"You must be getting away from Jesus and His teachings and do not realize it" (5T 516).
So wrote Ellen White to Dudley Canright after he had written an article published in the Review advocating the reading of "Uncle Tom's Cabin, Robinson Crusoe, and such books." She also wrote a rebuttal to his article which appears as RH 11-09-86. Thus SDAminster has made a valid point about McKee promot6ing such material, if that in fact is being done.
There are enough aspects to this whole scandal that probably everyone (including those who see nothing wrong with such material) can agree that if Ellen White were alive today she would say the same sort of thing.
Now Canright had a major problem: He couldn't handle being corrected. Thus it wouldn't surprise me if Ellen White's letter to him and her article is part of the reason why he said " 'that he had come to a point where he no longer believed that the Ten Commandments were binding upon Christians and had given up the law, the Sabbath, the messages, the sanctuary, our position upon [the] United States in prophecy, the testimonies, health reform, the ordinances of humility' " (3Bio 360). On that basis he asked to have his name dropped, which occurred on Feb. 17, 1887.
There are people involved in this saga who have the same major problem. Danny and the board could have humbly acknowledged their errors, including how they handled the child molestation allegations against Tommy Shelton. Instead they chose to sue. That was wrong.