Newsletter article for the Green Lake Church Gazette
If we are looking
for the birthday of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, October 22,
1844, will serve as well any other date. Which, at first glance, is
not very auspicious since our name for that day is “The Great
Disappointment.” Still, the spiritual trauma of that day gave birth
to the social and theological streams that became the Seventh-day
Adventist Church.
A quick summary of
the history:
In the early 1800s,
a New Englander named William Miller was studying the Bible,
especially the prophecies about the end of time. As he studied he
believed he had stumbled upon the approximate date for the Second
Coming of Jesus. He distrusted his conclusions, so he restudied the
passages and double-checked his calculations. Every which way he
approached it, he came up with the same answer. Jesus was coming back
to earth in 1843, give or take a year or two.
He was amazed that
no one else had seen this. How could it be that he was the only one?
If it were true surely he should tell people. But if he was wrong, it
would be irresponsible. So he kept quiet about it. But he experienced
an intensifying inner conviction that he should tell others the good
news. Finally, in an attempt to get the monkey off his back, he made
a deal with God:
“You want me to
tell people—you set it up.”
He figured that
would take care of things. It was up to God. He was off the hook.
Shortly after he
prayed this prayer, his nephew showed up at the house with an
invitation to come preach at their church. Uncle William was not too
happy about this, but a bargain was a bargain, so he preached. And
the rest is history.
Other people got
excited about his discovery. Invitations to preach started coming in.
Over the next few years a huge movement sprang up as thousands, then
tens of thousands of people caught Advent fever. Jesus was coming
soon. In 1843, give or take a year.
Eventually, the
entire nation was abuzz with Advent fever. People either believed it
and thought it was the most wonderful truth they had ever heard or
people dismissed it as fanaticism, fundamentalism, and a flat
contradiction of Jesus' statement that the day and hour of the Second
Coming was a mystery known only to God.
Sometime in 1843
someone came up with a refinement of Mr. Miller's prophetic scheme.
This new interpretation pinpointed a specific date—October 22,
1844. That was the Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur, according to one
Jewish calendar. And on that day, according to the theory, Jesus was
supposed to come back to earth. Farmers were so certain of this
prophecy they left their potatoes in the ground unharvested. Why have
a barn full of potatoes if Jesus was coming back? They could use
their time more profitably sharing the good news with their
neighbors. People spent their life savings to spread the word.
Finally, the day
arrived. It was like Thanksgiving and Christmas and the Fourth of
July all rolled into one. It was the best day ever. Jesus was going
come. War would end. Sick people would be released from pain and
suffering. Crushing debt would be lifted. Arthritis would quit
hurting. The scourge of addictions—in those days that would have
been alcoholism—would disappear. Life would be happy. People would
be holy and healthy. What a day!!!!!!
The day passed.
Nothing happened.
For the true
believers it was a big oops, a devastating, crushing disappointment.
It shook their entire religion to its very core. They had been so
sure of their understanding of the prophecies, that this failure
called into question the Bible itself and even the existence of God.
If they had been wrong about this, what else did they have wrong?
In the weeks and
months after this Great Disappointment, the true believers came up
with new interpretations of the passages they thought had predicted
the Second Coming. These new interpretations were still full of
complicated calculations and leaping conclusions based on obscure
Bible verses. While these interpretations of obscure prophecies have
not done very well under the microscope of biblical scholarship, the
mindset that allowed these novelties also opened those early
Adventists to all kinds of questions about traditional Christian
theology that they would have ordinarily suppressed.
What kind of God,
they asked, would keep people alive for billions of years just so
they could be tortured. The obvious answer—God would be a
monster—had been obscured by centuries of Christian tradition.
These early Adventists were free to reject this venerable tradition.
A flat, bold rejection of the notion of eternal hell fire has been
enshrined at the very heart of Adventist theology.
They rediscovered
the Jewish Sabbath, which, as modern biblical scholarship has
emphatically confirmed, was the Sabbath of Jesus and the apostles,
and therefore the authentic Christian Sabbath.
These theological
innovators rejected the doctrine of predestination. Even though it
had been a popular doctrine for at least 1700 years, and was strongly
affirmed by the leading founders of Protestantism, the shattering of
their religion allowed these early Adventists to ask the obvious
question: How can it be just for God to give people life with the
express intention of damning them? Once we step outside the circle of
internecine Christian argument, the notion of predestination is
crazy. Incredible. Unacceptable. Those early Adventists rejected it.
God could not be like that.
