Steve Daily
'Adventism for a New Generation'
Steve
Daily’s New Theology Handbook for Changing the Church
As
you read these quotations, think not that they are the random views of one
person.
First,
according to page 2 in his book, Steve Daily has been an Adventist youth
educator and pastor since 1975. Six of those years he spent as a youth
pastor and academy Bible teacher. Since 1979, he has been the campus
chaplain at La Sierra University. In this assignment, he regularly teaches
classes, counsels with students, and preaches sermons.
He
could not teach, preach, and counsel such ideas as are to be found in this
book, unless the school administration stood behind him. What you will
read here are the type of liberal ideas permeating La Sierra and Loma
Linda.
Second,
Daily’s ideas are supported by many others in the denomination. Consider
this sampling of praise printed on the back cover of his book:
“One
of the biggest issues facing the church today is how we will meet the
needs of our younger generations. This book is custom-made to address such
concerns.”—Lynn Mallery, President, Southeastern California
Conference.
“I
have been through the book in a solid fashion. I am much impressed and
joyous of its contents.”—William Loveless, Senior Pastor, Loma
Linda University Church (and leader in our denomination of the
“meditation” movement).
“A
badly needed and creatively expressed discussion of the major issues that
young people in our church are facing. Our young people deserve its
honesty and its courage.”—Gary Swanson, Editor, Collegiate
Quarterly.
“A
treasure trove of a book . . [It] shines out for its accurate analysis,
honesty, heart, and Gospel.”—Desmond Ford, Director, Good News
Unlimited.
“Adventism
for a New Generation is one of those books that demand attention and
thought . . I recommend this book to pastors, educators and thought
leaders who want a thorough analysis of what ‘might be’ if we fully
commit our mission to the work of
God.”—Bailey Gillespie, Coordinator, Valuegenesis Research Project.
“Steve
talks right from his inmost being about the church, its ministry and
especially young adult ministry. He leaves you with hope. But, be ready to
have your ideas challenged.”—Ted Wick, Director of Youth
Ministries, North American Division.
“Steve
Daily has written a challenging and thought-provoking book . . I found his
application of SDA theology to current issues extremely helpful and
insightful. He writes with the heart of a pastor and the eyes of a
prophet.”—Randal Wisbey, Director, Youth Resource Center, Andrews
University.
Steve
Daily is the individual who, several years ago, started a Sabbath trash
clean-up project in Riverside, California. With the approval of La Sierra
University officials, he would take students out each Sabbath to clean
streets and paint houses. At the time, he published an article (brazenly
entitled, “Holy Heresy”) in the Pacific Union Recorder
about what a wonderful missionary work it was, and we reprinted the
article in a monthly tractpack.
Campus
chaplain at LSU since 1979, Daily published a book, Adventism for a New
Generation, in 1992. It is a remarkable hodge-podge of La Sierra/Loma
Linda brand of liberalism. Pity the poor students who listen to his
counsels (since he has a Ph.D. in psychology, he has been trained as a
professional hypnotist).
Here
are some of the things you will find in his book. This is what your son
and daughter will learn if you send them to La Sierra University as
students. It is a curious blend of a variety of errors—some Protestant,
some Catholic, some Ecumenical, some psychological, and some New Age
As
you read that which follows, you will be shocked to learn how rapidly the
apostasy of lowered standards and changing doctrines are occurring. But
you will also obtain an insight into plans to change the church even more
in the years to come.
It
is time to pray earnestly.
WE
NEED CELEBRATION—“Many
Adventists today seem so threatened by the use of the word
‘Celebration’ in connection with worship. Somehow we have managed to
separate God from fun, religion from joy, and worship from Celebration in
the minds of many of our church members, and this mentality has had an
unfortunate impact on Adventist youth.”—page 7.
IT
IS TIME FOR SOMETHING RADICALLY NEW—“It
is not just coincidence that God’s prophets, including Jesus, have
always been radicals . . Today, God is calling Adventism to embrace a
radical, risky faith.”—page 20.
THROW
OUT THE WRITTEN STANDARDS—“We
must give up our preoccupation with externals and our obsession with
control. It is not the business of the church to prescribe for its members
how they should behave on Sabbath, what foods they should eat, in what
forms of recreation or entertainment they may participate, what books they
can read, how they should dress, if they can wear jewelry, or how they
should think.”—page 20.
LED
TO BELIEVE A LIE—“Adventism
has suffered a similar tragedy [to that of Russia]. Our youth have not
been led to believe a lie about communism, but they have been led to
believe a lie, just the same. This lie has involved a host of burdensome
rules and regulations laid on them.”—page 25.
TONGUES
COMES FROM THE SPIRIT—“[In
other times and religions] Healing, prophecy, and tongues were not the
focus of worship but the byproduct of an openness to the Spirit genuinely
lacking in Adventism today.”—page 25.
WE
NEED TO REDEFINE OURSELVES—“Like
Russia, the [Adventist] church has become a pluralistic society in a
pluralistic world that desperately needs to redefine itself.
Ideologically, we would do well to embrace the broadest range of liberal
and conservative factions in the interest of dialogue as post-Vatican II
Catholicism has done.”—page 26.
LET
THE WORLD HELP CHANGE US—“North
American Adventism needs a National Center for the Study and
Transmission of Values, a think tank and policy-making body . . Such a
body could even include non-Adventists who would contribute to our
self-understanding and interaction with modern society. The only healthy
denominations in the future will be those committed to the Kingdom of God
rather than their own institutional self-preservation.”—page 27.
WHAT
CONSERVATIVES ARE LIKE—“The
majority of audiences I speak to [in Adventism] are made up predominately
of people who were raised in conservative Christians homes and schools . .
Such religion is known for its ‘proof text’ approach to Scripture, and
its uncompromising emphasis on ‘correct doctrine’ or ‘objective
truth.’ ”—page 36.
THE
GREAT REVIVAL—“Like
it or not, a revival is sweeping the globe today which appears to be
gaining momentum as we move towards the year 2000. This revival movement
is often referred to as ‘the third wave of the Holy Spirit,’ and has
produced surprising results.”—page 41.
PEOPLE
NOT BOOKS—“Authority
ultimately resides in a person rather than in books or traditions.
Scripture is only a means to an end rather than an end in itself.”—page
46.
PERSONAL
CONDUCT NOT SO IMPORTANT—“The
essence of healthy religion has more to do with justice and social
ethics than with personal ethics.”—page 47.
NOT
NECESSARY TO EVEN BE A CHRISTIAN—“Christians
do not have an exclusive claim on Christ, for He transcends the local,
historically-limited movement that is Christianity. Jesus Christ
personifies the Kingdom of God on earth, and His people are all who
attempt to live by the principles of healthy religion.”—page 47.
CHRIST
GAVE US NOTHING WRITTEN—“Almost
every great religious teacher in history has passed on a written record of
insights for future generations . . The influence of most spiritual
leaders has been measured by the volumes which bear their names; Jesus
Christ is the exception to this rule . . Jesus Himself was not the author
of a static written code. His revelation of truth was a dynamic, living
revelation.”—page 47.
