Prayer is vital and increasingly so as the world continues to unravel. Without prayer, how will we touch the lives of busy, distracted, annoyed people?
“The church may appear as about to fall, but it does not fall. It remains, while the sinners in Zion will be sifted out, the chaff separated from the precious wheat” (Ellen G. White, Selected Messages, vol. 2, p. 380).
Has this statement been taken out of context by those who believe it promises the eventual triumph of corporate Adventism through the shaking out of its apostate majority?
When one listens to theological discussions in Adventism today, online and otherwise, the use of the fundamentalist label is clearly not designed to win the respect of those to whom it is applied.
Those who proclaim God’s last message for mankind, who seek first and foremost to be among that company who “keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus” (Rev. 14:12), need to be especially careful in vetting what they hear about both the church and the outside world.
According to both Scripture and the writings of Ellen White, the cleansing of the sanctuary in heaven and the cleansing of the soul temple on earth are clearly and irrevocably dependent on one another.
Everyone has a place in God’s work and is called to be faithful in proclaiming God’s last-day message.
This week the world remembered one of the most grotesque tragedies in human history. Its lessons dare not be forgotten, especially by Christians.
Within the past week, both the outgoing and incoming Presidents of the United States have issued blanket pardons to particular individuals. We aren’t going to discuss on this site the wisdom, justice, or lack thereof in any of these decisions. But as Bible-believing Seventh-day Adventist Christians we are constrained to ask, Does God issue pardons of this nature within the setting of Biblical salvation?
Does the Bible support the baptizing of people “into Christ,” rather than into a church with a set of doctrines?
“Fires will break out unexpectedly, and no human effort will be able to quench them. The palaces of earth will be swept away in the fury of the flames. . . . The end is near, probation is closing! Oh, let us seek God while He may be found, call upon Him while He is near!”
Ellen G. White, Messages to Young People, pp. 89-90.
“We cannot now step off the foundation that God has established. We cannot now enter into any new organization, for this would mean apostasy from the truth.”
Ellen G. White, Selected Messages, vol. 2, p. 390.
Do the inspired writings uphold this distinction?