FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES
James White, Editorial, Signs of the Times, June 4, 1874, Vol. 1, Num.
1; The Living Witness, "Significant Articles From the Signs of
the Times," Pacific Press Publishing Association, 1959, pages 1,
2.
In presenting to the public this synopsis of our faith, we wish to
have it distinctly understood that we have no articles of faith, creed,
or discipline aside from the Bible. We do not put forth this as having
authority with our people, nor is designed to secure uniformity among
them, as a system of faith, but is a brief statement of what is, and
has been, with great unanimity, held by them. We often find it necessary
to meet inquiries on this subject, and sometimes to correct false statements
circulated against us, and to remove erroneous impressions which have
obtained with those who have not had an opportunity to become acquainted
with our faith and practice. Our only object is to meet this necessity.
With these remarks, we ask the attention of the reader to the following
propositions which aim to be a concise statement of the more prominent
features of our faith.
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That there is one God, a personal, spiritual being, the Creator
of all things, omnipotent, omniscient, and eternal; infinite in
wisdom, holiness, justice, goodness, truth and mercy; unchangeable
and every-where present by his representative, the Holy Spirit.
Ps. 139:7.
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That there is one Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of the eternal Father,
the one by whom he created all things, and by whom they do consist;
that he took on him the nature of the seed of Abraham for the redemption
of our fallen race; that he dwelt among men, full of grace and truth,
lived our example, died our sacrifice, was raised for our justification,
ascended on high to be our only mediator in the sanctuary in heaven,
where through the merits of his shed blood, he secures the pardon
and forgiveness of the sins of all those who persistently come to
him; and as the closing portion of work as priest, before he takes
his throne as king, he will make the great atonement for the sins
of all such, and their sins will then be blotted out (Acts 3:19)
and born away from the sanctuary, as shown in the service of the
Levitical priesthood, which foreshadowed and prefigured the ministry
of our Lord in heaven. See Lev. 16; Heb. 8:4, 5; 9:6, 7.
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That the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testament were given
by inspiration of God, contain a full revelation of his will to
man, and are the only infallible rule of faith and practice.
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That baptism is an ordinance of the Christian church, to follow
faith and repentance, - an ordinance by which we commemorate the
resurrection of Christ, as by this act we show our faith in his
burial and resurrection, and through that, in the resurrection of
all the saints at the last day; and that no other mode more fitly
represents these facts than that which the Scriptures prescribe,
namely immersion. Rom. 6:3-5; Col. 2:l2.
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That the new birth comprises the entire change necessary to fit
us for the kingdom of God, and consists of two parts: First, a moral
change wrought by conversion and a Christian life (John 5:3) second,
a physical change at the second coming of Christ, whereby, if dead,
we are raised incorruptible, and if living, are changed to immortality
in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye. Luke 20, 36; 1 Cor. 15:51,
52.
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That prophecy is a part of God's revelation to man; that it is
included in that Scripture which is profitable for instruction (2
Tim. 3:16); that it is designed for us and our children (Deut. 29:29);
that so far from being enshrouded in impenetrable mystery, it is
that which especially constitutes the word of God a lamp to our
feet and a light in our path (Ps. 119:105; 2 Peter 1:19); that a
blessing is pronounced upon those who study it (Rev. 1:1-3); and
that, consequently, it is to be understood by the people of God
sufficiently to show them their position in the world's history
and the special duties required at their hands.
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That the world's history from specified dates in the past, the
rise and fall of empires, and the chronological succession of events
down to the setting up of God's everlasting kingdom, are outlined
in numerous great chains of prophecy; and that these prophecies
are now all fulfilled except the closing scenes.
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That the doctrine of the world's conversion and a temporal millennium
is a fable of these last days, calculated to lull men into a state
of carnal security, and cause them to be overtaken by the great
day of the Lord as by a thief in the night (1 Thess. 5:3); that
the second coming of Christ is to precede, not follow, the millennium;
for until the Lord appears, the papal power, with all its abominations,
is to continue (2 Thess. 2, 8), the wheat and the tares grow together
(Matt. 13:29, 30, 39), and evil men and seducers wax worse and worse,
as the word of God declares. 2 Tim. 3:1, 13.