These theological
advances would have been very unlikely apart from the upheaval of
“The Great Disappointment.” It was the shattering of their
theological confidence that enabled them to question all kinds of
certainties and traditions. If the thing they had believed so happily
and enthusiastically was wrong, what else could be wrong? It was a
great question. It remains a good question.
Since our forebears
through intense and sincere Bible study had arrived at utter
confidence that October 22, 1844, was the date of the Second Coming,
we might expect their subsequent theology would have been
characterized by a great degree of humility. We could hope these
early Adventists would learn from that terrible disappointment and
find a better way. Alas. Those early Adventists were also human.
Instead of turning away from theological speculation, they redoubled
their study of obscure Bible prophecies. They quickly worked out new
theories of interpretation and defended these new ideas as adamantly
as the earlier beliefs. Their certainty passed into the DNA of
Adventism. In the church culture of my childhood it was assumed that
if people disagreed with us, they were either incapable of correctly
understanding the plain meaning of the Bible (i.e. they were
unintelligent), or they were unwilling to admit what the biblical
evidence showed (i.e. they were spiritually perverse). No one could
honestly and understandingly disagree with us.
Which brings us to
today.
The official
Adventist creed currently has 28 statements. The unofficial creed
includes many details of prophetic interpretation, including explicit
condemnations of the Roman Catholic Church and American Protestant
Churches as members of spiritual Babylon. The denomination has
developed a “Church Manual” that is touted by some as an
absolutely authoritative guide to doing church. Recently top
bureaucrats in the church have taken to citing “General Conference
Policy” as incontrovertible authority even in matters of morality
and conscience. Each of these expressions of Adventist thought
represents a temptation to imagine that we have it “just right.”
The creed, Church Manual, and General Conference Policy have each
been crafted through a critical review process. They have been
developed in good faith by people of sound mind and good hearts who
have been chosen as leaders in the church. Traditional Adventist
prophetic interpretation goes back to the earliest days of Adventism
and have been reinforced by generations of evangelists. It is easy to
regard them as authoritative beyond question. But then we remember
our history. Once before, in spite of thorough study with good
hearts, we were wrong. We could be wrong again.
Oops is embedded in
Adventist DNA as deeply as our confidence in the Bible itself. There
should be no embarrassment in acknowledging that not everything we
believe, not everything we say, not everything we publish is
inerrant. We are Adventists. Our denominational birthday is October
22, “The Great Disappointment.” We could just as well call it the
Big Oops. We knew we were right, but we were wrong. It is vital to
recognize that this is not merely an Adventist reality. Christianity
itself is full of “oops.”
It is common for
Christians to imagine that the very best version of Christianity was
“apostolic Christianity.” People will often pine for the glorious
days of apostolic Christianity when the church was just as it should
be. But this is fiction. The apostles made big oops.
The disciple John
reported to Jesus: Master, we saw someone casting out demons in your
name. But he did not have authorization from you or even from one of
us. So we told him to stop. Jesus said, “What? You stopped him? How
could you? He was helping people. And helping them in my name. And
you stopped him? John, don't you understand that he is our ally? Do
not tell him to stop.” (See Mark 9 and Luke 9.) Similarly when a
denomination today imagines it alone can authorize people to work in
Jesus' name and do the work of Jesus, the denomination stands under
the rebuke of Jesus. No one needs Adventist credentials or Catholic
credentials or Lutheran credentials to work for Jesus. And if
officials in a denomination denigrate Christian ministry because it
is not under their control, they are acting “apostolic” in the
worst sense of the word.
Another favorite
story, one that we rehearse every time we dedicate a baby: Jesus was
teaching and healing, doing the important work of shaping the
spiritual lives of men. Some women approach, bringing their children
to have Jesus bless them. The disciples stopped the women. It was
their job to help ensure Jesus attended to the most important cases
among the thousands of people who came seeking his attention. The
disciples did not invent their status or function. They had been
assigned their work by Jesus himself. And they took their work
seriously. On this occasion, they officiously scolded the women for
imagining that their children were important enough to merit the time
and attention of Jesus. Men mattered. Men needed to be taught,
instructed, responded to. Men were spiritual leaders and as such,
they especially commanded the time and attention of Jesus. Women and
children not so much.
But they were wrong.
The apostles—disciples, brethren, elders—were wrong. Oops. Jesus
publicly corrected them.