DOCTRINES
AN UNFORTUNATE LATER RESULT—“When
a written record became necessary, it inevitably resulted in doctrinal
formulations, but these doctrines were intended to serve the purposes of
healthy religion as revealed through Christ and never to assume a central
position as the essence of religion, themselves.”—pages 47-48.
HEALTH
REFORM IS UNHEALTHY—“The
Adventist lifestyle generally involves a serious attempt to avoid
substances, habits and personal practices which are deemed harmful to
one’s mental, physical or emotional health . . But at the point that
these concerns dominate one’s faith, principles of justice, service and
love for humanity are undermined. A fascination with personal
righteousness is symptomatic of an unhealthful and introspective form of
religion . . Such a religion does more harm than good because it leads to
spiritual paralysis.”—page 49.
FALSE
RELIGION—“According
to Jesus, false religion is preoccupied with matters of personal salvation
and personal piety.”—page 49.
OBEDIENCE
VERY HARMFUL—“The
four most destructive sins which Christ condemned in the lives of the
religious leaders of His day were all the natural outgrowth of such an
introspective faith:
“1.
Legalism: Preoccupation with personal law-keeping, without genuine
regard for human need or God’s grace.
“2.
Hypocrisy: Preoccupation with what others think about our personal
righteousness, blinding us to gross inconsistencies in our lives.
“3.
Externalism: Preoccupation with overt acts of personal
righteousness, without concern for the great principles of healthy
religion.
“4.
Self-righteousness: Preoccupation with personal moral goodness
which blinds one to his/her own sinfulness and need to serve others.
“Jesus
made it clear that such a religion did more harm than no religion at
all.”—page 49.
MISTREATING
POOR DES—“If
Jesus were really our focal point, . . we would not be so suspicious and
critical in our attitude towards other Christian denominations and
religious movements. Nor would we so quick to discipline, judge and
mistreat some of our greatest preachers of the gospel such as Desmond Ford
and Smuts Van Rooyan.”—page 51.
OUR
PROBLEM: THE SPIRIT OF PROPHECY AND THE LAW OF GOD—“Some
students of Adventism have noted that the church’s history has been
marked by debates and inconsistencies with regard to its Protestant
heritage. In spite of our claims, the church has had difficulty
practically applying the principles of Protestantism for the following
reasons:
“1.
‘Sola Scriptura’ has been undermined by our over-dependence on
the writings of Ellen White.
“2.
‘Grace alone’ has been undermined by our externalism and
legalism.”—page 58.
OUR
DEBT TO CATHOLICISM—“In
the post-Vatican II era, Catholics have moved back towards a more Biblical
faith, and Protestants have gradually come to more readily acknowledge the
debts that they owe to their mother church.”—page 58.
WE
ARE BEGINNING TO COOPERATE WITH THE CATHOLICS—“Adventists,
who owe a great deal to their Protestant roots, are only now beginning to
join Catholics by making a more significant worldwide impact in terms of
their involvement with global needs and social justice.”—page 58.
WHERE
OUR DOCTRINES CAME FROM—“The
Puritans chose a pure and simple lifestyle which shunned adornment,
extravagance, immodesty, impurity, over-indulgence and intemperance. They
were known for their sobriety, discipline, judgment and emphasis on law,
order and external behavior. Adventists have for the most part inherited
these values from Puritan forefathers and mothers.”—page 59.
DOCTRINES,
A NUISANCE—“Like
many Adventists, and other conservative Christians, I grew up being taught
that a knowledge of ‘true doctrine’ was essential if one was to
survive spiritually and grow in God’s grace. I was bombarded in school
with Bible studies and proof texts.”—page 67.
A
BOOK OF ILLUSTRATIONS—“The
beauty of New Hope Church in Portland [David Snyder’s Milwaukie
Celebration church] is that they are more concerned with ‘helping
people’ than ‘hooking people’ . . They see the Bible more as a
‘casebook’ than as a ‘codebook.’ ”—page 73.
FANATICS
AND HERETICS—“The
Anabaptists who attempted to base every practice and belief on Scripture,
and to forsake every tradition of the Catholic Church not found in the
Bible, were opposed by Luther as ‘schwarmer’ [Ger: fanatics]
and devilish heretics.”—page 76.
NOT
VERY ACCURATE—“The Bible contains certain discrepancies in different ways.”—page
77.
IT
SURE HAS ERRORS—“[It
has been suggested that the Bible] does not contain theological errors:
The objection to such a view of inspiration would be that it does not
recognize the developmental process behind the doctrinal truths which
unfold in Scripture, and fails to account for theological contradictions
in the Bible.”—pages 77-78.
PART
MALE AND PART FEMALE—“Until
we get to know the author [of the Bible], we probably won’t appreciate
His/Her Book.”—page 78.
NOT
SUPPOSED TO GET INFORMATION OUT OF IT—“The
purpose of the Scripture is not to focus our attention on trivial items of
information, or even to be an inerrant source of information. The Bible
was never meant to be a science textbook, history textbook, encyclopedia,
or information almanac.”—page 79.
WHAT
WAS THEIR PROBLEM?—“During
the first few weeks on the job [after graduating from college], my
curiosity was aroused, each evening as I returned home, by a group of
protesters who were picketing the local theater. The movie they were
protesting was O God and their signs contained words like ‘scandalous,’
‘sacrilegious,’ and ‘blasphemy.’ [We are told that
Daily does not give the full title of the movie; it was O God—You
Devil, and was an extremely blasphemous motion picture.] When I
finally questioned one of them about the nature of their specific
complaints, it became obvious that they were offended by a film that dared
to make God in the image of George Burns, and presumed to present John
Denver, a zany grocery store produce man, as God’s principal prophet.
They seemed convinced that the intent of this picture was to make a
mockery of God and a farce out of Christianity.”—pages 81-82.
A
FAVORITE LA SIERRA SERMON—“A
favorite [sermon] story of mine in Scripture is the account of David’s
dance before the Lord as he led the procession which celebrated the return
of the covenant box to the city of Jerusalem.”—page 82.
WE
CANNOT STOP SINNING—“Furthermore,
Adventism rejects as un-Biblical the teaching that Jesus Christ had a
sinful human nature or that fallen human beings can perfectly duplicate
the sinless life that Jesus lived.”—page 86.
LEAVE
MORALITY UP TO THE FEMALE GODDESS—“Human
beings are not intended to seek for a moral/ethical norm within
themselves, or to set themselves up as such a norm for others. This is the
Spirit’s job, and She is very good at what She does.”—page 88.
EVOLUTION
IS ACCEPTABLE—“To
acknowledge the creatorship of God is not to insist that the earth is
six thousand years old, or that evolutionists are ungodly.”—page 91.
NOT
PARTICULARLY SCIENTIFIC—“Adventists
see the Biblical doctrine of creation as crucial to the major theological
themes presented in Scripture. This does not mean that Adventists support
the notion that the Bible is scientifically inerrant.”—page 91.
