Glacier View Sanctuary Review Conference (1980)
By Gilbert M. Valentine
Gilbert M. Valentine, Ph.D. has served internationally in teaching and senior administrative roles in Adventist higher education in Europe, Asia, the South Pacific and North America. He has written extensively in Adventist studies and has authored several books, including biographies of W. W. Prescott (2005) and J. N. Andrews (2019). The Prophet and the Presidents (2011) explored the political influence of Ellen White. He has also written for the Ellen G. White Encyclopedia (2013).
First Published: January 29, 2020
An historic and controversial theological consultation, the Sanctuary Review Committee (SRC) involved approximately one-hundred and fifteen international Bible scholars and church administrators who convened at Glacier View Ranch, forty-seven miles northwest of Denver, Colorado, from August 10-15, 1980. The unprecedented gathering was tasked with evaluating non-traditional interpretations of the Church’s sanctuary doctrine, which had caused widespread ferment when publicly expressed nine months previously by Australian theologian Desmond Ford. Former Adventist Review editor, Raymond Cottrell, described the meeting as “the most important event of this nature in Adventist history since the 1888 General Conference in Minneapolis.”1 Richard Hammill, former president of Andrews University and coordinator of the consultation, considered the meetings to have constituted “the most earnest endeavor and the greatest investment of funds and in time of Adventist workers from all parts of the world field” that had ever been given to “the discussion of a doctrinal problem in the Adventist Church.”2
Much was perceived to be at stake at the conference, both for Seventh-day Adventism’s historic identity as well as its theological claims. The “sanctuary doctrine” had developed out of the endeavors of the church’s founders during the late 1840s and early 1850s to gain fresh understanding of the biblical prophecies that they had erroneously expected to be fulfilled by the return of Christ in 1844. In brief, the sanctuary teaching (described in Article 23 of the Church’s fundamental beliefs) posited that the prophecy of Daniel 8:14 concerning the “cleansing of the sanctuary” was fulfilled in 1844 by the beginning of Christ’s final work as High Priest, entering the most holy place of the sanctuary in heaven at that time to begin a cleansing work. Later, in the 1850s the final work of Christ came also to be understood as involving an “investigative judgment” to distinguish between believers who have remained faithful and are prepared for eternity and those who are not. This understanding came to be regarded as one of the “pillars” of the Seventh-day Adventist movement expressing its distinct judgment message for the “last days.”
Immediate Background to the Conference
The immediate context for the convening of the SRC was a public presentation by Dr. Ford at a local chapter meeting of the Association of Adventist Forums at Pacific Union College (PUC) on October 27, 1979. Responding to an invitation from teaching colleagues, Adrian Zytkoskee, chair of the behavioral science department, and Wayne Judd from the Religion department, Ford had addressed the topic, “The Investigative Judgment: Theological Milestone or Historical Necessity?” The title, later perceived as a “provocation,” had been chosen by Ford’s department colleagues, according to PUC History department chair, Walter C. Utt.3 Initial adverse reaction to the meeting announcement made Ford apprehensive about proceeding, but assurance from colleagues that the “academic freedom” provided by the college setting and a small anticipated audience would make such a presentation appropriate and he decided to proceed.4 Initially the presentation had been scheduled for Paulin Hall, the 400-seat performance hall regularly used for such meetings, but due to an unexpectedly large response the organizers changed the venue at the last minute to the Irwin Hall Chapel, large enough to accommodate the more than 1,000 in attendance.
Ford’s presentation began with citations from Ellen White encouraging theological enquiry and investigation.5 He then briefly rehearsed the story of a “Problems in Daniel” Committee (1960-1966) appointed by the General Conference that had endeavored unsuccessfully to find solutions to contextual and exegetical problems related to the church’s central sanctuary teaching. He also cited several letters he had recently received about the problems from Adventist scholars to illustrate that the topic was broadly recognized and of current relevance. Ford then proceeded to delineate the specific problems such as the scriptural basis for the year-day principle of prophetic interpretation and linguistic problems connected with key words in Daniel, Leviticus, and Hebrews upon which the doctrine of the sanctuary rested. Because of these problems, Ford asserted, the doctrine of the sanctuary, “as traditionally held by Adventists,” could not be supported “directly or solely” by scripture.6
The solution Ford proposed was to recast the teaching and present it through a framework of “inaugurated” and “consummated eschatology” along lines suggested by George Eldon Ladd.7 Prophecy in scripture could have a dual or repeated fulfillment as illustrated in Jesus’ application of the prophecy of Daniel to the fall of the Jerusalem and the end of the world in Matthew 24. The hermeneutical device Ford used for this, he identified as an “apotelesmatic” principle, a term he had borrowed from well-known Adventist author, George McCready Price.8 He affirmed the continuing validity of 1844 as the date for the providential launching of the Seventh-day Adventist movement carrying the gospel and God’s last warning of a time of judgment. He supported his proposed solution with recent citations from Adventist authors and with Ellen White quotations. According to Utt, who heard the presentation, Ford did not “throw out the Spirit of Prophecy,” but did raise questions about the nature of its authority in the “establishment and validation of doctrine, at the same time insisting that Ellen White’s role was “absolutely indispensable” to “the development and survival of the Advent movement.”9
