Preface
Ellen G. White®: A Brief Biography
by Arthur L. White


Who Was Ellen White?

Who was Ellen G. White, and why do millions consider her writings of special value and
significance?

There are many books available for purchase online about the Life and Work of Ellen G. White.

In brief, she was a woman of remarkable spiritual gifts who lived most of her life during the
nineteenth century (1827-1915), yet through her writings she is still making a revolutionary
impact on millions of people around the world. During her lifetime she wrote more than 5,000
periodical articles and 40 books; but today, including compilations from her 50,000 pages of
manuscript, more than 100 titles are available in English. She is the most translated woman
writer in the entire history of literature, and the most translated American author of either
gender. Her writings cover a broad range of subjects, including religion, education, social
relationships, evangelism, prophecy, publishing, nutrition, and management. Her life-changing
masterpiece on successful Christian living, Steps to Christ, has been published in more than
140 languages. Seventh-day Adventists believe that Mrs. White was more than a gifted writer;
they believe she was appointed by God as a special messenger to draw the world's attention to
the Holy Scriptures and help prepare people for Christ's second advent. From the time she was
17 years old until she died 70 years later, God gave her approximately 2,000 visions and
dreams. The visions varied in length from less than a minute to nearly four hours. The
knowledge and counsel received through these revelations she wrote out to be shared with
others. Thus her special writings are accepted by Seventh-day Adventists as inspired, and their
exceptional quality is recognized even by casual readers. As stated in Seventh-day Adventists
Believe . . . , “The writings of Ellen White are not a substitute for Scripture. They cannot be
placed on the same level. The Holy Scriptures stand alone, the unique standard by which her
and all other writings must be judged and to which they must be subject” (Seventh-day
Adventists Believe . . . , Ministerial Association, General Conference of Seventh-day
Adventists, Washington D.C., 1988, p. 227). Yet, as Ellen White herself noted, “The fact that
God has revealed His will to men through His Word, has not rendered needless the continued
presence and guiding of the Holy Spirit. On the contrary, the Spirit was promised by our
Saviour to open the Word to His servants, to illuminate and apply its teachings” (The Great
Controversy, p. vii). The following is a more detailed account of the life and work of this
remarkable woman who, meeting all the tests of a true prophet as set forth in the Holy
Scriptures, helped found the Seventh-day Adventist church.  


The Acts of the Apostles
by E.G. White

PREFACE

Page v
The fifth book of the New Testament has been known from ancient times as
The Acts of the Apostles; but this title cannot be found in the book itself.
One of the earliest manuscripts, the Codex Sinaiticus, gives as the title the
simple word Acts, with no mention of the apostles. There is a reason for
this. Acts was intended to be more than a brief history of the service
rendered by the twelve disciples, much more than the principal events in the
lifework of its four leading characters, Peter, James, John, and Paul.
The book of the Acts was written by "the beloved physician," Luke, a
Gentile convert, for the whole church, Jews and Gentiles alike. While it
covers a period of a little more than three decades, it is filled with
important lessons for the church in every age. In the book of the Acts God
clearly indicates that the Christian today shall experience the presence of
the same Spirit who came with power at Pentecost and fanned the gospel
message into a flame. The acts of the Holy Spirit through Peter and Paul,
John and James, and others, can be repeated in the modern disciple.

The abruptness with which the book of Acts closes is not accidental; it
deliberately suggests that the thrilling narrative is unfinished, and that the
acts of God through the Spirit are to have their sequel throughout the
Christian dispensation--each successive generation adding a chapter full of
beauty and power to the one that preceded it. The acts recorded in this
remarkable book are in the truest

Page vi
sense the acts of the Spirit, for in apostolic times it was the Holy Ghost who
appeared as the counselor and helper of the Christian leaders. At Pentecost
the praying disciples were filled with the Spirit and preached the gospel with
power. The seven men chosen as deacons were "full of the Holy Ghost and
wisdom." Acts 6:3. It was the Holy Spirit who led in the ordination of Saul
(9:17); in the acceptance of Gentiles into church fellowship (10:44-47); in
the separation of Barnabas and Saul for missionary work (13:2-4); in the
Council of Jerusalem (15:28); and in Paul's missionary journeys (16:6, 7).
Another time when the church suffered intensely at the hands of Roman
and Jewish persecutors, it was the Spirit who sustained the believers and
kept them from error.
The Acts of the Apostles was one of the last books written by Ellen G.
White. It was published a few years before her death. It is one of the most
illuminating volumes that came from her prolific pen. The average reader
will find in it light for Christian witnessing. The message of the book is up
to date, and its relevancy is reflected in the effort of the author to show that
the twentieth century will witness a bestowal of spiritual power exceeding
that of Pentecost. The work of the gospel is not to close with a lesser
display of the Holy Spirit's power than marked its beginning.

That the reader might participate in this re-enactment of the glorious scenes
of the early church and at the same time be preserved from the subtle
counterfeits of the enemy of souls is the prayer and earnest wish of--

The Publishers.


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