The 1888 Message: Ellet J. Waggoner
The 1888 Message: Ellet J. Waggoner
The 1888 Message: Ellet J. Waggoner
Waggoner
Christ became our Sin-Bearer, condemned on our behalf, only through imputation,
i.e., because our sins were reckoned as His: "the LORD has laid on Him the
iniquity of us all …. He was reckoned with the transgressors; and He bore the sin
of the many, and made intercession for the transgressors" (Isa. 53: 12). "He made
Him to be sin on our behalf Who knew no sin" (II Cor. 5: 21). "Then said He unto
them, ‘But now, he that has a purse, let him take [it], and likewise [his] wallet:
and he that has no sword, let him sell his garment, and buy one. For I say unto
you, that what has been written must be fulfilled in Me, And with the lawless He
was reckoned: for the thing concerning Me has a fulfillment’" (Luke 22: 36-37).
"Yet it pleased the LORD to bruise him; He has put [Him] to grief: when You shall
make His soul an offering for sin" (Isa. 53:10). Only thus could He "carried up
our sins in His body onto the tree" (I Pet. 2:24) because He received the full
curse of sin and death within because of an outside-of-Himself sin reckoned as
His. Even so, by faith alone we receive the full blessing of life and
righteousness within, because of an outside-of-ourselves Righteousness reckoned as
ours(Isa. 53; Rom. 3-4; Ps. 32:1).
On E. J. Waggoner’s main desire in writing
• Page 52:2. "I have written this brief review, as I did my articles in the
Signs, with the desire to vindicate the law of God, and to show its perpetuity,
its binding claims upon all mankind, and the beautiful harmony between it and the
gospel. The law of God is the groundwork of all our faith. It may be said to be
the backbone of the Third Angel’s Message."
Ecclesia Reformata Semper Reformanda
On the ‘Reformed Church Ever Reforming’
Ellet J. Waggoner saw himself as helping to recover the faith once delivered so
gloriously to the saints in the 1st century AD and recovered so mightily in the
16th century. On the subject of the law and the gospel in the book of Galatians,
he declared the need for reform. His words still ring true for us as a people
today on our need to more fully grasp the Gospel in its New Testament, apostolic,
Day of Atonement context. In 1888, Ellet J. Waggoner stood with Ellen White as a
Protestant Reformer to the Advent people:
• Page 52:3. "I know you will say that it will be a humiliating thing to
modify our position on so vital a point as this, right in the face of the enemy.
But if a general has a faulty position, I submit that it is better to correct it,
even in the face of the enemy, than to run the risk of defeat because of his
faulty position. But I do not see anything humiliating in the matter. If our
people should to-day, as a body (as they will sometime), change their view on this
point, it would simply be an acknowledgment that they are better informed to-day
than they were yesterday. It would simply be taking an advance step, which is
never humiliating except to those whose pride of opinion will not allow them to
admit that they can be wrong. It would simply be a step nearer the faith of the
great Reformers from the days of Paul to the days of Luther and Wesley. It would
be a step closer to the heart of the Third Angel's Message. I do not regard this
view which I hold as a new idea at all. It is not a new theory of doctrine.
Everything that I have taught is perfectly in harmony with the fundamental
principles of truth which have been held not only by our people, but by all the
eminent reformers. And so I do not take any credit to myself for advancing it. All
I claim for the theory is, that it is consistent, because it sticks to the
fundamental principles of the gospel. (1)
Concluding remarks on the overwhelming centrality of Justification by faith
• Page 53:1-2. "Before I close, I cannot refrain form expressing my regret to
see in your book (on page 78) the expression, ‘the much-vaunted
doctrineofjustification by faith.’ Do you know of any other means of
justification? Your words seem to intimate that you think that doctrine has been
overestimated. Of one thing I am certain, and that is, that those who have held to
the theory of the law, which you are endeavoring to uphold, have not overestimated
the doctrine of justification by faith; because that theory leads inevitably to
the conclusion that men are justified by the law. But when I read Romans 3:28, and
read also that Paul knew nothing among the Corinthians but Jesus Christ and Him
crucified, and that ‘the just shall live by faith,’ and that ‘this is the victory
that overcometh the world, even our faith’ (1 John 5:4), and that Paul wanted to
be found [in Him] when Jesus comes, having nothing but ‘the righteousness which is
of God by faith’ (Philippians 3:9), I conclude that it is impossible to
overestimate the doctrine of justification by faith. You may call it a ‘much-
vaunted’ if you please; I accept the word, and say with Paul: ‘God forbid that I
should glory [or vaunt], save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the
world is crucified to me, and I unto the world.’
