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Open and Shut Door

by "BELIEVE ME OR NOT" <ghunt@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 3, 2008 at 11:37 PM

Open and Shut Door
[From the Seventh-day Adventist Encyclopedia, Second Revised Edition, 
Commentary Reference Series vol. 11 (Hagerstown, Maryland: Review and
Herald 
Publishing Association, 1996), pp. 249-252.]
OPEN AND SHUT DOOR. An expression derived from Rev. 3:7, 8, where Christ
is 
described as the one "that openeth, and no man shutteth; and shutteth, and

no man openeth" (an allusion to Isa. 22:22), and as the one who says to
the 
Philadelphia church, "Behold, I have set before thee an open door, and no 
man can shut it." Seventh-day Adventists have applied these texts to the 
closing of the first phase and the opening of the second and final phase
of 
Christ's ministry in heaven, where He has been the Christian's high priest

since His sacrifice on the cross (see Sanctuary). Christ's dual ministry
was 
prefigured by the service of the ancient high priest, who served "unto the

example and shadow of heavenly things" (Heb. 8:5). In the earthly
sanctuary 
he served daily in the holy place, the first apartment of the sanctuary,
and 
once a year in the Most Holy Place, the inner shrine where was the golden 
ark in which were the tables of the Ten Commandments and over which
appeared 
the visible glory of God. This entering into the Holy of Holies took place

on the Day of Atonement in the ceremony of the cleansing of the sanctuary 
(Lev. 16).

In applying the type to Christ, Ellen White declared: "Then Jesus rose up 
and shut the door in the holy place, and opened the door in the Most Holy,

and passed within the Second Veil, where He now stands by the ark; and
where 
the faith of Israel now reaches. I saw that Jesus had shut the door in the

holy place, and no man can open it; and that He had opened the door in the

Most Holy and no man can shut it: (Rev. 3:7, 8); and that since Jesus has 
opened the door into the Most Holy Place, which contains the ark, the 
commandments have been shining out to God's people, and they are being 
tested on the Sabbath question" (Present Truth 1:21, August 1849; also
Early 
Writings, p. 42).

This application corrected, not immediately but eventually, a 
misunderstanding of the "shut door" of the parable of the wise and foolish

virgins--a misconception that had been derived from the Millerite movement

of 1844.

The Millerites had based their expectation of the return of Christ 
principally on Daniel's prophecy of the cleansing of the sanctuary at the 
end of 2300 prophetic days (Dan. 8:14). At the climax of the movement, in 
1844, they [p. 250] specifically connected this prophecy with the 
purification ceremony of the ancient Day of Atonement as typifying the 
ending of Christ's mediation for sins (though they saw the cleansing of
the 
sanctuary as the purging of the earth in the final fires). At the same
time 
they gave increased and specific emphasis to the prophetic parable of the 
wise and foolish virgins (Matt. 25).

William Miller had likened his message of the expected Second Advent to
the 
"midnight cry" of the parable ("Behold, the bridegroom cometh"), and had 
emphasized the point that the wise virgins, who were ready to meet the 
arriving bridegroom, entered with him into the wedding, where the door was

shut after them, leaving the tardy foolish virgins outside. The virgins he

interpreted as those summoned to meet the returning Lord; the wedding, the

eternal kingdom, from which the unready would be forever excluded. "The
door 
was shut," he said, "implies the closing up of the mediatorial kingdom,
and 
finishing the gospel period" (William Miller, Evidence . . . of the Second

Coming of Christ [1840], p. 237).

Unlike most others who were then looking for the near advent of Christ
(see 
Premillennialism), the Millerites placed strong emphasis on the doctrine 
that at the coming of Christ every human being would be either ready or 
unready to meet Him, and that opportunity for salvation would then cease. 
This in theological parlance was called the close of human probation. The 
Millerites taught "that the notion of a probation after Christ's coming is
a 
lure to destruction, entirely contrary to the Word of God, which
positively 
teaches that when Christ comes the door is shut, and such as are not ready

can never enter in" ("Boston Second Advent Conference," The Signs of the 
Times 3:69, June 1, 1842; reprinted in SB, No. 1083).

