STILL
MORE ABOUT SECRET AGENTS 3 |
Vance
Ferrell
The
following account is true and factual as told to me by Dr. B.G. Wilkinson,
Ph.D., on April 21,1956, in Takoma Park, Maryland.
(For
those who never heard of Dr. Wilkinson, he was President of old Washington
Missionary College, (WMC) now Columbia Union College, from 1936 to 1946.
He was a respected and loved Leader in the SDA Church for over 60 years,
having built-up the cause of present truth in both Europe and America. He
passed to his rest in 1967 at the age of 96.
In
Dr. Wilkinson's second book, "Truth Triumphant", he writes,
"These men (the Jesuits) were skilled in sublimated treachery and
trained for years In the art of rapid debate in which they could trap an
opponent by the cunning use of ambiguous terms; they proposed to
dominate all schools and colleges. This they sought to accomplish in
non-Catholic schools by occupying the pulpits and professorial chairs, not
as Jesuits, but as professed adherents of the Protestant Churches to which
these schools belonged. It was their studied aim to gain entrance,
under the guise of friendship, into services of the State and to climb up
as advisers to the highest officers, where they could so influence affairs
as to bring them into the orbit of Rome." Chap. The Great Struggle in
India, Page 316. Printed in 1944)
Dr.
Wilkinson told me in 1936 he uncovered a Jesuit Bible instructor teaching
Bible classes in WMC. His account goes as below: Quote.
"I
had been carrying a heavy load of work for the past few years, as pastor
of Old Capitol Memorial Church, President of the College, and teaching
Bible Classes to young ministerial students at the College, so when it was
proposed to relieve me of some of the class work as Bible teacher and
hire a bright young man with an advanced degree in theology to take over
my Bible doctrines class, I consented. This young instructor had a very
pleasing personality and a magnetic attraction about him.
I
had nothing to do with his being hired. He began teaching and for about a
year all seemed to go well. Then some of my former students came to me
(Wilkinson had an "open door" policy with all students) and
seemed confused with questions about our doctrines, and they seemed
uncertain concerning exactly what we taught and believed. They confided in
me that this new Bible instructor did not teach the same way I had taught
them, he would leave matters up-in-the-air, express doubts about portions
of the Bible and not answer all questions that were put to him in class.
All
this aroused my suspicions for I knew all was not well and our students
were not getting a firm foundation In Truth. I felt badly about the
matter, since I had consented to give up my classes, and now this was
happening. I determined to look into the matter. I watched the young
instructor's mail. Every two weeks or so a long letter came for him in
his mail "slot". All the teachers and faculty had their mail
placed in open "pigeon" holes and all one had to do was look in
and see the letter. I noticed the return address on this one letter was
a Jesuit institution in Washington D.C. I knew all these places and their
locations.
I
took this letter and steamed it open. I felt that if the Bible instructor
was a Jesuit in disguise what I was doing was justified. In the letter
were his orders for the coming month on what he was to present to his
class and a report sheet on his activities to date. The next day I called
him in to my office, gave him his letter, and said to him, 'I know who you
really are, and why you are here.' He picked up his mail, left the
campus of WMC the same hour, never bothering to pick up his back pay, and
I never saw him again." (Ralph Moss)
PAGE
8 of the “ARKANSAS CATHOLIC” July 29, 1990
Adventists
spread anti-Catholic tracts
Indianapolis.
(CNS) . A Seventh -day Adventist factlon from Tennessee mailed an unknown
number of anti-Catholic booklets the week of July 8 to homes In
Indianapolis, where 2,000 gathered for the denomination's 55th world
convention July 6-14.
Shirley Burton, a spokesperson for the
denomination, told the Indianapolis Star Daily newspaper, the tract was
"trash”. The pamphlet. "United Sates in Prophecy” calls
Catholicism a pagan religion and refers to the pope as a beast.
Some
Adventists attending the convention demanded a retraction of Burton's
remark and claimed that anti-Catholicism is a crucial part of traditional
Adventist doctrine.
John
F. Fink, editor of the Criterion. Indianapolis archdiocesan newspaper,
“The Seventh-day Adventists have a history of anti-Catholicism, like
many other Protestant religions in the U.s. during the 18th and 19th
centuries..
The
pamphlet calls Catholicism a pagan religion
and refers to the pope as a
beast.
However,
the main body of the Church has moved away from an anti-Catholic position.
The new position of co-operation with the Catholic Church was exemplified
by the invitation from the Seventh-day Adventists to the Vatican to lend
an official observer to the conference.”
Rev.
Thomas J. Murphy, director of the Indianapolis archdiocesan office of
ecumenism, acted as the Vatican observer. He addressed the conference
July 10.
The
tract, distributed by the Adventist Lay workers Affiliate of Tennessee and
printed by Coming Events of Portland, TN, also characterized those who
celebrate the Sabbath on Sunday as disobedient to God's Holy Law.
Seventh-day
Adventists consider binding the Hebrew Testament prescriptions of Saturday
as the Sabbath, as well as Hebrew Testament law on tithing and diet.
Neither
the tract's distributor nor its publisher was represented at the conference.
Herbert Ford, news director for the denomination, told the Indianapolis
Star that Adventists who want to cling to the church’s historic,
anti-Catholic beliefs represent only about 1,000 of the church's 750,000
North American members.
Other
Adventists contend those numbers are larger than the church is willing to
admit, claiming that hundreds came to Indianapolis to meet in hotel rooms
across the city.
Fred
Allaback, an independent evangelist from Mount Vernon, OH, said that
"'Prophecy in the United States” is a condensation of “The Great
Controversy”, written by 19th century Seventh-day Adventist
founder and prophet, Ellen G. White.
White’s
book, Allaback said, warned against the evils of the papacy and feared
that Catholicism would become the official religion of the U.S.
Ford
said that “there is a little fear” among Adventists who live in
nations where Catholicism is strong.
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