In his response to Ford, Eric Syme, professor of religion and history at PUC, stated that he disagreed with him on only a few “extremely minor” points that he would not take time to raise. “As most of my students will certainly confirm,” he pointed out, “so much that Dr. Ford has said in this very eloquent and very lucid presentation, I have been teaching myself.”10 In particular, Syme was glad that Ford had emphasized the need to avoid giving Ellen White “canonical” authority–a theme that later occupied more than half of the questions in the question and answer portion of the presentation.11 Syme affirmed that in his view, what Ford had presented “was not a denial of Seventh-day Adventism.” Rather, his teaching that the investigative judgment had as its purpose “the vindication of God and what God has done,” was “not heresy” but was “in harmony with the finest traditions of our denomination.”12
When Ford’s mentor, retired seminary professor, Edward Heppenstall, heard a tape recording of the meeting, he wrote a letter of encouragement affirming, “You express my convictions right down the line,” although he worried that some “negative reactions” might come concerning what Ford had said about the inspiration of Ellen White.13 As Heppenstall feared, the presentation did produce strong negative reactions. After hearing a sharp denunciation of Ford on a tape produced by Russell Standish, physician and director of Bangkok Adventist Hospital, and his brother, educator Colin Standish, Heppenstall informed Richard Lesher at the Biblical Research Institute (BRI) that he had “never in my life listened to such distortions at any time.” He trusted that church leadership and Lesher himself, would “speak out against such a miscarriage of the facts” about Ford.14
Rapid and intense responses, both pro and con came “in unheard of quantities,” not from the PUC campus but from the community around the college, according to Utt.15 Gillian Ford, Desmond Ford’s wife, later reported that Dr. Dean Jennings, a physician from the nearby St. Helena Sanitarium, recorded the meeting and sent out copies to seven acquaintances. A person in New Mexico obtained a copy and, without the permission of Ford or the Forum organizers, circulated approximately 1,000 copies domestically and internationally. Others then re-copied the tape. Within a very short time, copies of the tape were very widely distributed.16 The college president, John Cassell, and academic dean, Gordon Madgwick, received copies in Singapore on their way back to Angwin from a visit to Australia. The General Conference officers also heard of the turmoil. Eight retirees from the Angwin community, for example, were representative of many who heard Ford’s presentation, not as an attempt at providing an answer to well-known problems, but as creating problems by attacking basic doctrines. They thus wrote in protest to the General Conference president. Audience applause after some of the points made at the meeting caused some of this retired group to “hang their heads in shame to hear the distinctive doctrines attacked by an S.D.A. minister.”17 Arthur White wrote a lengthy defense of his grandmother Ellen G. White, alleging that the presentation had robbed her of “her authority and integrity.” He sent the letter to his extended family and also to officers at the General Conference.18
Ten days after their return to campus and after consulting with their Union Conference officers, Cassell and Madgwick at their own initiative travelled to Washington, District of Columbia, for consultations about the problem with the General Conference officers. Following the consultation they took a recommendation to the PUC board that Ford be granted a six-month leave of absence to spend at the General Conference to further document the arguments he had made in the presentation.19 As they explained to the college faculty at the time, the administration felt that this was the best way to protect Ford from the many who were demanding his instant dismissal. As Utt observed, the vehemence of much of the reaction indicated that “lines” had already been drawn, that Ford had arrived at PUC “well equipped with enemies” and that “Ford himself was the issue,” not the questions he had addressed.20 In retrospect, thirty years later, Cassell felt that the decision to refer the issue of Ford’s presentation to Glacier View was “both tragic and counterproductive” for it “only served to embolden” Ford’s critics. He observed that it would have been better to have dealt with it “utilizing” PUC’s “well defined academic procedure.” But this was hindsight.21
Wider Background to the Glacier View Conference
The arrival of Desmond Ford on the PUC campus in mid-1977 from Avondale College in Australia, under the terms of a teacher exchange agreement between the two institutions, provides important contextual background for understanding the problems that led to the convening of the SRC. PUC had for many years previously offered its degrees on the Avondale campus through an affiliation agreement. Ford had accepted the appointment to PUC reluctantly. He had been assured by administration, however, that after the two-year assignment in California he would be returned to Avondale to his former role as chair of the theology department.
Ford was a charismatic preacher and teacher, whose biblical knowledge and sharp intellect were widely admired. Utt reported that at PUC his “dazzling style” moved and inspired both students and church members. He was thus much in demand for speaking engagements off campus.