Because they expected Christ to return at the close of the 2300 prophetic 
days, they had emphasized the close of probation at the end of that
period. 
Therefore, for a short period after the disappointment of October 1844, 
Miller and many others thought that their work for the world was done,
that 
there was only a little "tarrying time" left--perhaps but a few days or 
months--until Christ would come. In December 1844 Miller wrote: "We have 
done our work in warning sinners, and in trying to awake a formal church. 
God, in his providence has shut the door, we can only stir one another up
to 
be patient; and be diligent to make our calling and election sure. We are 
now living in the time specified by Malachi iii:18, also Daniel xii:10,
and 
Rev. xxii:10-12. In this passage we cannot help but see, that a little
while 
before Christ should come, there would be a separation between the just
and 
unjust, the righteous and wicked, between those who love his appearing,
and 
those who hate it. And never since the days of the apostles, has there
been 
such a division line drawn as was drawn about the 10th or 23rd day of the 
7th Jewish month" (William Miller letter, in Advent Herald, Dec. 11, 1844,

p. 142; reprinted in Western Midnight Cry 4:25, Dec. 21, 1844).

Others expressed themselves similarly at first. But J. V. Himes, Miller's 
most prominent colleague, and others held that since Christ had not come, 
the 2300-day prophetic period must not have ended in 1844; that it must 
extend to some other date in the future, and therefore that the
fulfillment 
of the "midnight cry" of the parable of the virgins was also still future;

and that the October 1844 movement (see Seventh-Month Movement) was a 
mistake, and was not a fulfillment of prophecy. By the spring of 1845 the 
main Millerite group, including Miller, had come to this view. This group,

still possessed of the idea that the "door" of the parable of the virgins 
was none other than the "door of salvation," argued thus: Since Christ has

not come, the door of salvation is still open; therefore, the parable of
the 
virgins has not yet met fulfillment. They concluded that anyone who taught

that this parable had been fulfilled must believe that probation had
ended, 
and must, therefore, be ipso facto a "no-mercy" heretic. The phrase "shut 
door" became an epithet.

But a minority continued to hold that the time had been correct; that the 
mistake had been in the nature of the prophetic fulfillment; that in
October 
1844 the 2300 days had ended in the symbolic Day of Atonement and the 
parable had been fulfilled (though not in the way that they had expected);

and therefore that the door of the parable--whatever it might mean--had
been 
shut in fulfillment of the prophecy. To them the phrase "shut door" was 
equivalent to the affirmation of belief that the "true midnight cry" had 
been the climax of a God-given message and the 1844 movement had been led
of 
God and permitted, in His providence, as a test of their consecration and 
willingness to be ready to meet their Lord. Naturally these regarded the 
majority, who had given up "the time," as turning their backs on the truth

and denying the Lord's leading in the "midnight cry."

[p. 251] Some continued to hold--as Miller had taught--that the door was 
that of salvation, for they still expected Christ to return very shortly.
As 
time passed, some held that it was the door of "access" to listeners--that

obstinate and willful individuals had closed their ears to God's message
for 
that day; in either case there was no chance of winning acceptance of
their 
message by the world at that time. The unfortunate controversy over the 
"shut door" magnified the subject unduly and prolonged the
misunderstanding. 
As might be expected, feelings ran high in this time of disillusionment
and 
confusion.

The extremists on the shut-door doctrine declared that Christ had come,
not 
literally, but "spiritually" (see Spiritualism [1]). But the small group 
that formed the nucleus of the future Seventh-day Adventist Church opposed

alike the vagaries of those who declared that Christ had come spiritually 
and the position of the majority who "denied their past experience" in the

1844 movement. They retained their confidence in the 1844 fulfillment, and

concluded that the mistake lay in the event they had expected.

They accepted the explanation of the Disappointment that was first
advanced 
by Hiram Edson on the day after the Disappointment, namely, that the 
ministry of Christ as our high priest in the heavenly sanctuary had not 
ended with the 2300 days, but had entered another phase, as symbolized (1)

by the high priest's entry into the Holy of Holies, the beginning of the 
symbolic cleansing of the sanctuary, and (2) by the coming of the
bridegroom 
to the wedding (not to the earth); and that the end of this phase, 
symbolized by the priest's coming out of the sanctuary and the
bridegroom's 
return from the wedding (Luke 12:36), was yet to come, and would be
followed 
by the Second Advent.

Their retention of the belief in the 1844 ending of the 2300 days and
their 
separating of the Second Advent from that prophetic period saved them from

the error to which the majority group was susceptible--that of seeking 
future dates for the end. But it left them with the dilemma of either 
accepting the no-mercy doctrine or correcting their view of the "shut
door" 
from the initial Millerite definition of it. They gradually came to see
the 
opening of the final phase of Christ's ministry as the shutting of the
door 
of the holy place and the opening of the door to the Holy of Holies--the 
opening of a new message of the Sabbath, and the opening of a broadened 
ministry to the world preceding the Second Advent. But this took time.

