2014 Ellen White Issues Symposium

Join us as we break new ground in understanding Ellen White and issues relating to her life, ministry, and prophetic gift. All are invited to attend free. Speakers this year include Mike Oxentenko, Ron du Preez, David Williams, Tim Poirier, Stan Hickerson, Jerry Moon, and Denis Fortin. Monday, March 24, 2014, from 9am – 5 pm, in the Seminary Chapel.

For information on attending the Ellen White Issues Symposium please call the Center for Adventist Research at (269) 471-3209. We look forward to seeing you on the last Monday in March. Though this will be an academic symposium it is our intention that it also provide spiritual encouragement and inspiration for those who attend.

9:00 AM Merlin D. Burt
Welcome and Introduction
9:15 AM Mike Oxentenko
A Comparative Analysis of Chiastic Technique in the Writings of Ellen G. White and William E. Foy as Evidence of Post Biblical Inspiration.

Response: Jerry Moon

Facilitator: Iriann Irizarry

10:00 AM Ron du Preez
Hebrew Literary Structures in Ellen White’s Writings

Response: Richard Davidson

Facilitator: Iriann Irizarry

10:45 AM Break
11:00 AM David Williams
An Historical Theology of Ellen G. White’s Experience of and Teachings on Music During the Writing of
The Desire of Ages while in Australia from 1892–1898

Response: Hyveth Williams

Facilitator: Kevin Burton

12:00 PM Lunch
1:30 PM Tim Poirier and Stan Hickerson
Ellen G. White: Letters and Manuscripts with Annotations 1845 – 1859

Facilitator: Merlin D. Burt

2:30 PM Jerry Moon and Denis Fortin
Ellen G. White Encyclopedia: The Inside Story

Facilitator: Terry Robertson

3:30 PM Break
3:45 PM Current Issues DiscussionFacilitator: Merlin D. Burt

Download
Symposium program

Symposium Purpose

The purpose of this symposium is to break new ground in understanding Ellen White and issues relating to her life, ministry, and prophetic gift that have current importance.  The structure of the symposium will have some elements of academic formality.  Papers will be presented with a prepared response followed by brief responses from the presenters.  The papers presented will later be published in a journal that will be available at a reasonable cost.  At the symposium we will also make available the published presentations from the 2005 through the 2012 symposiums.  At the meeting there will be an opportunity to submit questions relating to Ellen White issues.  We will attempt to discuss as many of these question as time will allow in the afternoon.

Symposium Presenters

Mike Oxentenko, MDiv, is president of the Reaching Hearts International and pastor of a vibrant young church plant in Spencerville, Maryland in the Allegheny East conference. Prior to this Oxentenko has pastored churches in Michigan and Maryland. In addition, he has a radio program, Reaching Your Heart, which is aired daily.
Ron du Preez, ThD., DMin, holds doctoral degrees in missions and ethics, and is currently completing a third in New Testament Studies. He is a respected scholar and inspirational speaker who has served the Lord, through the Seventh-day Adventist Church (on four continents), as a university professor, administrator, and missionary; and is currently pastoring in the Oregon Conference.
David Williams, MSM, is currently a Ph.D. student in Church History, Systematic Theology, and Musicology at Andrews University. Williams is assistant Professor of Christian Ministry in Liturgy, Worship, and Sacred Music at the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary. He has studied extensively in Europe with leading artists in organ, additionally spending a year in the Netherlands receiving instruction from Sietze de Vries in improvisation.
Tim Poirier, M.T.S., is Vice Director and Archivist of the Ellen G. White Estate at the World Headquarters of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, where he has been employed since 1981. Among his major projects have been the Ellen White CD-ROMs and the forthcoming annotated volume of Ellen White’s earliest letters and manuscripts.
Stanley D. Hickerson, M. Div., Annotations Editor for the Ellen G. White ® Estate and Adjunct Professor of Religion and Biblical Languages at Andrews University. He has been researching Adventist history for forty-two years and has a special interest in locating historic sites. A contributor to the upcoming Ellen G. White Encyclopedia, he has written on today’s topic and continues researching the homes and lives of James and Ellen White and other Adventist pioneers.
Jerry Moon, Ph.D., is associate professor and chair of the Church History Department in the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary at Andrews University. He is also editor of Andrews University Seminary Studies. He is co-editor of the Ellen G. White Encyclopedia.
Denis Fortin, Ph.D., Professor of Theology and a member of the Seminary faculty since 1994. He has authored several publications on Adventist history and theology, including his 2004 Adventism in Quebec: The Dynamics of Rural Church Growth, 1830-1910. He is co-editor of the Ellen G. White Encyclopedia.