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That the mistake of Adventists in 1844 pertained to the nature
of the event then to transpire not to the time; that no prophetic
period is given to reach the second advent, but that the longest
one, the two thousand and three hundred days of Dan. 8:14, terminated
in 1844, and brought us to an event called the cleansing of the
sanctuary.
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That the sanctuary of the new covenant is the tabernacle of God
in heaven, of which Paul speaks in Heb. 8 and onward, and of which
our Lord, as great high priest, is minister; that this sanctuary
is the antitype of the Mosaic tabernacle and that the priestly work
of our Lord, connected therewith, is the antitype of the work of
the Jewish priests of the former dispensation (Heb. 8:1-5, etc.);
that this, and not the earth, is the sanctuary to be cleansed at
the end of the two thousand and three hundred days, what is termed
its cleansing being in this case, as in the type, simply the entrance
of the high priest into the most holy place, to finish the round
of service connected therewith. by making atonement and removing
from the sanctuary the sins of believers (Acts 3:19), and occupies
a brief but indefinite space in the first apartment (Lev. 16; Heb.
9:22, 23); and that this work in the antitype, beginning in 1844,
consists in actually blotting out the sins of believers (Acts 4:19),
and occupies a brief but indefinite space of time, at the conclusion
of which the work of mercy for the world will be finished, and the
second advent of Christ will take place.
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That God's moral requirements are the same upon all men in all
dispensations; that these are summarily contained in the commandments
spoken by Jehovah from Sinai, engraven on tables of stone, and deposited
in the ark, which was in consequence called the "ark of the
covenant," or testament (Num. 10:33; Heb. 9:4, etc.): that
this law is immutable and perpetual, being a transcript of the tables
deposited in the ark in the true sanctuary on high, which is also,
for the same reason, called the ark of God's testament: for under
the sounding of the seventh trumpet we are told that "the temple
of God was opened in heaven, and there was seen in his temple the
ark of his testament." Rev. 11-19.
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That the fourth commandment of this law requires that we devote
the seventh day of each week, commonly called Saturday, to abstinence
from our own labor, and to the performance of sacred and religious
duties; that this is the only weekly Sabbath known to the Bible,
being the day that was set apart before Paradise was lost (Gen.
2:2, 3), and which will be observed in Paradise restored (Isa. 66:22,
23); that the facts upon which the Sabbath institution is based
confine it to the seventh day, as they are not true of any other
day, and that the terms, Jewish Sabbath, as applied to the seventh
day, and Christian sabbath, as applied to the first day of the week,
are names of human invention, unscriptural in fact, and false in
meaning.
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That as the man of sin, the papacy, has thought to change times
and laws (the law of God, Dan. 7:25), and has misled almost all
Christendom in regard to the fourth commandment, we find a prophecy
of reform in this respect to be wrought among believers just before
the coming of Christ. Isa. 56:l, 2; 1 Peter l:5; Rev. 14:12, etc.
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That as the natural or carnal heart is at enmity with God and
his law, this enmity can be subdued only by a radical transformation
of the affections, the exchange of unholy for holy principles; that
this transformation follows repentance and faith, is the special
work of the Holy Spirit, and constitutes regeneration, or conversion.
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That all have violated the law of God, and can not of themselves
render obedience to his just requirements, we are dependent on Christ,
first for justification from our past offences, and secondly, for
grace whereby to render acceptable obedience to his holy law in
time to come.
