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Introduction |
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The great controversy between good and evil, |
To unfold the scenes of the great
controversy, |
between truth and error.
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Before the entrance of sin, Adam enjoyed open
communion with |
his Maker; but since man separated himself
from God by transgression, |
the human race has been cut off from this
high privilege. By |
the plan of redemption, however, a way has
been opened whereby |
the inhabitants of the earth may still have
connection with Heaven. |
God has communicated with men by his Spirit,
and divine light has |
been imparted to the world by revelations to
his chosen servants. |
“Holy men of God spake as they were moved by
the Holy Ghost.” 2 |
Peter 1:21. |
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During the first twenty-five hundred years of
human history, |
there was no written revelation. Those who
had been taught of God, |
communicated their knowledge to others, and
it was handed down |
from father to son, through successive
generations. The preparation |
of the written word began in the time of
Moses. Inspired revelations |
were then embodied in an inspired book. This
work continued during |
the long period of sixteen hundred years,
from Moses, the historian |
of creation and the law, to John, the
recorder of the most sublime |
truths of the gospel. |
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The Bible points to God as its author; yet it
was written by |
human hands; and in the varied style of its
different books it presents |
the characteristics of the several writers.
The truths revealed are |
all “given by inspiration of God” (2 Timothy
3:16); yet they are |
expressed in the words of men. The Infinite
One by his Holy Spirit |
has shed light into the minds and hearts of
his servants. He has given |
dreams and visions, symbols and figures; and
those to whom the |
truth was thus revealed, have themselves
embodied the thought in |
human language. |
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The ten commandments were spoken by God
himself, and were |
written by his own hand. They are of divine,
and not human composition. |
But the Bible, with its God-given truths
expressed in the |
language of men, presents a union of the
divine and the human. Such |
a union existed in the nature of Christ, who
was the Son of God and |
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the Son of man. Thus it is true of the Bible,
as it was of Christ, that [d] |
“the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among
us.” John 1:14. |
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Written in different ages, by men who
differed widely in rank |
and occupation, and in mental and spiritual
endowments, the books |
of the Bible present a wide contrast in
style, as well as a diversity in |
the nature of the subjects unfolded.
Different forms of expression are |
employed by different writers; often the same
truth is more strikingly |
presented by one than by another. And as
several writers present |
a subject under varied aspects and relations,
there may appear, to |
the superficial, careless, or prejudiced
reader, to be discrepancy or |
contradiction, where the thoughtful, reverent
student, with clearer |
insight, discerns the underlying harmony. |
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As presented through different individuals,
the truth is brought |
out in its varied aspects. One writer is more
strongly impressed with |
one phase of a subject; he grasps those
points that harmonize with his |
experience or with his power of perception
and appreciation; another |
seizes upon a different phase; and each,
under the guidance of the |
Holy Spirit, presents what is most forcibly
impressed upon his own |
mind; a different aspect of the truth in
each, but a perfect harmony |
through all. And the truths thus revealed
unite to form a perfect |
whole, adapted to meet the wants of men in
all the circumstances |
and experiences of life. |
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God has been pleased to communicate his truth
to the world |
by human agencies, and he himself, by his
Holy Spirit, qualified |
men and enabled them to do this work. He
guided the mind in |
the selection of what to speak and what to
write. The treasure was |
intrusted to earthen vessels, yet it is, none
the less, from Heaven. The |
testimony is conveyed through the imperfect
expression of human |
language; yet it is the testimony of God; and
the obedient, believing |
child of God beholds in it the glory of a
divine power, full of grace |
and truth. |
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In his Word, God has committed to men the
knowledge necessary |
for salvation. The Holy Scriptures are to be
accepted as an |
authoritative, infallible revelation of his
will. They are the standard |
of character, the revealer of doctrines, and
the test of experience. |
“Every scripture inspired of God is also
profitable for teaching, for |
reproof, for correction, for instruction
which is in righteousness; that |
the man of God may be complete, furnished
completely unto every |
good work.” 2 Timothy 3:16, 17, Revised
Version. |
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Yet the fact that God has revealed his will
to men through his |
Word, has not rendered needless the continued
presence and guiding |
of the Holy Spirit. On the contrary, the
Spirit was promised by our |
Saviour, to open the Word to his servants, to
illuminate and apply |
its teachings. And since it was the Spirit of
God that inspired the |
[e] Bible, it is impossible that the teaching
of the Spirit should ever be |
contrary to that of the Word. |
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The Spirit was not given—nor can it ever be
bestowed—to supersede |
the Bible; for the Scriptures explicitly
state that the Word |
of God is the standard by which all teaching
and experience must |
be tested. Says the apostle John, “Believe