The disciples
imagined it was their job use their position of authority as members
of the inner circle of Jesus to enforce the natural ranking of their
society and make sure Jesus served the important people first. The
disciples were wrong. It was a big oops. So today, when men imagine
it is their job to control access to the “inner circle” of Jesus,
they are wrong. Excluding women from ordination to ministry is simply
wrong. Sure, the apostles, first “clergy,” were all male. They
were also all wrong. Oops.
In the story of “The
Canaanite Woman,” the disciples were unanimous in their urging of
Jesus to get rid of her. She was an annoyance. Jesus seemed to share
their bias and told the woman he was not authorized to bless her. His
divinely-appointed ministry was to Jewish people, not people like
her. In this story even Jesus is wrong, if we take his words
literally. If the disciples (and Jesus' first words) were right, the
woman should have been excluded. But the woman was included,
overturning both the authority of the apostles and the initial words
of Jesus. Oops. The teaching of the Gospel in this passage clearly
makes the authority of the apostles subordinate to authority of
motherhood. The natural “authority” of humanity is higher than
ecclesiastical authority wielded by modern day apostles.
Apostolic error and
blindness did not end with the crucifixion or the resurrection or
even with Pentecost. According to the story in Acts 10, the Holy
Spirit had to overcome deep reluctance on the part of Peter to get
him to go to the home of Gentile Cornelius. At Cornelius' house, the
Holy Spirit dramatically bypassed apostolic authority and agency.
Before members of the household were baptized and completely apart
from any “authorization” or laying on of hands by the apostle,
the Holy Spirit came on the Gentiles in the same dramatic fashion
that was observed on Pentecost, the very “coming of the Holy
Spirit” that inaugurated or validated the mission of the apostles.
Those who claim that full spiritual authority is dispensed only
through apostolic channels, are ignoring the plain meaning of this
story. The apostles often got it wrong, especially when it came to
their view of their authority. They consistently exaggerated and
misunderstood their authority. (Application to the male clergy of
Adventism who fighting to exclude women from full ecclesiastical
honor is obvious.)
Adventists may be
tempted to dismiss all that I have written so far because we have not
traditionally lionized apostolic authority. We give much greater
prominence to “prophetic authority.” Because Ellen White had a
prophetic gift, we imagine the Adventist Church is immune to the
kinds of misunderstanding that have tripped up other Christians.
Through the prophet, God has kept us correct. At least that's what we
say. The story of the people of Israel during the life time of the
prophet Jeremiah can help protect us from this kind of arrogance.
When Jeremiah was
born, Judah was an independent nation. Then the armies of Babylon
began threatening. Jeremiah called the nation to repentance. He
warned that unless they repented, doom was unavoidable. The
Babylonians broke the Jewish defenses and the Jewish king became a
vassal of the king of Babylon. The Jewish people rebelled in an
attempt to recover their God-ordained independence. The Babylonians
returned, broke the Jewish defense and deported 10,000 people to
Babylon. Again the Jewish people attempted to assert their
God-ordained independence. Again the Babylonian army besieged the
city. Against this background, consider this prophecy:
And it came to pass the same year, in the beginning of the reign of
Zedekiah king of Judah, in the fourth year, and in the fifth month,
that Hananiah the son of Azur the prophet, which was of Gibeon, spake
unto me in the house of the LORD, in the presence of the priests and
of all the people, saying,
“Thus speaketh the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel, saying, I have
broken the yoke of the king of Babylon. Within two full years will I
bring again into this place all the vessels of the LORD'S house, that
Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon took away from this place, and carried
them to Babylon. And I will bring again to this place Jeconiah the
son of Jehoiakim king of Judah, with all the captives of Judah, that
went into Babylon, saith the LORD: for I will break the yoke of the
king of Babylon.”
Then the prophet Jeremiah said unto the prophet Hananiah in the
presence of the priests, and in the presence of all the people that
stood in the house of the LORD, even the prophet Jeremiah said,
“Amen! The LORD do so. The LORD perform thy words which thou hast
prophesied, to bring again the vessels of the LORD'S house, and all
that is carried away captive, from Babylon into this place. Jeremiah
28: 1-6
The words of
Hananiah were spoken in the name of the Lord. The hope for Israel he
announced was well-supported in the prophecies of Isaiah and Micah
before him. The doom of Babylon was also announced by previous
prophets. But he was wrong. God did not break the yoke of Babylon.
The captives did not come home—at least not for another seventy
years, then to a city and temple that had been razed.
During Jeremiah's
long prophetic career he frequently had conflicts with other
prophets. He himself was charged with treason for the content of some
of his prophecies. His predictions, especially late in his career
seemed unbelievable and unholy because of their gloom.
