Seventh Day Adventist End of Days will be Hell on Earth. Ellen G White birthed a Doomsday Cult

3 years ago
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Ellen G. White undoubtedly was one of the most influential individuals in the history of the Seventh-day Adventist church.

A spiritual leader considered by many to be a prophet. over 100 years have passed since Ellen G White died in 1915, and the Seventh Day Adventist cult still pray for the second coming. And consistently they claim to speak under the influence of the Holy Spirit that end of times events are unfolding.

Ellen Gould Harmon and her twin sister, Elizabeth, were born November 26, 1827, in Gorham, Maine. Her parents were devout members of the Methodist Episcopal church. When the Harmon family became acquainted with William Miller's stirring warning of Christ's imminent return, they accepted his message with deep conviction, that it would occur in 1843.

At the age of nine Ellen was involved in a serious accident that she said affected her whole life. A girl who was following Ellen and her sister was carrying a rock. When Ellen turned towards her, she threw the rock at Ellen, and she fell senseless to the ground when it impacted her face. Which appears to be some form of birth for Prophets.

After Ellen Harmon regained consciousness, she was confined to bed for several weeks. She had lost a great deal of weight, probably at least partially due to the difficulty of feeding her during the period of her prolonged coma - no intravenous feeding equipment being available at that time. Fluids put in her mouth might have been swallowed by reflex action, however.
She improved very slowly, and "her health seemed to be completely shattered."

Later Ellen was able to attend school but little; and she states that "it was almost impossible for me to study, and retain what I had learned."

When she did attend school her hand trembled so much that she could make no progress in her writing; and when studying she says

"the letters of my book would run together, large drops of perspiration would stand upon my brow, and I would become dizzy and faint."

Her teacher advised her to leave school until her health improved, which she did.

Three years later, when she was twelve, she attempted to go to school again; but her health failed once more and she was forced to leave school permanently. This discouraged Ellen greatly. She wrote:

"When I pondered over my disappointed hopes, and the thought that I was to be an invalid for life, I was unreconciled to my lot and at times murmured against the providence of God in thus afflicting me."

James White stated that at the time of Ellen's first vision,

"her nervous condition was such that she could not write, and was dependent on one sitting near her at the table to even pour her drink from the cup to the saucer."

Ellen had a significant dream that was probably the first of her many recorded visionary experiences. She wrote:

"The horror of my mind could not be described. I awoke, and it was some time before I could convince myself it was not a reality. Surely, I thought, my doom is fixed."

Thus by her own admission, became the start of her Doomsday cult. Following the lesson of the Ten Commandments, Ellen G White went on to found the Seventh Day Adventists based on the fourth Commandment.

It would be interesting to see how Ellen G White (founding figure) would react to how ignorant the cult of Seventh Day Adventists are to the Ellen G White books.

I may be going to hell hypocrites. But there is solace in knowing that I will be looking down on you who will reside on a lower level of it.

And there you have it...Seventh Day Adventists exposed.

Ellen G White authored "The Steps to Christ" which SDAs consistently stumble off of. I am THE Anti-Adventist out to educate members and non-members on what you preach and what you do.

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