It is interesting to trace the steps by which the little groups that later

became the Seventh-day Adventists moved out of the shut-door dilemma and 
solved the double problem: (1) Is the door shut? and (2) What is the door?

Ellen G. Harmon (later White) was accused of claiming divine revelation
for 
the no-mercy doctrine. This she denied. She stated later: "With my
brethren 
and sisters, after the time passed in forty-four I did believe no more 
sinners would be converted. But I never had a vision that no more sinners 
would be converted. . . . I was shown that there was a great work to be
done 
in the world for those who had not had the light and rejected it. Our 
brethren could not understand this with our faith in the immediate
appearing 
of Christ" (Letter 2, 1874, in Selected Messages, book 1, p. 74).

Her first vision (December 1844) portrayed the "Advent people" journeying 
along a path to the Holy City with the light of the "midnight cry" behind 
them, and entering the city at the Second Advent. This, to those who 
accepted it, meant reassurance that the 1844 message and movement had not 
been a delusion; or to put it another way, that the 2300 days had ended
and 
the parable, with its "shut door," had been fulfilled, and that very
shortly 
they would see their Lord, who was delaying His appearance to test their 
faith.

Her view in February 1845 was in agreement with Edson's
explanation--Christ, 
the high priest, going from the holy place to the Most Holy Place, within 
the veil, explained as His going to receive the kingdom after which He
would 
"return from the wedding" to receive His waiting ones at the Second
Advent. 
In 1847 she connected this entering of the Holy of Holies with the
shutting 
of the door.

Thus both Hiram Edson and Ellen Harmon taught that Christ's work in the 
sanctuary had not ended, but was continuing in another phase. However,
they 
thought that this phase would represent only a brief period.

When in 1848 she described a vision depicting the future SDA publications
as 
"streams of light that went clear round the world," the little group could

not comprehend that there was either the time or the possibility for them
to 
bear a message to the world at large.

In 1849 Ellen White had a vision of the heavenly sanctuary that further 
depicted the significance of the "open and shut door," in connection with 
the Sabbath message and in connection with Rev. 3:7, 8 (see extract quoted

[p. 252] near the beginning of this article). The shutting of one door
meant 
the opening of another.

In 1850 James White reported the accession of one man who "had made no 
public profession of religion" before 1845. By the next year there was a 
noticeable change. In April, White stated that the door was shut to "those

who had heard the everlasting gospel message and rejected it," but he held

that the following classes may be converted: (1) "erring brethren" in the 
Laodicean church (the majority group of ex-Millerites), (2) children now 
coming to the age of accountability, and (3) "hidden souls" compared with 
the biblical "seven thousand" who had "not bowed unto Baal" (1 Kings
19:18), 
who would be converted in the future "in His own time," when they hear the

message; but at present, he said, the message was for those in the
Laodicean 
church (editorial note in Review and Herald 1:64, Apr. 7, 1851).

In September he reported some converts from this third class. In December
G. 
W. Holt, a fellow minister in New York, wrote that "in some places where
but 
a few months since there was seemingly no sign of there being one child of

God, they are now springing up." The next February White reported "many," 
and by May "a large portion," of those who had had no connection with the 
1844 movement. These accessions seem to have changed the picture. White 
wrote in February, setting forth a new view of the "shut door": "It
however 
represents an important event with which the church is connected, that was

to occur prior to our Lord's return from the wedding. That event shuts out

none of the honest children of God, neither those who have not wickedly 
rejected the light of truth, and the influence of the Holy Spirit" 
(editorial note 1 in Review and Herald 2:94, Feb. 17, 1852).

After quoting Isa. 22:22 and Rev. 3:7, 8 on the shut and open door, he 
continued: "This Open Door we teach, and invite those who have an ear to 
hear, to come to it and find salvation through Jesus Christ. There is an 
exceeding glory in the view that Jesus has OPENED THE DOOR into the
holiest 
of all. . . . If it be said that we are of the OPEN DOOR and seventh day 
Sabbath theory, we shall not object; for this is our faith" (ibid. 95).


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 1 Posts in Topic:
Open and Shut Door
"BELIEVE ME OR NOT&q  2008-05-03 23:37:20 

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