What were people to
do in light of the prophetic confusion?
Do not trust in prophecies that proclaim God's favor on this temple
or this city. Instead do this: Provide for justice. Be careful to
protect the foreigner, the fatherless, and the widow, and do not shed
innocent blood. Jeremiah 7
Jeremiah came back
to this theme more than once. The message above was delivered at the
temple and was addressed to the people as a whole. Below is a
prophecy Jeremiah gave at the royal palace.
Thus says the LORD: Go down to the house of the king of Judah, and
speak there this word.
Say, 'Hear the word of the LORD, O king of Judah, sitting on the
throne of David, you and your officials and every citizen who enters
through these gates. This is what the LORD says: Do what is just and
right. Rescue those who have been robbed from the hand of the
oppressor. Do no wrong or violence to the foreigner, the fatherless,
or the widow, and do not shed innocent blood in this place. Jeremiah
22.
All the debates
about which scenario was correct—whether Babylon was going to break
through Jewish defenses or give up the siege, whether the exiles in
Babylon were going to come home soon or not—all these debates
ultimately were of secondary concern. What mattered before God was
social justice, morality, generosity toward foreigners, poor people,
and those without the security of stable family life. If the Jewish
people would devote themselves to this exalted moral vision they
would find themselves acting in concert with the will of God.
Jesus made this same
point in Matthew 24-25. He talked about end times and prophetic
speculations. Then he told the story of the sheep and goats. The
people whom the judgment revealed as wise people were not those who
understood prophecy, but those who served. In fact, in the story it
is precisely those who were most religious, who made clear
distinctions between good people and bad people, between people
worthy of help and people unworthy of help—these are the people who
are revealed in the judgment to be fools.
Among Adventists it
is common to cite the “presence” among us of Ellen White and the
certainty of her prophetic guidance as proof that we are on the right
track. We are the people of God. Our church is the exclusive
corporate agency of God for doing God's final work in the earth. In
making these claims, we ignore two obvious facts. First, she is dead.
We cannot know definitively what she would say were she alive among
us today. Just as Hananiah echoed the words of the true prophet
Isaiah and was then denounced by the true prophet Jeremiah for
uttering false prophecy, so those who quote Ellen White in support of
optimistic assessments of the stability and triumph of the
denomination may find themselves in error.
Second, Ellen White
herself often made statements which contradict each other according
to their plain reading. She wrote that the General Conference was the
highest authority of God on earth. And she wrote that the General
Conference was not the highest authority of God on earth. She wrote
that no one is authorized to ignore the slightest detail of her
words, then she scolded a missionary for following her instructions
to the letter regarding drug use, an obedience that resulted in the
death of the missionary's child. Famous debates among Adventists
about the nature of Christ and soteriology have been fueled by
passages in Ellen White that could readily be adduced in support of
contradictory views.
When we devote
ourselves to championing some particular prophetic interpretation or
some bit of arcane theology like the interpretation of Daniel 8:14 or
the correct scientific application of Genesis 6-9 or the correct
interpretation of Paul's prohibition on women instructing men, we are
skating toward irrelevance and ultimately toward folly. We are
heading toward another oops.
We are most likely
to avoid religious oops when we devote ourselves to the mission
described by Jeremiah and Jesus:
Do what is just and right. Rescue those who have been robbed from the
hand of the oppressor. Do no wrong or violence to the foreigner, the
fatherless, or the widow, and do not shed innocent blood in this
place.
I was hungry and you gave me food. I was thirsty, and you gave me
water. I was a foreigner and you took me in. I was naked and you
clothed me. I was sick and you visited me. In prison and you did not
abandon me.
When we devote our
energy, our minds, our treasure to pursuing this vision we can expect
the commendation of our Lord, “Well done, good and faithful
servant.” That's better than oops.
1 comment:
Re. Jesus and the Canaanite woman. In both Matthew and Mark he is quoted saying that it wasn't good to take the children's bread and give it to the dogs. Ah! What kind of dogs was he referring to? Two words used in the Greek originals of both Gospels. On the one hand, we're not to give what is holy to dogs[Gr. kuones; ALWAYS used in a bad sense in NT] However, in the two accounts of his dealing with the Canaanite woman it is a different word used[Gr. kunaria; literally, "little dogs", a term of endearment used for house-dogs, AND ONLY USED IN THESE TWO PLACES IN THE NT!]
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