• "Hoping that you will read this letter in the spirit in which it was
written, and that you will believe that I have written it with only the utmost
good-feeling and brotherly love for you personally, and praying that God will
guide both of us and all His people to the most perfect knowledge of the truth as
it is in Jesus, I remain your brother in Christ, E. J. WAGGONER."
Comparison of E. J. Waggoner’s position in 1888 with that of the Protestant
Reformation:
Topic Protestant Reformation Waggoner’s position in 1888
Justification by faith (i.e. 'righteousness by faith')
The pardon and righteousness reckoned to all who believe
• grasped by faith alone "without works" (Rom. 4:1-8)
• Christ’s life & death reckoned ours continuously not just for past sins but
for our present ‘coming short’ (Rom. 3:24-28; 4:8; 8:1, 31-39; Heb. 7:25) The
pardon and righteousness reckoned to all who believe
• grasped by faith (not as clear on "without works")
• Christ’s righteousness reckoned ours mostly for past sins (EJW like fellow
SDAs not clear on the ‘present continuous’ nature of justification)
Nature of the Atonement Substitutionary Substitutionary
Sanctification = "fruit of the Spirit" [in] love, obedience, and good works; to
be "completed in you until the day of Jesus Christ" (Gal. 5: 22-23; Phil. 1: 6)
= love and obedience (less explicit on the nature of the work of the Holy
Spirit in sanctification)
Centrality of Justification by faith "the article of the standing and falling
church" (Luther); "the principal hinge of religion" (Calvin) "impossible to
overestimate" (Waggoner)
Nature of faith Faith in the Object, Christ (because faith is without merit or
virtue in itself)
Not faith as the object, love (as held by the Medieval church) Faith in the
Object, Christ
Nature of sin
Explicitly and Biblically: Not only what we do but what we are More
implicitly: Not only what we do but what we are (not as clear on the nature of
sin)
Human nature of Christ Like us in all things, sin excepted Like us in all things,
sin excepted (although not as clearly articulated)
Christ as our Sin-Bearer By imputation only By imputation only
Old & New Covenants A matter of status before God not dispensation (sinners
justified by faith alone in the OT also) A matter of status before God not
dispensation (sinners justified by faith in the OT also)
The Covenant to Abraham = the Gospel = the Gospel
Law in Galatians Both but especially the moral law Only the moral law
Justification by faith in its NT-apostolic, eschatological Day of Atonement
context (Rom. 1-3; Hebrews; John 12; 16; Rev. 12, etc.) Not fully recovered:
Sensed a connection with acquittal in the final judgment, but not the full
significance or consequences Not fully recovered: Sensed its connection with 3rd
Angel’s message but not the full significance or consequences
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At the gate
Francis S. Greene
(25 October 1989)
There came two men to heaven, and at its splendid gate
They answered, each man for himself, the Keeper of their fate.
The Searcher there of hidden hearts, Who for each seeker yearned,
Gave test to all their source of trust and all their souls had learned.
"What claim for your redemption can grant you entrance here?
How do you qualify to walk where holy angels fear?"
The first man said, "My life is clean! Behold me, void of sin.
This did the Christ within my life, that I might enter in.
All holy, harmless, undefiled, and such a one as He.
All praise to Him, who fashioned thus a miracle like me!"
The candidate who followed next then stood before his Lord
To answer Him whose holy voice was as a two-edg’d sword.
"What offering do you present? Do you have Heaven's key?
No flesh can come with empty hands. Where is your gift to Me?"
"I have no gift to make Thee, Lord," the second softly said.
"All good appearing in my life, Christ wrought it in my stead.
He wove the very robe I wear, and made my eyes to see
That there is not a scrap of good belonging unto me.
Therefore, my ransom is His blood; in it I rest my fate.
I claim Thy Christ as entrance, Lord, for Jesus is my Gate."
To whom did Heaven open wide? The answer's clear to see:
No flesh shall be self-justified, and none can buy what’s free.
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Appendix I
A brief compilation of clear statements on Justification by faith
Martin Luther & the Reformers Ellen White & Seventh-day Adventists
• "God accounts and acknowledges him as righteous without any works who
apprehends His Son by faith alone….This, then, is the amazing definition of
Christian righteousness. It is the divine imputing or accounting for righteousness
or unto righteousness because of faith in Christ or for Christ’s sake" (D. Martin
Luthers Werke, Vol. III, p. 1229).
• "It is faith alone that achieves this that all sins are remitted to us and
that the whole Decalogue is fulfilled by faith, because faith alone gives me
Christ, who is the fulfillment and the end [telos completion] of the law. What
else does faith give? It imparts and brings with it the Holy Spirit, from whom all
good works flow" (D. Martin Luthers Werke, Kuitische Gesamtausgabe [Weimar,
1883-], Vol. XXXIX, Pt. 1, p. 482).