THE
MALE/FEMALE GOD MADE A MISTAKE—“The
Bible says that sin began with Lucifer or the Devil (Jn. 8:44), but it
does not explain how God escapes direct responsibility for sin if He/She
created Lucifer while knowing full well that he would ultimately rebel and
sin.”—page 105.
BUT
NEVER CALLED TO OBEDIENCE—“Dan
Simpson, who pastors Celebration Center, . . [has a] love for the
gospel. The gospel for Simpson is all the good news about God: Not just
that God has saved us, which is mighty good news, but that He/She is a God
of unconditional love—who calls us to love each other; that He/She
accepts us with open arms—and nail print hands; that He/She is a God of
limitless forgiveness—the source of true health; that He/She is the
Ultimate Creator—who calls us to creativity.”—page 113.
SAVED
BY JUSTIFICATION ALONE—“Justification
is totally and exclusively the work of God in Jesus Christ. We have
already noted that salvation comes only as a gift of God’s grace in
Scripture. Justification is the term which describes how this gift has
been made available to all human beings willing to acknowledge their
sinfulness.”—page 117.
HURT
BY KNOWING HE IS RESPONSIBLE FOR WHAT HE DOES—“He
is a young man that I know very well. I have known him for years. I hurt
deeply for him and his wife as they recently went through a divorce. But
there is an even deeper pain in his life. It is a pain that is rooted in
fear and insecurity about where he stands with God. He recalls being so
powerfully influenced by an Academy Bible teacher, who convinced him that
he as an Adventist was already being judged in God’s ‘investigative
judgment,’ that when crises come into his life he falls back into this
irrational fear.”—page 130 [opening words of the chapter, entitled
“Cutting the Leash of Legalism!”].
POOR
THING—“I
struggled with the same kind of anxieties into my late teens. My mind had
been so bombarded with Ellen White quotes in school that I found myself
vacillating back and forth between rebellion and a religion of guilt and
fear.”—page 130.
THE
LAW IS THE PROBLEM—“Adventists
reject a legalistic ethic which promotes blind adherence to law
itself.”—page 135.
LAW-KEEPERS
ARE THE ENEMIES—“When
Jesus ministered on this earth, He was faced with religious leaders and
other devout people who not only believed that they were capable of
keeping God’s law, but actually believed they were doing so.”—page
135.
YOU
CAN’T OBEY ANYWAY—“The
law of God demands perfect obedience and we can never meet that
requirement. We can only accept Christ’s perfect obedience and the blood
of Jesus that saves us.”—page 137.
In
chapter 14 (pp. 140-148), Steve Daily describes the Sabbath work program
he started at La Sierra University, with the full approval of the faculty
and administration. He is quite proud of the fact that he succeeded in
getting large numbers of grade school, academy, and college students to
break the Sabbath, week after week, and clean the streets, paint houses,
and lay foundations. The chapter is entitled “Holy Heresy,” the
same title given to a Pacific Union Recorder article we reprinted
several years ago. Here are several excerpts from this chapter. Of course,
all this could have been done on another day but, in Daily’s view, doing
it on the Sabbath made it more sanctimonious:
LSU-APPROVED
SABBATH-BREAKING—“What
would happen if a group of Adventist college students decided to follow
Christ’s example—helping non-Adventists in their community on Sabbath?
What do I mean by help? I mean fixing up and painting a disabled widow’s
house on a weekend, including Sabbath afternoon.”—page 140.
THE
SUNDAY-KEEPERS APPROVED—“The
response to this Community Service Day was overwhelmingly positive. The
mayor and the City Council honored the university with a proclamation of
recognition and held up La Sierra University as an example for other
institutions in the community. [LLU; what’s wrong with you?] They also
voted us more funds so that the next year we invited La Sierra Academy and
elementary students to join us, and painted ten houses instead of eight
while taking on various new projects as well.”—page 141.
DOING
IT SINCE 1987—“This
year [1992], our fifth annual Riverside Community Service Day is
expanding to include volunteers from the Southeastern California
Conference office in service activities. We hope these kinds of activities
will continue to become contagious in our community and in other
Seventh-day Adventist
communities .
. Service is always appropriate, even on the Sabbath day. It’s amazing
what can develop from a little holy heresy!”—page 141.
A
FEW FANATICS STILL HONOR IT—“There
are still those Christians who subscribe to the strict Puritan notion of
Sabbath-keeping, which is so committed to making God’s Sabbath a Holy
Day, that it becomes a burdensome pilgrimage to endure it. This is the
mentality of legalistic Sabbath-keeping that prevailed among those in
Jesus’ day who considered it sinful to . . spit on the ground, look in a
mirror, or have sex, etc. on the Sabbath day.”—page 147.
REALLY
KEEPING THE SABBATH—“When
God’s people catch a vision of what it really means to keep the Sabbath,
they will occasionally or regularly take part of a Sabbath day . . by
visiting, helping, or voluntarily cleaning, painting, repairing or doing
whatever that person’s needs call for.”—page 148.
Steve
Daily ignores the fact that it is not necessary to clean and paint houses
on the Sabbath; we have other times when we can do that. The animal is
pulled out of the pit on the Sabbath, because it is a sudden emergency, a
life-and-death situation, and could not be postponed to another day. But
cleaning the streets can be done on any other day.
In
chapter 15 (pp. 149-156), Daily discusses the doctrine of hell. His
conclusion is that it does not exist! The realization that they have lost
out on eternal life is the only “hell” people will experience,
according to Daily.
HELL
IS A VISION—“This
vision of reality fills the wicked with intense mental anguish and remorse
. . This is the agony of Hell. God does not add any kind of punishment to
the consequences of sin to make Hell.”—page 156.
SLAIN
BY FALLING ROCKS—“In
a final act of mercy, God responds to their pleas for the rocks and
mountains to fall on them by forever putting them out of their
misery.”—page 156. [Calling for falling rocks occurs at the Second
Advent, not the Third.]
Chapter
16 is entitled, Does God have Aids? It tells us even more about the
concepts Steve Daily teaches the youth at La Sierra University. He deeply
sympathizes with homosexuals, and encourages them when he preaches sermons
at Kinship Kampmeetings (pp. 157-158).
On
pp. 158-159, and elsewhere, he tells of his trip to Calcutta, India, to
visit Mother Teresa, and how much he appreciates her. Not once in the book
does he say that he appreciates Ellen White.
Then
he turns his attention to the evils of our historic Sanctuary Message:
DAILY’S
FEARFUL LOOKING FORWARD TO JUDGMENT—“Many
Adventists have used the sanctuary doctrine to warn of an investigative
judgment that undermines the gospel of Jesus. This doctrine has
particularly been a stumbling block for many young SDAs who question its
validity . . Some church members have used this doctrine to promote
perfectionism, legalism and other guilt-producing forms of theology.”—page
160.
FIRED
FOR REJECTING A BASIC TEACHING—“Finally,
this doctrine [the investigative judgment] was used by Adventist Church
leaders to remove and defrock [discharge] one of the most Christ-centered
theologians the church has ever produced [Desmond Ford].”—page 160.