Getting to Andrews

We are located in rural southwestern Michigan and if you are within 300 miles of Andrews, the cheapest way to get here is by car.  If you are coming from further away or would just prefer taking the bus,  Greyhound serves the nearby town of Benton Harbor, just 12 miles from the campus. You can also take the train, the closest station with an Amtrak service is Niles, 15 minutes from campus.

If you are thinking about flying to Andrews, the closest airport is South Bend Regional Airport. Many students, friends and visitors of Andrews also fly into the Chicago O’Hare or Midway airport and then take the Coach USA bus service to nearby South Bend, Indiana.

 

Driving Directions

From the North and West From the East From the South
Take I-94 to exit 28.Take US 31 south approximately 11 miles to Berrien Springs.

Turn left at J.N. Andrews Blvd.

Take the Indiana Toll Road (I80/90) to the South Bend west exit.Take US 31 north approximately 15 miles to Berrien Springs.

Take exit 15A; turn right at the stop sign.

Go about half a mile, then turn left at J.N. Andrews Blvd.

Take US 31 north to Berrien Springs, located about 15 miles north of the Indiana border.Take exit 15A; turn right at the stop sign.

Go about half a mile, then turn left at J.N. Andrews Blvd.

 

 

 

Willock and White

In fall 2010 we began an ambitious project to catalog and better manage and preserve the Ellen G. White Document Files (WDF). This collection originated as the office file for Ellen White many years ago. It is a collection of clippings, papers, photocopies and other information gathered on a variety of topics. The original is in most cases at the main White Estate office at the General Conference building in Silver Spring, Maryland. Many of the White Document Files at the Center mirror the main office. However, our files often contain much more and/or different material than does the main office file. For years we’ve relied on a card index to access the contents of the files. Several years ago we were able to get the file titles into the Library’s catalog. But from the catalog we still did not know what was actually in the files.

Debbie Willock has worked on this large and complex task since the beginning. She feels she will be able to complete her part of the work by May 2014. She is listing all of the contents of each Document File in the Library’s online catalog. This will allow searching by title of the file, by the title of the individual items, as well as by keyword searching for any word appearing in the title, subject heading, and content note field.

Debbie’s approach to this work is to work through the entire collection looking for certain type of materials such as photographs, publications, term papers, and other materials which require different treatment. Some of these were removed and others were managed in different ways. This took more time at the beginning but at the end Debbie is left with less to do so the last stages should proceed faster. It is a large project, but one we anticipate will be used and appreciated by our researchers here and around the world. In fact the White Estate is tentatively planning to download the end result into their online Document Resource Center which will make this resource available to the world through the White Estate web site.
After indexing or cataloging the file contents the natural next step is to digitize them. We began this in 2012. Digitizing a collection is very time intensive since we need to remove staples and treat each document or folder as a separate file. This is a rather tedious process as each document, whether one page or 100 pages, is treated as an independent item. Then we need to link the scanned images to the collection register. Once the contents are scanned the Digitization Manager works with the System Librarian, Steve Sowder, to insert the PDF of each document into a web page. This web page is then what is attached to the Library Catalog and made available to researchers. Currently there are 2,417 linked WDF electronic files in the James White Library catalog.

Due to issues with changing organization and some resulting confusion we have temporarily suspended digitization until the organizing phase of the work is further along. Debbie is still finding documents and other items which need to go into what she thought were already done files. When Debbie finishes the organization and cataloging this year digitization can resume.

This project is a huge task. Most people do not realize the enormity of the work. The procedure sheet is nine pages in itself. When Merlin Burt was at the Loma Linda University White Estate Branch Office in the 1990s they undertook a similar but much less ambitious project and it took them quite a few years to get through a smaller number of files. Debbie is a determined and focused worker who sets goals for herself and works diligently to meet them. She has been hampered by an evolving set of procedures and by waiting for others to try to keep up with her when they need to do something to keep her work moving along.

White Document File boxes in their storage location in the stacks area of the Center for Adventist Research.

White Document File boxes in their storage location in the stacks area of the Center for Adventist Research.

In recent years Angelika Kaiser, and now Heidi Magesa, spent considerable time reviewing Debbie’s listing of the file contents on the library catalog for accuracy and completeness. Then Camille Clayton did a final quick review looking for obvious spelling problems and other things that may have been missed by Debbie, Angelika, and Heidi’s review. Camille also assigns necessary subject headings to make the WDF’s easier to find by those doing subject searches.

Debbie Willock has been working on the White Document File for over three years during her time at the Center. Over time the project has changed in focus and procedures, but through it all Debbie has been a diligent and precise worker. She is very dedicated to this project and feels it is critical for young people to be aware of their denominational history. She believes this project takes important strides towards educating them. Thank you Debbie for a job well done.

Debbie Willock, an MDiv student, plans to graduate in August and hails from Windsor, Ontario, Canada.

Katy Wolfer, Special Projects Manager / Enjoys canoeing and kayaking and has been dunked in several Michigan rivers.

Jim Ford, Associate Director / Appreciates wide open spaces and can often be found walking to work.

A Passion for Books

I came from Brazil where I worked as a pastor in a southern city. I have always been passionate about books, not only about their content, but also their shape, structure, binding and preservation. For the ancient book artisans, the artistic elements of a book were more than style, they used to represent the very core of the book’s message. With this in mind, my first job was in a book bindery and restoration company. There I learned the different approaches to books with preservation and restoration needs, as well as the different techniques of modern book bindery. This background gave me the way to work and attain my baccalaureate in theology. And today, I am very proud to use this knowledge to approach the historical materials of our church, and attain my PhD degree.

This is exactly the opportunity that my job at CAR gives me, to be a part of history. I work here in the digitization department, which I consider the new, and maybe the last, frontier of the book conservation task. I have also done some preservation tasks, and most recently I had the opportunity to handle Joseph Bates’ Bible. To handle, digitize, and preserve this Bible was an amazing experience for me. I had never thought I would have this book in my hands when I first read about its author. This is like encountering the past and reaffirming my faith. The most wonderful thing of all is that this happens every day here at the Center for Adventist Research.
Felipe Masotti, Student Worker / A PhD student from Brazil who loves working with books.

Volunteer Spotlight: Sallie Alger

Recently I talked with Sallie Alger, a retired library faculty who is volunteering at the Center.

Why do you volunteer?
I am a high energy person who likes to be involved in campus, church, and community programs and I derive a sense of satisfaction by contributing to all. I believe that we have a responsibility to give back to our church and community as our time, talents, and funds allow!
To that end, I have volunteered at the local community library for approximately 25 years and with the Optimist Club of Berrien Springs for about 15 years, serving as president for one year, vice-president several times, and currently as a director. I have also held several offices at the Pioneer Memorial Church and have been a PMC Elder for 10 or 12 years. I just finished a two year volunteer position at Adventist Frontier Missions where I cataloged their library of 800 books and also served as a development representative—visiting and contacting donors in a five state region. I have also served on the local REACH board for approximately 10 years.
Hobbies and Activities
Reading, exercise, travel and, most importantly, our grandsons—Carter, 11, and Boden, 7 who live in Grand Rapids with their parents, Christopher (our son) and Jean (our lovely daughter-in-law)!

Sallie Alger is a retired library faculty who is back volunteering at the Center for Adventist Research cataloging the backlog of over 3,000 Seventh-day Adventist periodicals! She worked at the James White Library for 20+ years in various departments and capacities and ended her career there as Head of Bibliographic Services/S.A.I.L. Departments.

Katy Wolfer, Special Projects Manager / Hopes spring is near as she learns all she can about permaculture and no-till gardens.