• "But the doctrine of Justification is this, that we are pronounced righteous
and are saved solely by faith in Christ, and without works. . . . it immediately
follows that we are pronounced righteous neither through monasticism nor through
vows nor through masses nor through any other works. . . ." (Martin Luther,
Lectures on Galatians, 1535).
• ‘The article of Justification, which is our only protection, not only
against all the powers and plottings of men but also against the gates of hell, is
this: By faith alone [sola fide] in Christ, without works, we are declared just
[pronuntiari iustos] and saved’ (Martin Luther, comp. E. M. Plass, What Luther
Says, 2: 701).
• ‘Therefore a man can with confidence boast in Christ and say: ‘Mine are
Christ’s living, doing, and speaking, his suffering and dying, mine as much as if
I had lived, done, spoken, suffered, and died as He did’ (Martin Luther, Luther’s
Works, 31: 297).
• "… the obedience of Christ is imputed to us for righteousness. That glory
cannot be taken away from Christ and transferred to either our renewal or our
obedience without blasphemy" (Martin Chemnitz, 1522-1586; Examination of the
Council of Trent, Pt. 1, pp. 490-491; cf. Rom. 10: 4).
• "Justifying righteousness is the doing and suffering of Christ when He was
in the world. This is clear because we are…justified by His obedience… (Rom. 5:19;
10:4). This righteousness resides in and with the person of Christ; it is of
justifying virtue only by imputation, i.e. by God’s reckoning it to us, even as
our sins made the Lord Jesus a sinner…by God’s reckoning it to Him" (John Bunyan,
Justification by an Imputed Righteousness, a sermon; 17th century).
• "…if we are justified on the grounds of the work of the Holy Spirit in us,
we are called to rest on a work, which, so far from being finished and accepted,
is not even begun in the case of any unrenewed sinner; and which, when it is begun
in the case of a believer, is incipient only…marred and defiled by remaining sin…
and never perfected in this life" (J. Buchanan, The Doctrine of Justification, p.
402). • "Christ was a Protestant…. Luther and his followers did not
invent the reformed religion. They simply accepted it as presented by Christ and
the apostles" (Ellen White, ‘Visit to the Vaudois Valleys,’ Review and Herald, 06-
01-86).
• "The great doctrine of justification by faith, so clearly taught by Luther,
had been almost wholly lost sight of…[England, 18th c.]" (Ellen White, The Great
Controversy, p. 253).
• "The point which has been urged upon my mind for years is the imputed
righteousness of Christ. I have wondered that this matter was not made the subject
of discourses in our churches throughout the land, when the matter has been kept
constantly urged upon me, and I have made it the subject of nearly every discourse
and talk that I have given to the people. (Ellen White, MS 36 1890 cited in Faith
and Works, p. 18).
• "The believing sinner is pronounced innocent, while the guilt is placed on
Christ. The righteousness of Christ is placed on the debtor's account, and against
his name on the balance sheet is written: Pardoned. Eternal Life" (Ellen White,
RH, 08-24-1897).
• "Through His imputed righteousness they are accepted of God as keeping all
His commandments" (Ellen White, TM 37).
• "Righteousness without a blemish can be obtained only through the imputed
righteousness of Christ" (Ellen White, RH, 9-3-01).
• "Let not the fallacies of Satan deceive you; you are justified by faith
alone …. but genuine faith… bring[s] forth the fruits of the Spirit." (Ellen
White, Signs of the Times, 03-24-90).
• "They [sinners] are justified alone through the imputed righteousness of
Christ" (Ellen White, Mss. Rel., Vol. 8, p. 255).
• "Christ only is the way, the truth, the life; and man can be justified alone
through the imputation of Christ’s righteousness. Man is justified freely by God’s
grace through faith, and not by works, lest any man should boast. Salvation is the
gift of God through Jesus Christ our Lord. Many have felt their hopeless
condition, and have asked in perplexity, ‘How shall we gain … the world to come?
Earth lies under the curse, and is doomed to destruction; how shall we be able to
enter the city of God?’ We would point you to Christ, the way, the truth, the life
– the mystic ladder between heaven and earth" (Ellen White, RH, 11-11-1890)
• "…What is the ground of our acceptance; And we reply that it is not our
righteousness, nor our humility, nor contrition, nor tears, nor repentance, nor
anything that the Holy Spirithaswrought in us, but what Christ has done for us"
(John Brunson, RH, 12 August 1902).
• "When the sinner believes that Christ is his personal Saviour, then,
according to his unfailing promises, God pardons his sin, and justifies him
freely. The repentant soul realizes that his justification comes because Christ,
as his substitute and surety, has died for him, is his atonement and
righteousness" (Ellen White, RH, 11-04-1890).
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