[“Christ-centered Ford” did all he could to undermine confidence in
the Spirit of Prophecy and obedience to God’s law.]
THE
DISEASED MALE/FEMALE DEITY—“Does
God have AIDS? Yes, in a very real sense, I believe that He/She does, as
He/She enters into the pain and hurts of human experience.”—page
167.
Elsewhere
in the book, Daily tells us that this is one of his favorite sermon
titles. Note that our perfect High Priest is said to be diseased now.
LEARNING
FROM THE PENTECOSTALS—“My
thinking about worship was transformed several years ago when I attended
the Anaheim Vineyard Fellowship. I was dumb-founded by what I saw.
Thousands of people were worshiping God with a passion that I had never
witnessed in any other church. Some were standing, some were lifting up
their arms, others were clapping, some were sitting quietly in prayer or
meditation, a few were jumping, and several were kneeling, but they all
seemed to be actively worshiping God.”—pages 172-173.
LET’S
TURN ADVENTISTS INTO PENTECOSTALS—“Since
that day, I have returned to the
Vineyard many times for my own spiritual nourishment and have
longed to see the same kind of worship emerge in Adventism.
“God’s
last people will be people who find worship to be the most exciting and
meaningful experience in life.”—page 173.
THE
SECOND ANGEL’S MESSAGE—“The
second angel [of Revelation 14] warns that all who trust in human works or
material possessions in the last days will fall. Only a radical faith and
trust in God which stands for the principles of Christ and shuns
materialism will be able to endure and realize the hope of God’s
grace.”—page 174.
ALREADY
SAVED—“Those
who are in Christ have already been judged and saved.”—page 176.
The
context of the above statement indicates that we are saved in our sins,
regardless of whether or not we obey the law of God. Not once in the book
does Daily hint that obedience is ever necessary.
DANGEROUS
TO BELIEVE GREAT CONTROVERSY—“There
are those Christians, Adventist and non-Adventist alike, who believe that
certain eschatological signs must be fulfilled before Christ can return.
For example, many Adventists believe that national Sunday laws must be
passed before the Advent . .
However, Jesus warned against any form of religion which relied heavily
upon outward signs. It was this kind of unhealthy dependence on
preconceived ideas of how things must happen which led the Jewish leaders
to reject the messiahship of Christ. Therefore, Jesus declares that it is
a wicked and adulterous generation that bases its faith on signs.”—pages
178-179.
Chapter
18 is entitled, “Are We a Nonprophet Organization?” As you
might expect, it is a heavy downplaying of the Spirit of Prophecy.
YOU
CAN’T TRUST GOD’S WORD—“Prophets
are infallible: This is another popular myth . . The infallibility of
Scripture comes through its only infallible interpreter, Jesus Christ. He
is the only infallible prophet.”—page 182.
IMMORAL
WRETCHES—“Prophets
are morally superior [is another myth]: Many Christians assume
that God would only communicate truth through the purest human channels
available. But God’s ways are not our ways [i.e., we believe in moral
purity, but God doesn’t.] . . The most obvious example of this is the
story of Balaam. Not only does God speak through a prophet who has
apostatized and given himself over to corrupt motivations, but God speaks
through a jackass as well. Elijah’s spiritual pride led him to believe
that he was the last righteous man on earth, and David, one of the most
prolific channels of God’s revelations, lived a life checkered with
moral failures. Like all of us, the prophets are sinners in desperate need
of God’s grace.”—page 182.
WE’RE
ALL PROPHETS—“Throughout
their history, Adventists have also emphasized the importance of the
prophetic spirit. But too often the gift of prophecy has been defined in a
rather narrow sense. For many Adventists, the ministry of Ellen White has
not only been considered the primary manifestation of this gift in the
church, but its only legitimate manifestation as well. Today, this
tendency is changing as Adventism is beginning to broaden its
understanding of what the prophetic spirit entails in Scripture.”—page
184.
CAN’T
FIGURE OUT REVELATION—“Prophecy
is never understood until after it is fulfilled . . In every century,
interpretations of Revelation have radically changed.”—page
185.
NOTHING
TO DO WITH THE SPIRIT OF PROPHECY—“The
‘Spirit of Prophecy’ has come
to be a synonym for the writings of Ellen White in Adventism. However . .
the spirit of prophecy equals the testimony of Jesus, not the writings of
Ellen White.”—page 187.
LOTS
OF INSPIRED WRITINGS—“The
idea that the gift of prophecy is a rare and isolated gift bestowed on
only a few individuals over the centuries is not a New Testament
understanding of prophecy. God is willing to speak through various
individuals in the community of faith who are open to the Holy
Spirit.”—page 187.
IF
YOU ACCEPT ELLEN WHITE—“Adventists
who would accept Ellen White as a post-Biblical prophet, would also
recognize the prophetic ministry of individuals such as Joan of Arc,
Martin Luther, John Wesley, Martin Luther King, Desmond Tutu, etc.”—page
188.
PROPHETS
AT LA SIERRA—“Who
are the three greatest prophets of the twentieth century? I have asked
several hundred Adventist . . students to respond to this question over
the past few years, and have received some interesting answers. The names
most often mentioned by Adventist students have been 1) Ellen White, . .
2) Martin Luther King, Jr., 3) Mohandas K. Gandhi, 4)
Oral Roberts, and 5) Jean Dixon.”—page 181.
ADVENTISTS
NOT THE REMNANT—“The
Adventist church, like many others, has often overstated its relation to
the remnant church of Scripture; throughout much of its history it has
even made exclusive claims to remnant status. Such claims, past and
present, are unfortunate evidence of unhealthy and dysfunctional religion
in Adventism.”—page 194. [Read Revelation 12:17.]
DISCARD
FOOLISH IDEAS—“Why
has the [Adventist] church rigidly clung to an outmoded view of
eschatology which has focused on Sunday laws and Catholics, rather than
applying Christ-centered eschatological principles to our world
today?”—page 200.
NOTHING
WRONG WITH FORD—“Why
did the church dismiss a theologian like Desmond Ford, who was doing such
creative and Christ-centered work in the area of eschatology? Why
haven’t we acknowledged our error in this regard and invited him to
return?”—page 201.
BELIEVING
THOSE WRITINGS IS WORSHIPING ELLEN WHITE—“How
long can we afford to worship a dead prophet (Ellen White) . . while we
remain closed to the prophetic Spirit as a living reality in the community
of faith?”—page 201.
OBEYING
GOD’S WORD HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH THE REMNANT—“How
can a people who have embraced conformity [to God’s Word] rather than
prophetic dissent, who have become followers rather than creative and
critical thinkers, and who have been preoccupied with externals rather
than a radical faith . . view themselves (especially in exclusive ways) as
God’s remnant people?”—page 201 [i.e., Revelation 14:12 is wrong].
LET’S
UNITE WITH THE OTHER CHURCHES—“We
must become facilitators of ‘spiritual ecumenicity’ (as opposed to
institutional ecumenicity), so that we can respond to Christ’s last
prayer for unity by breaking down the barriers of denominationalism rather
than helping to build them up.”—pages 201-202.
