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This accusation comes to us from Doctrines of Demons, a 1999 booklet by former Adventist and retired physician Jack Gent, who was born in 1922. ChargeLike other critics, Gent claims that Ellen White taught that no more sinners could be converted. He adds an interesting twist to this allegation by pointing out that at the same time Ellen White was supposed to be teaching this particular version of the "shut door," many were being converted in the "great crusades" of D. L. Moody and I. D. Sankey. If no more sinners could be saved, how come Moody and Sankey were so successful in leading people to Christ? Here's how Jack Gent put it:
Of course Gent's concerns would be legitimate, if they were true. However, we note the following facts about Moody and Sankey:
Thus Moody and Sankey were not seeing a lot of conversions during public crusades in 1849. What they were seeing in elementary school we do not know. AnalysisWe find it highly disturbing that Jack Gent did not provide for his readers widely and readily available quotations such as the following. These quotations demonstrate that there were hardly any conversions to Christ within the denominations, even before October 22, 1844. Take note that this particular quotation is from none other than the learned Albert Barnes:
Since there really were no great number of conversions around the time period in question, the prevailing climate of the Christian community did nothing to contradict the idea of a shut door of mercy for sinners. And yet Ellen White always claimed that her visions never taught the no-more-mercy-for-sinners version of the "shut door." While she claimed to still believe in a different version of the shut door, one that still held out mercy for sinners, she steadfastly maintained that her visions had never taught the extreme version. Give Us Your Opinion
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