Lesson 14 Section B: Prophets Speak Out

One of the identifying marks of God’s people, as described in Revelation 12:17, is that they have “the testimony of Jesus Christ,” which according to Revelation 19:10 is “the spirit of prophecy.” In this lesson we will delve into the way in which God has used prophecy through the years to bless and help His people, and how we may recognize the characteristics of a true prophet. Ellen G. White, as a prophetess for today, will be examined in the light of God’s word. You will find this a fascinating study!
Channel for God’s truth
First of all, let’s examine how prophecy works and what it is. In
previous lessons, we have studied various prophecies of the Bible, their
symbolic and literal meanings, and their exact fulfillment.
Prophecy is history told in advance; it is a preview of future events in
God’s dealing with this world. Throughout all the ages since sin
entered, God has been very merciful in doing nothing before first revealing
it to His prophets. See Amos 3:7. He spoke to the fathers
through the Prophets. Hebrews 1:1. The chain of prophetic
revelation goes like this: From God to Jesus to His angel to the prophet
to God’s people. Revelation 1:1, 2. Gabriel is Christ’s
own angel of prophecy who stands in God’s presence.
Some outstanding prophets of the Old Testament were Moses, a shepherd;
David, a king; and Daniel, prime minister of both Babylon and Persia.
Similarly, Miriam, the sister of Moses, Deborah, and Huldah were women
who prophesied in the Old Testament times.
Prophets in the Christian church
God has placed prophets in His church as one of the gifts to unify and
perfect the believers in the knowledge of Christ. “’Till we all come
in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto
a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ.”
Ephesians 4:13. See also 1 Corinthians 12:28.
Some outstanding prophets in the New Testament were Jesus Himself, John
the Baptist, and John the Revelator. There were also prophetesses
in those days, such as Anna (Luke 2:36) and the four daughters of
Philip the evangelist (Acts 21:9).
The prophets served a valuable role among God’s people. They presented
a true picture of the spiritual condition of the church as a whole.
However, when the people fell so deeply into apostasy that there was no
more hope for them, then the prophets ceased to prophesy. Lamentations
2:9. And Proverbs 29:18 affirms, “Where there is no vision,
the people perish:….”
Characteristics of a true prophet
Physical test of a true prophet
Certain physical phenomena occur while a prophet is in vision. A
careful analysis of these facts will reveal the basic difference between
the true prophet of God and the spiritualistic medium or clairvoyant who
claims to be able to predict the future.
Daniel was a great prophet in the Old Testament times. He described
what happened to him when he was in vision.
Ellen G. White as the prophetess for today
It is often supposed that there were no prophets after the death of John
the Revelator. It is true that the canon of the Scriptures closes
with the book of Revelation, but it was promised that the special gift
of prophecy would remain with God’s church until the end of time.
See 1 Corinthians 12:28; Ephesians 4:8, 11, 12. The
purpose for these gifts is to perfect the saints, the work of the ministry,
and the body of Christ. Clearly, this gift of prophecy will remain
in force until the church has reached perfection, an enviable condition
we have not yet reached. Therefore, we expect this gift to be in
the church today. A few years before the close of the 2,300 day/year prophecy
in 1844, God desired to communicate directly to the world and His people
important details concerning the closing events. The Holy Spirit
had guided men, as they searched God’s word, to understand the prophecies
of Daniel 8 and 9. And they preached the first and second
angel’s messages with a power that shook the world. But as the cleansing
of the sanctuary in heaven, the investigative judgment, began, a special
work had to be done to prepare a people for Christ’s advent. Review
Lesson 12 for the history of the three angels’ messages.
Born in 1827 in Gorham, Maine, Ellen Gould Harmon was to play a vital role
as a spiritual counselor in the movement through which God would accomplish
this work. Being of delicate health because of a nearly fatal accident
which put an end to her formal schooling at the age of nine, Ellen was
raised as a devout Methodist. Suffering much from the experiences
of her accident and people’s attitude toward her facial disfigurement,
Ellen early turned to Christ for comfort. She was converted when
11 years old and baptized at 12. She believed with all her heart
the prophecies concerning the second coming of Christ in 1844 and, with
others, bore the bitter disappointment when He did not come. Ellen’s
faith, however, remained strong.