WE
MODERNS DON’T NEED THE 19TH CENTURY—“We
must open ourselves to the possibility of new and different eschatological
scenarios so that we do not enter the twenty-first century with a
nineteenth-century view of prophecy.”—page 202.
NEW
LIGHT FROM THE ATHEISTS—“In
1983, I spent one day attending the American Psychological Association’s
national conference at the Anaheim Convention Center. One of the
presentations I heard that day made a major impact on my thinking. The
paper was by Gerald LaRue, a professor at UCLA, and it was entitled
‘The Way of Ethical Humanism.’ It was an attempt to redefine
religion in a scientific, humanistic context that would understand God as
a force of nature and a force inside of every human being that must be
harnessed for the betterment of all humanity. This psychological faith
stood in contrast to the great religious traditions of the past, and was
presented as being free from ‘superstition,’ ‘sexual taboos’
and ‘credal formulations’ . .
“After
hearing this talk, my interest in ‘ethical humanism’ increased, and I
began to read the journal The Humanist on a regular basis.”—page
202. [At the turn of the century, the atheists began calling themselves
“humanists.”]
INJURE
CHILDREN BY REQUIRING OBEDIENCE—“The
late Virginia Satir, one of my professors in graduate school, was one of
the first pioneers in the field of marriage and family therapy to explore
the dynamics of healthy and dysfunctional families. Her work has been
complemented and expanded by many others, whom I have drawn on as well to
construct the following profile of characteristics commonly found in
unhealthy families:
“Parents
either strictly enforce rigid rules which break a child’s will . .
Family secrets must be carefully guarded . . The way you behave (both in
and out of the family system) is more important than the way you really
are.”—pages 208-209.
FORGET
ABOUT STANDARDS; THEY’RE CHANGING ANYWAY—“During
my years as a university chaplain, I have sat through many committee
arguments focusing on change in the church. They have focused on
everything from Christian rock music to jewelry. But too often we try to
settle disputes over individual standards—which may be in
transition—apart from a larger visionary perspective on change.”—page
227.
MORAL
STANDARDS NOT WANTED—“A
high percentage of Adventist young people are disillusioned with the
over-emphasis on rules and externals in the Adventist school system.”—page
232.
AN
ECUMENICAL TRAINING CENTER—“On
the La Sierra University campus, Charles Teel has established a Stahl
Center for World Mission, which is dedicated to this sort of task
[reaching the world]. Teel calls the church to a ‘Global Village’
perpective that places a premium on interdependence, inclusivism and
cultural/ethnic diversity.”—page 247.
WE
NEED TO ENTER THE PENTECOSTAL REVIVAL—“The
question is, do we have something important and helpful to learn from the
charismatic [tongues and excitement] movement? And my answer is a definite
YES.
“Peter
Wagner, a widely published professor at Fuller [Theological Seminary], has
referred to the tremendous growth in the Vineyard and other movements like
it, as the ‘Third Wave of the Holy Spirit’ . . He believes that the
first wave of the Holy Spirit came through the Pentecostal movement at the
turn of the century [when modern tongues-speaking suddenly exploded into
prominence]. The second wave came through the charismatic renewal which
swept through many of the mainline Christian churches after the middle of
the twentieth century. And the third wave of the Holy Spirit . . is a
non-denominational movement that seeks to revitalize Christians . . It is
a movement that has captured the attention and imagination of some of the
brightest and most educated minds in the Christian Church.
“It
is not a movement I would expect Adventists generally to welcome, for we
have been taught to be suspicious of anything charismatic. We are quick to
point out Ellen White’s statements about a final false revival
characterized by a delusion of miraculous works, but we often forget about
her equally powerful statements . . which tell us the most powerful and
miraculous genuine revival of all times will accompany these deceptions.
On this point, we cannot afford to forget the words of Jesus, who said,
‘He that is not against us is on our side.’ The tendency to attribute
to the devil miracles done in Christ’s name by non-Adventist Christians
is the ‘unpardonable sin’ that Jesus condemned in the Jewish leaders.
How important it is that we not commit that sin today.”—pages
249-250.
It
is clear that Daily believes the Pentecostal movement is of God. He also
believes those who reject it will not go to heaven.
TRAIN
THE YOUTH IN INTERDENOMINATIONAL WORK—“We
must empower our young people through forms of mission and service that
are interdenominational.”—page 250.
Chapter
26 is entitled “Rediscovering Our Adventist Heritage: Adventism and
Charismatic Renewal.”
LEARNING
REVIVAL FROM A PSYCHIATRIST—“One
of my favorite authors is Dr. John White, a psychiatrist who has written
20 books and spent much of his life studying historical and contemporary
occurrences of revival all over the world, from a psychological,
sociological and theological perspective.”—page 274.
EXPECT
REVIVALS THAT ARE TOTALLY STRANGE—“When
God chooses to actively and overtly intervene in human history, He usually
does so in a manner that is completely unexpected, totally unorthodox, and
often offensive or disturbing.”—page 275. [The context on these
pages speaks of shouting and tongues.]
EXCITEMENT
IS TRUE REVIVAL—“Our
early Adventist pioneers were an unusually diverse group of
people—strong willed, independent and dogmatic by nature . . They
defined Babylon as boredom . . So what can we do, what changes can we
make, to rediscover the passion for God that burned in the hearts of our
pioneers? First, we must recognize that this flame is lit by the Holy
Spirit.”—page 277.
EXCITEMENT
IS WHAT WE NEED; NOT BIBLICAL TRUTH—“At
the beginning of this chapter, I mentioned four different views of the
Holy Spirit’s work which undermine an openness to, and readiness for,
revival . .
“1.
Naturalism: eating from the tree of knowledge. This view rejects
the possibility that miracles or supernatural works of the Holy Spirit
have anything to do with revival . . The more we base our faith on a
purely rational understanding of objective doctrines, the more we will
worship the letter which kills, rather than the spirit which gives life.
As a people we have gluttonized from the tree of knowledge [by learning
and obeying principles, instead of giving ourselves up to emotional
outlets] for so long that we have lost our appetite for the tree of life
[wonder-working revivals].”—page 277.
CLAPPING
AND SHOUTING – THE MARKS OF TRUE REVIVAL—“When
revival comes . . worship becomes our most exciting activity, because in
worship we anticipate and experience God’s presence. It is in this
context that . . [we are to] clap, shout and lift up our hands in the
sanctuary.”—page 280
THE
TONGUES MOVEMENT IS OF GOD—“We
should acknowledge the legitimacy of the gift of tongues without stressing
or overemphasizing its importance.”—page 281.
EXPECT
SUPERNATURAL VISIONS AND DREAMS—“We
need to recognize that God will increasingly communicate with us through
visions and dreams, and to sensitize ourselves to that possibility.”—page
281.
WHEN
A PROPHET ARISES, BELIEVE HIM—“As
God’s Spirit is poured out, we are going to receive (if we are open and
willing) the gifts of prophecy and spiritual discernment with much greater
power and wider participation than our pioneers experienced.”—page
281.