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That the Spirit of God was promised to manifest itself in the
church through certain gifts, enumerated especially in l Cor. 12
and Eph. 4; that these gifts are not designed to supersede, or take
the place of, the Bible, which is sufficient to make us wise unto
salvation, any more than the Bible can take the place of the Holy
Spirit; that, in specifying the various channels of its operations,
that Spirit has simply made provision for its own existence and
presence with the people of God to the end of time to lead to an
understanding of that word which it had inspired, to convince of
sin, and to work a transformation in the heart and life; and that
those who deny to the Spirit its place and operation, do plainly
deny that part of the Bible which assigns to it this work and position.
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That God, in accordance with his uniform dealings with the race,
sends forth a proclamation of the approach of the second advent
of Christ; and that this work is symbolized by the three messages
of Revelation 14, the last one bringing to view the work of reform
on the law of God, that his people may acquire a complete readiness
for that event.
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That the time of the cleansing of the sanctuary (see proposition
10), synchronizing with the time of the proclamation of the third
message (Rev. 14:9, 10), is a time of investigative judgment, first,
with reference to the dead, and secondly, at the close of probation,
with reference to the living, to determine who of the myriads now
sleeping in the dust of the earth are worthy of a part in the first
resurrection, and who of its living multitudes are worthy of translation,
- points which must be determined before the Lord appears.
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That the grave, whither we all tend, expressed by the Hebrew word
"sheol" and the Greek word "hades," is a place,
or condition, in which there is no work, device, wisdom, nor knowledge,
Eccl. 9:10.
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That the state to which we are reduced by death is one of silence,
inactivity, and entire unconsciousness. Ps. 146:4; Eccl. 9:5, 6;
Dan. 12:2.
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That out of this prison-house of the grave, mankind are to be
brought by a bodily resurrection, the righteous having part in the
first resurrection, which takes place at the second coming of Christ;
the wicked in the second resurrection, which takes place in a thousand
years thereafter. Rev. 20:4, 6.
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That at the last trump, the living righteous are to be changed
in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, and that the risen righteous
are to be caught up to meet the Lord in the air, so forever to be
with the Lord. 1 Thess. 4:16, 17; 1 Cor. 15:51, 52.
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That these immortalized ones are then taken to heaven, to the
New Jerusalem, the Father's house, in which there are many mansions
(John 14:l-3), where they reign with Christ a thousand years, judging
the world and fallen angels, that is, apportioning the punishment
to be executed upon them at the close of the one thousand years
(Rev.20:4; 1 Cor. 6:2, 3); that during this time the earth lies
in a desolate, chaotic condition (Jer. 4:23-27), as in the beginning,
by the Greek term "abussos" (bottomless pit, Septuagint
of Gen. 1:2); and that here Satan is confined during the thousand
years (Rev. 20:1, 2), and here finally destroyed (Rev. 20:10; Mal.
4:1); the theater of the ruin he has wrought in the universe being
appropriately made for a time his gloomy prison-house, and then
the place of his final execution.
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That at the end of the thousand years the Lord descends with his
people and the New Jerusalem (Rev. 21:2), the wicked dead are raised,
and come up on the surface of the yet unrenewed earth, and gather
about the city, the camp of the saints (Rev. 20, 9), and fire comes
down from God out of heaven and devours them. They are then consumed,
root and branch (Mal. 4:1), becoming as though they had not been
(Obadiah 15, 16). In this everlasting destruction from the presence
of the Lord (2 Thess. 1:9), the wicked meet the "everlasting
punishment" threatened against them (Matt. 25:46), which is
everlasting death. Rom. 6:23; Rev. 20:14, 15. This is the perdition
of ungodly men, the fire which consumes them being the fire for
which "the heavens and earth, which are now, . . . are kept
in store," which shall melt even the elements with its intensity,
and purge the earth from the deepest stains of the curse of sin.
2 Peter 3:7-12.
- That new heavens and a new earth shall spring by the power of God
from the ashes of the old, and this renewed earth with the New Jerusalem
for it's metropolis and capital shall be the eternal inheritance of
the saints, the place where the righteous shall evermore dwell. 2
Peter 3:13; Ps. 37, 11, 29; Matt. 5:5.