not every spirit, but try |
the spirits whether they are of God; because
many false prophets are |
gone out into the world.” 1 John 4:1. And
Isaiah declares, “To the |
law and to the testimony; if they speak not
according to this word, it |
is because there is no light in them.” Isaiah
8:20. |
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Great reproach has been cast upon the work of
the Holy Spirit, |
by the errors of a class that, claiming its
enlightenment, profess |
to have no further need of guidance from the
Word of God. They |
are governed by impressions which they regard
as the voice of God |
in the soul. But the spirit that controls
them is not the Spirit of |
God. This following of impressions, to the
neglect of the Scriptures, |
can lead only to confusion, to deception and
ruin. It serves only to |
further the designs of the evil one. Since
the ministry of the Holy |
Spirit is of vital importance to the church
of Christ, it is one of the |
devices of Satan, through the errors of
extremists and fanatics to |
cast contempt upon the work of the Spirit,
and cause the people of |
God to neglect this source of strength which
our Lord himself has |
provided. |
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In harmony with the Word of God, his Spirit
was to continue its |
work throughout the entire period of the
gospel dispensation. During |
the ages while the Scriptures of both the Old
and the New Testament |
were being given, the Holy Spirit did not
cease to communicate light |
to individual minds, apart from the
revelations to be embodied in the |
sacred canon. The Bible itself relates how,
through the Holy Spirit, |
men received warning, reproof, counsel, and
instruction, in matters |
in no way relating to the giving of the
Scriptures. And mention is |
made of prophets in different ages, of whose
utterances nothing is |
recorded. In like manner, after the close of
the canon of Scripture, |
the Holy Spirit was still to continue its
work, to enlighten, warn, and |
comfort the children of God. |
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Jesus promised his disciples, “The Comforter,
which is the Holy |
Ghost, whom the Father will send in my name,
he shall teach you all |
things, and bring all things to your
remembrance, whatsoever I have |
said unto you.” “When he, the Spirit of
truth, is come, he will guide |
you into all truth; ... and he will show you
things to come.” John |
14:26; 16:13. Scripture plainly teaches that
these promises, so far |
from being limited to apostolic days, extend
to the church of Christ |
in all ages. The Saviour assures his
followers, “I am with you alway, |
even unto the end of the world.” Matthew
28:20. |
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And Paul declares that the gifts and
manifestations of the Spirit were set in |
the church [f] “for the perfecting of the
saints, for the work of the ministry, |
for the edifying of the body 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 |
4:12, 13. |
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For the believers at Ephesus the apostle
prayed, “That the God |
of Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of
glory, may give unto you the |
Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the
knowledge of him; the eyes |
of your understanding being enlightened; that
ye may know what is |
the hope of his calling, and what ... is the
exceeding greatness of his |
power to us-ward who believe.” Ephesians
1:17-19. The ministry |
of the divine Spirit in enlightening the
understanding and opening |
to the mind the deep things of God’s holy
Word, was the blessing |
which Paul thus besought for the Ephesian
church. |
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After the wonderful manifestation of the Holy
Spirit on the day |
of Pentecost, Peter exhorted the people to
repentance and baptism in |
the name of Christ, for the remission of
their sins; and he said, “Ye |
shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. For
the promise is unto you, |
and to your children, and to all that are
afar off, even as many as the |
Lord our God shall call.” Acts 2:38, 39. |
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In immediate connection with the scenes of
the great day of God, |
the Lord by the prophet Joel has promised a
special manifestation of |
his Spirit. Joel 2:28. This prophecy received
a partial fulfillment in |
the outpouring of the Spirit on the day of
Pentecost; but it will reach |
its full accomplishment in the manifestation
of divine grace which |
will attend the closing work of the gospel. |
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The great controversy between good and evil
will increase in |
intensity to the very close of time. In all
ages the wrath of Satan |
has been manifested against the church of
Christ; and God has |
bestowed his grace and Spirit upon his people
to strengthen them |
to stand against the power of the evil one.
When the apostles of |
Christ were to bear his gospel to the world
and to record it for all |
future ages, they were especially endowed
with the enlightenment |
of the Spirit. But as the church approaches
her final deliverance,
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Satan is to work with greater power. He comes
down “having great |
wrath, because he knoweth that he hath but a
short time.” Revelation |
12:12. He will work “with all power and signs
and lying wonders.” |
2 Thessalonians 2:9. For six thousand years
that master-mind that |
once was highest among the angels of God, has
been wholly bent |
to the work of deception and ruin. And all
the depths of Satanic |
skill and subtlety acquired, all the cruelty
developed, during these |
struggles of the ages, will be brought to
bear against God’s people |
[g] in the final conflict. And in this time
of peril the followers of Christ |
are to bear to the world the warning of the
Lord’s second advent; |
and a people are to be prepared to stand
before him at his coming, |
“without spot, and blameless.” 2 Peter 3:14.