MORE
IMPORTANT TO BE OPEN TO THE SPIRIT THAN TO READ THE BIBLE—“In
the New Testament church, most believers did not even have access to
Bibles, but they were open to the Spirit. The religious leaders, who did
have access to the Scriptures, but were not open to the Spirit, crucified
Jesus and persecuted His followers.”—page 281.
ORDINATION
OF WOMEN—“How
can we give a woman like Ellen White unlimited credibility, while we
currently deny basic equality to our female ministers?”—page 294.
LEARN
A LOT FROM SEX BOOKS—“My
library has no shortage of books which candidly address the most pressing
sexual concerns facing adolescent Christians today. It really isn’t very
surprising that none of these books is written by an Adventist. As a
people, I believe we tend to be somewhat more inhibited and sexually
repressed than Americans in general. Much of this is a consequence of our
Victorian heritage, which has been well preserved through the work of
Ellen White.”—pages 296-297.
AVOID
THOSE WORTHLESS BOOKS—“Most
Adventists are not aware of what bizarre and extreme views of sexuality
were commonly held by our nineteenth century ancestors. Books like Messages
to Young People have served to perpetuate such baggage throughout much
of the twentieth century as well.”—page 297.
LAUGH
AT THOSE WHO TEACH PRINCIPLES—“I
had a senior Bible teacher in academy in the 1970s who held similar views,
teaching us (much to our amusement) that any physical contact with the
opposite sex before marriage was wrong. Our Victorian heritage may be
greater than we think.”—page 297. [You are reading what Steve Daily
has been teaching La Sierra students since 1979.]
MASTURBATION
IS A HEALTHY PRACTICE—“Many
Adventists have a ‘masturbation-phobia’ as a result of Ellen White’s
extreme pronouncements about this practice. Her teaching on this topic was
rooted in a nineteenth century ‘vital force’ physiology which has no
credibility in the medical community today . . A balanced Christian
approach to sexual self-stimulation sees it as a potentially healthy form
of sexual discovery, exploration and awareness. It can even be a healthy
equalizing force in marriages.”—page 297.
PREMARITAL
SEX IS A PRACTICAL SOLUTION—“Finally,
the question of premarital sex is an important one. The Biblical principle
that sexual intercourse be reserved for a monogamous marital relationship
is increasingly being viewed as obsolete or impractical by young
Christians. One reason for this has been the church’s tendency to
address this issue in an ‘all or nothing’ context.”—page 298.
NEED
TIME BEFORE MARRIAGE TO GET STARTED—“Sexuality,
like spirituality, communication or any other aspect of a relationship
must develop and mature over time. Christian couples who have dated for a
significant period need to honestly discuss their convictions and sexual
boundaries . . We need to remember that God created sex to be an
enjoyable, pleasurable activity.”—page 298.
NO
SCRIPTURAL BASIS FOR NOT HAVING VARIETY OF SEX BEFORE MARRIAGE—“I
often recommend an exercise called ‘sexual pleasuring’ that is
commonly prescribed in sexual therapy . . [Unmarried] couples need to
realize that there is a wide range of sexual activities that can be
tremendously pleasurable and satisfying, that do not involve sexual
intercourse and its accompanying risks . . Those who criticize such young
people for not living up to their standards have no Scriptural
basis for their criticisms and no right to make themselves moral policemen
for other Christians.”—page 298.
INCORRECT
TO TAKE AWAY ROCK MUSIC—“For
many Adventists and other Christians, rock music is so associated with
promiscuous sex, drugs, rebellion, Satanism, and immorality in general
that it has no place in the church or
in a Christian’s life. It becomes one more item on the ‘forbidden
list’—along with dancing, movies, gambling, Sabbath breaking,
etc.—that our young people know so well. We have become experts at
‘taking things away,’ but not at offering positive substitutes.”—page
299.
WE
MUST HAVE DANCING—“If
we condemn ‘immoral dancing’ in one breath, we must offer a more
positive form of dancing in its place . . The church has managed to define
it in consistently negative terms.”—page 299.
DANCING
WILL HELP US BE MORE RELIGIOUS—“There
has been a need for Adventists to develop modern forms of Christian dance
to enhance both the social and religious environments on our campuses, but
nothing is ever done for fear of what people might say.”—page 299.
OPEN
THE DOOR WIDE TO EVERYTHING—“The
church has not only consistently opposed innovations in the areas of
music, dress and dancing, or other art forms, but has generally opposed
innovations of any kind.”—page 299.
THROW
OFF THE STANDARDS—“Down
through the years, the church has condemned such innovations as new
hymnals, new translations of the Bible, musical instruments, and at times
all forms of music, drama, and colorful dress.”—page 299.
WE
NEED ADORNMENTS FOR CONTEMPORARY RELEVANCE—“As
a recent article in Insight reminded us, in 1866 the church was
opposing women ‘adorning’ themselves with such things as ‘buttons,
ribbons, embroidery and other decorations.’ We’ve come a long way,
baby—but not really. We’re still obsessed with trivia and externals,
still afraid to try new things, or take risks to reframe the gospel with
contemporary relevance. We’re still afraid to teach our young people to
think for themselves on these issues and act on their own
convictions.”—page 299.
REQUIRING
STANDARDS IS TOO CONTROVERSIAL—“Health
reform becomes a controversial issue for many Adventist young people once
again, because of what many perceive to be gross inconsistency. As a young
man, I can remember an extremely obese union temperance director
condemning drinking, smoking, meat-eating, and Coke, coffee and every
other form of caffeine in a tirade that was totally embarrassing. Another
case that immediately comes to mind is a gifted youth pastor I know who
was fired by a conference for committing the unpardonable sin of drinking
Pepsi in public.”—page 300.
WHY
BE SO STRICT?—“Too
often Adventists make a big deal of strict vegetarianism, avoiding all forms
of caffeine, and other ‘tiny splinters.’ ”—page 300.
SEE,
JESUS AND PAUL DIDN’T BELIEVE IN STANDARDS EITHER—“As
Jesus and Paul so aptly put it, ‘You aren’t made unholy by what you
put in your mouth,’ for ‘the kingdom of God is not a matter of meat
and drink.’ ”—page 301.
BURIED
IN BAPTISM, THAT THE OLD MAN MAY ARISE—“The
most controversial aspect of Adventism’s teaching about the use of
alcohol, tobacco and other drugs is not the church’s insistence on total
abstinence, but its insistence that such habits be overcome prior to
baptism.”—page 303.
BAPTIZE
THE SMOKERS AND LIQUOR DRINKERS—“It
is our manner and method of teaching total abstinence that is difficult to
justify from Scripture and therefore worth reconsidering. There is
something questionable about requiring
people to give up ‘selected’ addictive habits before they can be
baptized or given membership in our churches as ‘fellow sinners’ who
have accepted a Saviour. This was not the example of Jesus.”—page 303.
