Biography ellen g white
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In August 1846 she married James White, a 25-year-old Adventist minister who shared her conviction that God had called her to do the work of a prophet. Lacking self-confidence and fearful of ridicule, she hesitated, but she eventually went forward in faith. An X-ray examination disclosed a break in the left hip, and for five months Mrs.
White was confined to her bed or wheelchair. When Christ did not return by the spring of 1844, scoffers who thought Christ would not return for a thousand years grew bold. She also authored several thousand articles which were published in the Review and Herald, Signs of the Times, and other Seventh-day Adventist periodicals.
Initially shy and reluctant, Ellen White eventually became a very popular public speaker, not only in the United States, but in Europe and Australia as well.
She was much in demand in Adventist meetings and also before non-Adventist audiences, where she was a much-sought-after temperance lecturer. This was her last trip to the eastern states, and it made a lasting and vivid impression on the many Seventh-day Adventists who heard her speak or who met her at the General Conference session. He appealed to the hearts of professed Christians and unbelievers to prepare to meet Jesus.
Preachers of the day described in detail the agonies of the lost in an eternally burning hell, which made the love and mercy of God seem too far away to young Ellen. She was laid to rest at the side of her husband in Oak Hill Cemetery, Battle Creek, Michigan. It was these appeals that caused Ellen White to recognize her sinfulness, and to begin to seek the Savior.
Her health counsels, based on such visions, have resulted in Adventists’ living approximately seven years longer than the average person in the United States.
Ellen White read widely.
Often their journeys took them to towns and cities where Ellen White lived and labored between the years 1885 and 1887. At the conference she spoke a number of times in a clear, firm voice. When Ellen was in her early teens she and her family accepted the Bible interpretations of the Baptist farmer-turned-preacher, William Miller.
Also, the Holy Spirit impressed her at times to draw literary gems from the works of others into her own articles and books. Her health was so impaired that she could not continue her education, and was forced to give up her ambitions of becoming a scholar. Though she herself had no medical training, the fruitage of her ministry can be seen in the network of Adventist hospitals, clinics, and medical facilities that circle the earth.
The closing active months of Mrs. White’s life were devoted to the book Prophets and Kings.
On the morning of February 13, 1915, as Ellen White was entering her comfortable study room at Elmshaven, she tripped and fell, and was unable to rise. But a mistake had been made. Eagerly, Ellen earned all the money she could in order to buy tracts to tell others about Jesus's coming.