*NOTE: Fundamental principles 14, 15 and 16 did jot appear in these
Signs of the Times article by James White. There are 25 statements in
this article. The three omitted statements making a total of 28, were
published by Uriah Smith in 1872, and the full 28 statements were also
published each year in the Seventh-day Adventist Yearbooks between the
years 1889-1914. Because James White and Uriah Smith were co-editors
at the Advent Review and Sabbath Herald there was great unity between
these two pioneer Adventists. Both men were with this people from the
beginning, and both men suffered the Great Disappointment of 1844.
This publication of 25 fundamental principles by James White was the
first number in the first edition of the Signs of the Times. Why James
White chose to omit these three statements is not known. Uriah Smith's
publication of Fundamental Principles was published in a pamphlet format.
The SDA Yearbooks were published in book format. Perhaps James White
edited down the statements to 25 for space in a monthly magazine format.
One can rest assured that all pioneer Seventh-day Adventists were in
total harmony with the principles of these three statements. (See Preface
by James White above).
The omitted statements 14, 15 and 16, are included below.
14. That the followers of Christ should be a peculiar people, not
following the maxims, nor conforming to the ways, of the world; not
loving its pleasures nor countenancing its follies inasmuch as the
apostle says that "whosoever therefore will be" in this
sense, "a friend of the world is the enemy of God" James
4:4); and Christ says that we can not have two masters, or, at the
same time, serve God and mammon. Matt. 6:24.
15. That the Scriptures insist upon plainness and modesty of attire
as a prominent mark of discipleship in those who profess to be the
followers of Him who was "meek and lowly in heart; "that
the wearing of gold, pearls, and costly array, or anything designed
merely to adorn the person and foster the pride of the natural heart,
is to be discarded, according to such scriptures as 1 Tim. 2:9, l0;
1 Peter 3:3, 4.
16. That means for the support of evangelical work among men should
be contributed from love to God and love of souls, not raised by church
lotteries, or occasions designed to contribute to the fun-loving,
appetite-indulging propensities of the sinner, such as fairs, festivals,
crazy socials, etc., which are a disgrace to the professed church
of Christ; that the proportion of one's income required in former
dispensations can be no less under the gospel; that it is the same
as Abraham (whose children we are, if we are Christ's. Gal. 3:29)
when he gave him a tenth of all (Heb. 7:1-4); the tithe is the Lord's
(Lev. 27:30); and this tenth of one's income is also to be supplemented
by offerings from those who are able, for the support of the gospel.
2 Cor. 9:6; Mal. 3:8, 10.
Spirit of Prophecy Endorsement
"The past fifty years [1906 > 1844] have not dimmed one jot
or principle of our faith as we received the great and wonderful evidences
that were made certain to us in 1844, after the passing of the time.
. .," Ellen White wrote. "Not a word is changed or denied."
(The New York Indicator, February 7, 1906; also; The Upward Look, page
352, emphasis supplied).
"That which the Holy Spirit testified to as truth after the passing
of the time, in our great disappointment, is the solid foundation of
truth," Ellen White stated further. "The pillars of truth
were revealed, and we accepted the foundation principles that have made
us what we are-Seventh-day Adventists, keeping the commandments
of God and having the faith of [not IN, but OF] Jesus." (Ibid.,
The Upward Look, page 352, emphasis supplied).
"I was instructed to call upon our physicians and ministers to
take a firm stand for the truth," Ellen White counseled. "God
has led us in the past, giving us truth, eternal truth. By this
truth we are to stand." (Selected Messages, Book 1, page 162, emphasis
supplied).
"God never contradicts Himself. . ." Ellen White stated.
"But we stand by the old land marks. . the truth that for
the past fifty years God has been giving to His people, substantiating
it by the demonstration of the Holy Spirit.-- Let.-329-1905. (Notebook
Leaflets from the Elmshaven Library, Vol. 2, pages 157, 158, emphasis
supplied).
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