IT
IS LEGALISM TO ASK FOR CHANGES BEFORE BAPTISM—“I’ve
never yet known a fisherman who has tried to clean a fish before catching
it. Yet Adventists consistently attempt to do this spiritually by
insisting that individuals must ‘clean up their lives’ in specific
ways before they can come to God through baptism. No wonder we are often
accused of legalism.”—pages 303-304.
UNFORTUNATELY,
ELLEN WHITE IS STILL INFLUENTIAL—“Adventism’s
response (or no-response) during the twentieth century to numerous issues
reflects the influence of what Ellen White wrote before her death in 1915.
The questions of competitive sports in Adventist schools is a classic
example.”—page 306.
HOW
CRUEL TO DENY OUR YOUTH COMPETITIVE SPORTS—“In
recent years the debate has been resurrected in Adventism, as academies
and colleges all over North America have gradually built up sports
programs that in some cases offer scholarships and have the potential to
become high profile . .
“As
one who lived and worshiped sports into my teens, and was then transferred
from public school to an Adventist school which had absolutely no sports
program of any kind, I can relate to the frustration this causes. For the
sake of our young people, we need to rethink and resolve some of the
obvious inconsistencies that are rooted in the church’s current
position.”—page 306.
STOP
USING THOSE BOOKS—“We
need to quit misusing Ellen White’s writings as we attempt to solve such
issues. She never intended that her writings be the last word, even in her
own day, much less today. We need to consistently affirm all the gifts
that God has given to human beings—not just musical, academic, and
healing gifts, but physical, athletic gifts as well.”—page 307.
LET
THEM SMOKE AND DO DRUGS IF THEY WANT—“The
church needs to quit making paternal mandates on such issues not
addressed in Scripture, which serve to polarize rather than promote mature
moral decision making by individuals and communities.”—page 307.
THE
LIBERATING CELEBRATION CHURCHES—“My
biases in favor of celebrative worship have already been revealed in
chapter 24. However, there is still something important to be said about
the extreme polarization that seems to exist in the Adventist Church over
this issue.
“On
the one hand, Adventists are condemning such innovations in worship as
being ‘of the devil’ and ‘leading the church into apostasy.’ On
the other hand, those who are more liberated in their forms of worship
often tend to discount or make fun of the ‘rigidity, intolerance,
traditionalism and over-serious nature’ of their critics.”—page
307.
ESSENE
EXTREMISTS VS. A WORLDLY JESUS—“The
Essenes were extreme separatists. They islolated themselves in the desert,
were obsessed with ceremonial purity, took vows of poverty, chastity,
simplicity and total abstinence from wine, meat, oil and any form of
self-gratification. They were sober, serious men who lived lives of
rigorous discipline and devotion and had no toleration for sin or
compromise of any kind. They condemned all religious innovations and were
not known for being ‘joyful believers.’
“Jesus,
by contrast, began His earthly ministry by going to a party. He didn’t
seem to give a rip about ceremonial purity or dietary restrictions, and
even violated the most sacred laws and traditions of Judaism.”—page
307.
At
this point in his class presentation, he probably asks his students,
“Which do you want to be like: the Essenes or Jesus?
JOHN
BROUGHT FUNERAL SONGS— “Jesus
emphasized and affirmed the diversity of God’s attempts to communicate
with humanity. ‘John came fasting and drinking no wine’; he
represented those who ‘sang the funeral songs’ of warning, judgment,
repentance and sober, solemn assemblies.”—page 308.
JESUS
BROUGHT DANCING—“Jesus,
by contrast, came eating and drinking. He represented those who ‘played
the wedding music’ and emphasized God’s good news of forgiveness,
mercy, and grace. He embraced sinners, identified with the dispossessed,
and brought dancing and celebration wherever He went (except around the
religious establishment).”—page 308.
Chapter
29 is entitled, “The Heretical Imperative: Adventism, Ecumenism, and
Other Churches.”
BREAK
DOWN THE DENOMINATIONAL BARRIERS—“The
sixties, seventies, and eighties proved to be decades of significant
Ecumenical activity. The members of the various Christian churches, as
well as Christians and members of other world religions, learned to
interact and cooperate in unprecedented numbers. The World Council of
Churches became the symbol of this new institutional cooperation, and
several important theological works called on the ‘global church’ to
break down its barriers of denominationalism and division.”—page
312.
THE
SIN OF SEPARATION—“There
is a new Ecumenism sweeping through much of the Christian church today,
that Adventism cannot afford to ignore . . It seeks to address the most
tragic sin in Christendom, the ever-present sin which continually
challenges the credibility of the church: the sin of fragmentation and
divisiveness.”—pages 312-313.
BY
NOT UNITING, WE ARE AT THE TAIL—“An
Ecumenical movement will restore integrity to the word church. This
movement is directly connected to the ‘Charismatic renewal’ that is
impacting many mainline churches, and is based primarily on the shared
faith, hope, and love of ministers and church members from various
denominations who have come together . . My prayer is that Adventism will
be on the cutting edge of this movement, rather than occupying its usual
position at the end of the tail.”—page 313.
NON-DENOMINATIONAL
SUNDAY SERVICES—“We
have a unique opportunity as a people to be the church that is best able
to break down denominational barriers because of our past and because of
our Sabbath.
“If
we were to renounce our past sectarian mentality and embrace our
communities by using our sanctuaries for non-denominational Sunday
services, people would think very differently about our schools and
churches. They would no longer be seen as isolated subcultural islands. We
would experience a dialogue with non-Adventists Christians that would not
only benefit us but would open many non-Adventist minds to the value and
meaning of the Sabbath. It may be that God raised us up as a people for
such a time as this.”—page 313.
FORGET
THE DIFFERENCES AND UNITE IN MINISTRY—“In
his spiritually-anointed book, The House of the Lord, Francis
Frangipane calls upon all Christians, including Adventists, to quit
debating their differences and to focus on the essentials of Christ, the
Holy Spirit, intercessory prayer and a shared love for their cities and
communities.
“We
can write this appeal off as another feeble attempt of the evil one to
break through our sacred barriers of isolationism, or we can humbly repent
of our independent ways and plead for a commitment to unity in Christ and
intercession through His Spirit to fill our ranks. I believe the
consequences of this decision will determine the future course of
Adventism to a great degree.”—page 314.
HARMED
BY NOT UNITING WITH THE CATHOLICS—“It
is admittedly difficult for people who were born and raised believing that
they were God’s Remnant Church, God’s special chosen people, to
embrace an Ecumenical spirit of any kind, particularly when Adventism’s
eschatology has consistently warned against any allegiance with
non-Christians, Catholic Christians, ‘apostate’ Protestant Christians,
or any group that is ‘non-Adventist.’
“It
is a sobering and scary thought to conclude that our eschatology [set of
beliefs about last-day events] has been built on an unsound foundation,
and that it has ultimately done us more harm than good.”—page
314.
ALL
THE OTHER CHURCHES ARE SPECIALLY CHOSEN TOO—“The ‘heretical
imperative’ for Adventism is even a more difficult mandate than for
Christians in general. It is the mandate to stop thinking just of
ourselves as ‘God’s chosen people’ and start recognizing the
existence and ministry of ‘God’s chosen peoples.’