She was not the first one through whom God wished to work. The initial
vision was given to two others, but they both refused to obey Heaven’s
command to relate the vision to others. Therefore, God’s spirit left
them, and God chose the weakest of all possible individuals to become His
instrument. Beginning when she was 17 years old, Ellen received some
2,000 visions, the messages of which she was instructed to write down.
Though at first unable even to hold a pen long enough to write a page,
strength was miraculously given her, and until the age of 87 she wrote
extensively—some 45,000 pages for books and periodicals, all entirely in
harmony with the Bible. She also passed the test of living a dedicated
Christian life.
Through divine illumination she penned a wealth of information on prophecy,
religion, medical knowledge, ecological necessities, hygiene, diet, psychology,
future events, and the fate of some of our large cities. Her amazing
observations and predictions regarding the use of hygiene and sunlight
in the care of the sick, the dangers of hypnosis, juvenile delinquency,
the electrical currents in the brain, and the communication of diseases
such as cancer and tuberculosis through flesh eating have been confirmed
by science many years later. Her various counsels regarding these
subjects were unknown and virtually unaccepted in her day. None of
this was her own knowledge; it came from God, the Creator of earth and
the human body.
Ellen Gould White (she was married in 1846 to James White and was the mother
of four sons) had visions which were genuine and fully in harmony with
the physical tests of a true prophet, as outlined in the preceding sections
on characteristics and physical tests of a true prophet.
One of the early pioneers of the Great Second Advent Movement, J.N. Loughborough,
who wrote a book by this title, stated on p. 204: “The first time I saw
Mrs. E.G. White (formerly Miss Harmon) was on October, 1952. On that
day I saw her in a vision that lasted over one hour. Since that time
I have had the privilege of seeing her in vision about fifty times.
I have been present when physicians have examined her while in this state,
and I esteem it a pleasure to bear testimony to what I have seen and know.
I trust a narration of the facts in the case may not be carelessly cast
aside for the random suppositions of those who have never seen her in this
condition.
“In passing into vision she gives three enrapturing shouts of ‘Glory!’
which echo and re-echo, the second, and especially the third, fainter,
but more thrilling than the first, the voice resembling that of one quite
a distance from you, and just going out of hearing. For about four
or five seconds she seems to drop down like a person in a swoon, or one
having lost his strength; she then seems to be instantly filled with superhuman
strength, sometimes rising at once to her feet and walking about the room.
There are frequent movements of the hands and arms, pointing to the right
or left as her head turns. All these movements are made in a most
graceful manner. In whatever position the hand and or arm may be placed,
it is impossible for anyone to move it. Her eyes are always open,
but she does not wink; her head is raised, and she is looking upward, not
with a vacant stare, but with a pleasant expression, only differing from
the normal in that she appears to be looking intently at some distant object.
She does not breathe, yet her pulse beats regularly. Her countenance
is pleasant, and the colour of her face as florid as in her natural state.”
It is no wonder that these strange and supernatural phenomena caused a
great stir among the Christians of Ellen White’s day. We would not
be any less astonished today. But note how the characteristics of
the Bible prophets when in vision were all found in her experience.
(1) She lost her strength, then (2) she received supernatural strength;
(3) her eyes were always open; (4) she did not breathe, yet (5) her pulse
was regular; and (6) she spoke without breath. The fact that she
did not breathe was undoubtedly the most spectacular phenomenon of all,
and it was tested many times by skeptical physicians. For example,
a spirit medium, a certain Dr. Brown, had declared that her visions were
of spiritualistic origin. When he watched her once and found out
that she didn’t breathe, he turned very pale, gasped, “She does not breathe!”
and ran out of the house as fast as he could go.—The Great Second Advent
Movement, p. 211.
As stated previously, the true prophet conveys God’s messages independently
of his own preferences and thinking. Often he does not even understand
fully what he is saying. This was also true of Ellen G. White.
She was not a scientist. To the contrary, she barely started normal
schooling. She simply wrote as the Lord instructed her to declare
important truths essential for the spiritual, mental, and physical health
of mankind. She said in Counsels on Diet and Foods, p. 344: “The
whys and wherefores of this I know not, but I give you instruction as it
is given me.”
We are thankful for this valuable source of information and for the humble
woman who was used by God in her meekness and devotion to truth.
Some outstanding books written by Ellen G. White: