How did ellen g white die

Life Sketch of Ellen White
(Overview Page)

Highlights from the life of Ellen G. White

  • Ellen Gould Harmon was born in 1827 to Methodist parents at Gorham, Maine, USA.
  • At age 9, she suffered a near-fatal accident, terminating her formal education, making her a sickly child.
  • In 1840, intrigued by Baptist preacher William Miller's "Advent awakening" revival preaching, Ellen gave her heart to Jesus. Soon after, baptism and membership in the Methodist church.
  • She was deeply disappointed when Jesus did not return in 1843 and again in October 1844 as predicted by Millerites.
  • At age 17 (December 1844), she experienced her first of many visions.
  • Married evangelist James White in 1846.
  • Ellen White published her first of dozens of books, A Sketch of the Christian Experience and Views of Ellen G. White in 1851. In 1888 she published her most famous book, The Great Controversy Between Christ and Satan; and in 1898 she published The Desire of Ages, a classic biography on the life and teachings of Jesus Christ.
  • In vision Mrs. White was shown various future events. For exa

    Biography

    Ellen G. White in Europe 1885-1887

    Between the summers of 1971 and 1972, Pastor Dores A. Delafield and his wife, Evelyn, conducted seminar-type meetings with ministers, teachers, and laymen throughout Western and Eastern Europe. Often their journeys took them to towns and cities where Ellen White lived and labored between the years 1885 and 1887. Ellen G. White in Europe is the first serious attempt ever to put into print the record of those eventful years when Mrs. White labored so tirelessly on the European continent. Her influence was felt in the evangelistic and institutional expansion of Seventh-day Adventist witnessing in eight European countries. As a preacher and counselor she participated in important conference sessions. She lectured in the major Adventist churches in Europe, meanwhile carrying forward a vast literary work, the influence of which is still felt around the world. Mrs. White appears in this volume not simply as a Christian laborer on the European scene, but as the Lord's special messenger, a warm, friendly human being yet conscientious and fai

    White, Ellen G(ould) [Harmon] (1827-1915)

    Co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist (SDA) Church

    Ellen Harmon was born and reared in Gorham, Maine, in a devout Christian home. Her father was an exhorter in the Methodist Church, and her Christian experience was nurtured in Methodist class meetings. Having accepted the teaching of William Miller regarding the imminent return of the Lord, the family was forced out of the Methodist Church. In 1846 Ellen married James White, a fellow Millerite, and together they consolidated the group of Millerites that became the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Michigan in 1861. Although she was never ordained and did not hold formal administrative office, she was accepted as a messenger of the Lord and exerted powerful influence in the young church. Largely under her influence the church developed a worldwide view of its mission and particular ideals regarding education and health, using them and Christian literature to propagate the message. In due course these views gave a particular shape to the Adventist mission endeavor. Her residence and work i

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