”—page 314.
DENOMINATIONALISM
MUST GO—“Christian
denominationalism is so deeply entrenched in the very nature of American
religion that it is difficult to imagine its demise. Yet this is one of
the ‘spiritual megatrends’ analysts have predicted as we move
towards the twenty-first century.”—page 315.
WE
WOULD DO BETTER TO MERGE WITH THEM—“Non-denominational
movements have flourished among young people and promise to be the rule
rather than the exception by the year 2000 if this trend continues. In
this context, we must honestly ask ourselves if our medium is more
important than our message. Are we really concerned about communicating a
message concerning the kingdom of God, or are we more concerned about
preserving our denominational identity?”—page 315.
It
seems unbelievable that such things could be written by a tithe-supported,
Seventh-day Adventist minister! He has been teaching these views for years
at La Sierra University and at meetings throughout the Southeastern
California Conference. Yet there is no one to tell him, “Thus far you
shall go, and no farther.” Daily could probably deny the existence of
God, and continue to be accepted by the administration and faculty of La
Sierra University.
Where
will all this lead? The apostasy will not slacken nor cease; it will
continue deepening. With the passing of time, we will hear of still more
financial and licentious scandals issuing from Southern California.
Souls are
going to be lost as a result. Yet many seem to have no concern.
—Vance Ferrell
I
found several informative items in Steve Daily’s book, Adventism for
a New Generation, which we have here reviewed. Here they are:
“A
survey of 2,000 Adventist youth in 1960 revealed that only 42 percent of
Adventist homes had regular family worship, a figure much lower than their
parents would have reported. By 1980, a study of Adventist parents
themselves revealed that only 34 percent had regular family worship. The
recent Valuegenesis research reveals that only 23.6 percent of SDA youth
report having daily worship in their homes.”—page 208.
“A
few years ago, I attended a national convocation of Adventist church
leaders, where a newly appointed administrator openly discussed a research
finding which revealed that Mormons and Adventists in the Northwest had a
higher incidence of incest than all other groups in the study.”—page
209.
“Approximately
40 percent of Adventist scientists in the 1980s believed that the earth
was over four billion years old.”—page 232.
“Church
growth expert Leith Anderson tells us that in the ’90s
approximately 85 percent of America’s Protestant churches are either
stagnating or dying.”—page 227.
The
number in the church who pay tithe: Never–10.8 percent / Seldom–16.1
percent / Sometimes–20.4 percent / Most of the time–25.2 percent /
Always–27.5 percent.—adapted from page 257.
“There
is a strong positive correlation between the age an adolescent begins
dating and the likelihood that he or she will engage in premarital
sex.”—page 298.
Here
is a tabulation of the age when dating initially begins, and the
percentage who ultimately have intercourse before graduation:
12
years - 91 percent
13
years - 56 percent
14
years - 53 percent
15
years - 40 percent
16
years - 20 percent.
—adapted
from page 298.
DAILY
PROVIDES THE LIBERALS WITH
A BLUEPRINT FOR ACTION, SOURCES
OF GUIDANCE
Ellen
White’s writings are worthless today; and, because of its errors, the
Bible is not fully trustworthy. Fortunately, there have been many prophets
in history, and they are all around us today. We ourselves should expect
to receive visions and dreams at any time containing new light.
We
can learn much from others, especially the Ecumenicals, Pentecostals,
Protestants, Catholics, and psychiatrists. We can even learn from the
spiritists (F. Scott Peck) and the atheists (humanists).
We
should attend meetings of Pentecostals and non-Adventist churches, in
order to learn things to improve our own denominational beliefs,
objectives, and activity.
We
no longer need written standards and codes. We need personal changes,
obtained by personal contact with people. We need people, not books.
CHANGES
WE NEED TO MAKE
Radical
changes are needed. Jesus was a radical, and we need to be radicals today.
We should break away from all those earlier patterns in our denomination,
and experiment with a host of new ones learned from the other churches.
We
need to change our worships, so they will be celebration events. They
should include the high excitement, clapping, hand-waving, parallel
praying, and tongues of the Pentecostals.
We
need to move out from Adventism and experiment with and adopt the
innovations of the other churches. Whatever their fads might be (feminism,
new age, etc.), we should appreciatively consider them. But we should look
with consistent disfavor on the idea of returning to the restricting
standards and beliefs of historic Adventism.
We
need to forget about converting people to our beliefs. Instead, we should
become a grand social agency, helping the poor so they can enjoy life a
little better.
When
we thus set aside our distinctive doctrines, the world will accept us
wholeheartedly, and no longer will we be scorned as “those
commandment-keepers.” We want acceptance, and this is how we can get it.
We
need to forget about standards and belief. It is not conduct but being
happy and making people happy that counts.
BELIEFS
THAT NEED CHANGING
Most
all our beliefs need changing! Earlier in our history, we thought that
conduct had something to do with salvation, but now we have accepted the
modern Protestant theory that we are saved in our sins. So we can abandon
codes of conduct and enjoy life. Our male/female god wants us happy.
By
accepting these new ideas, we are liberated from Victorian taboos on
conduct, sex, amusement, and self-glorification. It is time to enjoy the
world for a change!
STEVE
DAILY—How
did Steve Daily wonder so far from truth? His experience is a warning to
us, lest we follow in his steps:
In
his book, Adventism for a New Generation, Steve mentions that he
did not like doctrines and standards in his youth. Abandoning the Spirit
of Prophecy, he was ready to place his confidence in the great men of the
world. Steve came to the conclusion, often stated in his book, that the
solutions to our personal and church problems are to be found in the
wisdom of men in other denominations, as well as psychiatrists, humanists,
and even men, such as F. Scott Peck, who have spiritist connections.
But
in rejecting the narrow way, and stepping out into the broad one, Steve is
in the process of destroying himself.
“There
is only one path to Paradise restored—the path of obedience. The message
given man to proclaim in these last days is not to be amalgamated with
worldly opinions. In these days of peril, nothing but obedience will keep
man from apostasy. God has bestowed on man great light and many blessings.
But unless this light and these blessings are received, they are no
security against apostasy and disobedience. When those whom God has
exalted to positions of high trust turn from Him to human wisdom, their
light becomes darkness, and how great is that darkness! Their entrusted
capabilities are a snare to them. They are become an offense to God.”—Upward
Look, 318.
Think
not that we have seen the end of how deep the new theology can lead men
into sin. In the months and years ahead, we are going to witness even more
terrible falls by the advocates of the “it’s all right to sin”
teaching. These individuals, thinking they are saved in their sins, will
be led on by the devil into every species of evil—licentiousness,
mismanagement, sodomy, embezzlement, and more.
“There
always has been, and till the conflict is ended, there always will be a
departing from God. Sins have a close connection. One act of disobedience,
unless repented of, leads to another. He who justifies himself in sin is
led on step by step in deception, till at length he sins with
impunity.”—Ibid.
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