
doctrine which marks Seventh-day Adventism's uniqueness so complex that it is difficult
to grasp! Or was this Reid's cover so as to avoid the current controversy in
Adventism over this teaching? We have known since
1890 one problem, and have done nothing about it. Or would the necessary
changes to conform the type and antitype be too traumatic? But is not pure
unadulterated truth basic to the righteousness of Christ? See TM, p. 65. Evil on evil! Says the Lord the Eternal -- it
is coming, the hour has come, the hour is striking and striking at you, the
hour and the end! (Ezekiel
7:5-6; Moffatt)
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Originally published by Adventist Laymen's Foundation of Mississippi/Arkansas
Wm. H. Grotheer, Editor
Adventist Laymen's Foundation was chartered in 1971 by Elder Wm. H. Grotheer, then 29 years in the Seventh-day Adventist
ministry, and associates, for the benefit of Seventh-day Adventists who were deeply concerned about the compromises of fundamental
doctrines by the Church leaders in conference with those who had no right to influence them. Elder Grotheer began to publish the monthly "Thought Paper," Watchman, What of the Night? (WWN) in January, 1968, and continued the publication as Editor until the end of 2006. Elder Grotheer died on May 2, 2009.
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