At this time the special |
endowment of divine grace and power is not
less needful to the |
church than in apostolic days. |
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Through the illumination of the Holy Spirit,
the scenes of the |
long-continued conflict between good and evil
have been opened to |
the writer of these pages. From time to time
I have been permitted |
to behold the working, in different ages, of
the great controversy |
between Christ, the Prince of life, the
author of our salvation, and |
Satan, the prince of evil, the author of sin,
the first transgressor of |
God’s holy law. Satan’s enmity against Christ
has been manifested |
against his followers. The same hatred of the
principles of God’s |
law, the same policy of deception, by which
error is made to appear |
as truth, by which human laws are substituted
for the law of God, |
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and men are led to worship the creature
rather than the Creator, may |
be traced in all the history of the past.
Satan’s efforts to misrepresent |
the character of God, to cause men to cherish
a false conception |
of the Creator, and thus to regard him with
fear and hate rather |
than with love, his endeavors to set aside
the divine law, leading |
the people to think themselves free from its
requirements, and his |
persecution of those who dare to resist his
deceptions, have been |
steadfastly pursued in all ages. They may be
traced in the history of |
patriarchs, prophets, and apostles, of
martyrs and reformers. |
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In the great final conflict, Satan will
employ the same policy, |
manifest the same spirit, and work for the
same end, as in all preceding |
ages. That which has been, will be, except
that the coming |
struggle will be marked with a terrible
intensity such as the world |
has never witnessed. Satan’s deceptions will
be more subtle, his |
assaults more determined. If it were
possible, he would lead astray |
the elect. Mark 13:22, Reevised Version. |
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As the Spirit of God has opened to my mind
the great truths |
of his Word, and the scenes of the past and
the future, I have been |
bidden to make known to others what has thus
been revealed,—to |
trace the history of the controversy in past
ages, and especially to so |
present it as to shed a light on the
fast-approaching struggle of the |
future. In pursuance of this purpose, I have
endeavored to select and |
group together events in the history of the
church in such a manner |
as to trace the unfolding of the great
testing truths that at different |
periods have been given to the world, that
have excited the wrath of |
Satan, and the enmity of a world-loving
church, and that have been |
maintained by the witness of those who “loved
not their lives unto |
the death.” |
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In these records we may see a foreshadowing
of the conflict |
before us. Regarding them in the light of
God’s Word, and by the [h] |
illumination of his Spirit, we may see
unveiled the devices of the |
wicked one, and the dangers which they must
shun who would be |
found “without fault” before the Lord at his
coming. |
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The great events which have marked the
progress of reform |
in past ages, are matters of history, well
known and universally |
acknowledged by the Protestant world; they
are facts which none |
can gainsay. This history I have presented
briefly, in accordance |
with the scope of the book, and the brevity
which must necessarily |
be observed, the facts having been condensed
into as little space as |
seemed consistent with a proper understanding
of their application. |
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In some cases where a historian has so
grouped together events |
as to afford, in brief, a comprehensive view
of the subject, or has |
summarized details in a convenient manner,
his words have been |
quoted; but except in a few instances no
specific credit has been |
given, since they are not quoted for the
purpose of citing that writer |
as authority, but because his statement
affords a ready and forcible |
presentation of the subject. In narrating the
experience and views of |
those carrying forward the work of reform in
our own time, similar |
use has occasionally been made of their
published works. |
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It is not so much the object of this book to
present new truths |
concerning the struggles of former times, as
to bring out facts and |
principles which have a bearing upon coming
events. Yet viewed as |
a part of the controversy between the forces
of light and darkness, |
all these records of the past are seen to
have a new significance; and |
through them a light is cast upon the future,
illumining the pathway |
of those who, like the reformers of past
ages, will be called, even at |
the peril of all earthly good, to witness
“for the Word of God, and |
for the testimony of Jesus Christ.” |
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To unfold the scenes of the great controversy
between truth and |
error; to reveal the wiles of Satan, and the
means by which he may |
be successfully resisted; to present a
satisfactory solution of the |
great problem of evil, shedding such a light
upon the origin and |
the final disposition of sin as to fully make
manifest the justice and |
benevolence of God in all his dealings with
his creatures; and to |
show the holy, unchanging nature of his law,
is the object of this |
book. That through its influence souls may be
delivered from the |
power of darkness, and become “partakers of
the inheritance of the |
saints in light,” to the praise of Him who
loved us, and gave himself |
for us, is the earnest prayer of the writer.
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E. G. W. |
Healdsburg, Cal., |
May, 1888.
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