When specifically did James White not hold to "the right doctrines of divinity"?
According to documented material handed out at GC in Utrecht. Can you prove them wrong? How about diet?
I don't think you answered my question. I asked when James White didn't hold to "the right doctrines of divinity." Utrecht is too late since James White was long dead by that time.
Can I prove them wrong? Perhaps. It depends on what they said. Unless I know what they said, I have no idea if they are right or wrong.
We can talk about diet after dealing with the Trinity.
This was material handed out on the street at Utricht by some people claiming to be the historical Adventists. I don't have the paper in my files now.
Personally, I don't think those type of people, if they claim to be anti-trinitarians, have their facts straight on that topic.
They had quotations by James White which indicated that James White was an anti-trinitarian at the early date.
The problem, Johann, is that those people are relying on the mere use of the word trinity to denote acceptance or rejection of the doctrine, rather than looking for the the acceptance or rejection of the concepts within that doctrine. In fact, they are confused on what those concepts really are.
For example, the so-called anti-trinitarians will advance the idea that Christ was begotten in support of their anti-trinitarianism. However, that is part of the classic Roman Catholic doctrine of the Trinity, at least going back to perhaps the 5th century. Meanwhile, those who say that they believe in the Trinity oftentimes deny that Christ was begotten, and thus the anti-trinitarians are on this point more Trinitarian than many or most Adventist Trinitarians.
In one anti-trinitarian newsletter, an author blasted Froom, I believe, for saying that God was
homoousios, and then stated that he believed that the Father and Son were of the same substance or essence (I don't recall which word was used). He seemed oblivious to the fact that that is what
homoousios means. I wrote him about the discrepancy, and he replied that he should have said similar substance or essence instead.
So when these folks assert that James White or anyone else was anti-trinitarian, I don't buy it unless they can positively identify the specific points of the Trinity doctrine that James White rejected. I don't take their word for it.