In Australia in the 1960s, Ford had been highly influential, in partnership with Australasian Division (now South Pacific Division) president Laurence C. Naden, in successfully opposing an aberrant perfectionism entailed in Robert D. Brinsmead’s “Sanctuary Awakening Fellowship” that had divided many churches. Then, in 1970, Brinsmead abandoned his view that end-time perfection could be achieved by human sinful nature being physically eradicated (“blotted out” from the subconscious mind of the believer just prior to the close of probation) in a final cleansing of the “soul temple.” Instead, he became a highly activist promoter of a strongly Reformationist view of soteriology that stressed the primacy of justification by faith as the ground of Christian assurance, the root of sanctification, and the only basis for a victorious Christian life. This theme meshed with that which Ford had been preaching all along.
During the 1970s, however, Adventist Review editor Kenneth H. Wood and associate editor Herbert Douglass reacted against what they perceived as an antinomian emphasis in Australia. With the encouragement of General Conference President Robert H. Pierson, they began to strongly advocate an emphasis on end-time perfectionism with a priority stress on sanctification. Australian church leaders found this development deeply disturbing and counterproductive in their field (see article on Palmdale Conference). As a result, Ford’s preaching became the target of much criticism from those of a more staunchly traditional mind-set.
The criticism in Australia intensified when a number of retired pastors and evangelists became troubled by what they perceived as “worldly influence” at Avondale, which they associated with rising academic standards necessitated by government accrediting requirements. Academic programs were lengthened from two years to four years, curriculum content expanded, and the need for teachers with terminal degrees was emphasized. Social changes on campus and the weakening of the work-study program also contributed to a sense that the college was departing from the “blueprint” for Adventist education. Numerous “Concerned Brethren” (CBs) became highly critical of the college administration and of Ford, who had acquired a second PhD in England, and they targeted him and his faculty colleagues over a range of issues.22 In particular, they perceived Ford’s forensic emphasis on righteousness by faith as a form of antinomianism at variance from official church teaching and as a serious departure from historic Adventism.23
Naden and his successor as division president, R. R. Frame, valued Ford’s role and his defense of the Church against the Brinsmead agitation. They understood the need for the college to upgrade its courses, recognized the changing social context, and resisted the criticism.24 In the late 1970s, however, pressure and agitation from aggressively conservative elements in the division increased and became more widespread. This was led largely by Russell Standish and another physician, John Clifford, through the promotion of their book Conflicting Concepts of Righteousness by Faith in the Australasian Division.25 Under mounting pressure, Frame’s successor, Keith S. Parmenter, less able to counter the criticism than his predecessors, arranged a teaching exchange for Ford at Pacific Union College in California.26 It was hoped that the theological disturbances in the South Pacific would thereby subside. After beginning to teach at PUC in the fall of 1977, Ford’s popularity as a speaker for college Weeks of Prayer, camp meetings, and conferences soon made his name and his gospel emphasis widely known in the United States.
In the summer of 1979, Robert Brinsmead published a sharply critical evaluation of the doctrine of the investigative judgment entitled 1844: Re-examined.27 The book addressed exegetical problems associated with the doctrine, particularly its perceived incompatibility, as traditionally taught, with Hebrews 6:19 and 9:12, which described Jesus entering the inner sanctuary in heaven at the ascension, not in 1844. Brinsmead also wrote of the tension between the investigative judgment teaching and the biblical doctrine of justification by faith. As part of his promotion of the book, Brinsmead had conducted numerous meetings around California during the summer of 1979.
The widespread agitation stirred by Brinsmead, Ford explained to General Conference President Neal Wilson, led to “a continued barrage of calls and letters asking for a solution to the problem of Hebrews 9.” Wherever he went, Ford said, he was asked “to make a statement” on what Brinsmead had presented.28 Thus, his agreement to accept the invitation of his PUC colleagues to address the Forum on October 27 in an attempt “to pick up the pieces” for church members. Other reasons Ford gave for going public with his views included his sense of frustration over prominent church leaders’ long-term knowledge about the problems–ever since the early 1960s, when the previous president, R. R. Figuhr, had set up a committee, called “Problems in Daniel,” to seek for answers. This committee had not made progress and had been disbanded. Ford also felt betrayed when he learned that the agreement that he would be returned to Avondale as head of the theology department after two years at PUC could not be honored–he had been asked to remain in America for a third year.29
Ford believed that his attempt at addressing the exegetical problems with the sanctuary doctrine was an appropriate answer that had wide scholarly support. He had defended the teaching this way for years at Avondale. As he explained to Wilson, he believed that he was not “opposing basic doctrines,” but rather an “incomplete expression of the doctrine of the pre-advent judgment.” Furthermore, he reported to Wilson, “theologians of the Church have written me saying they agree right down the line with the October 27 presentation.”30 Professors at key Adventist institutions had “commented similarly.” Ford’s observation was confirmed by his PUC religion department chairman, Fred Veltman, who informed Cassell and Madgwick that the views enunciated by Ford were held by other “teachers teaching at PUC and at other colleges.” He himself held “substantially the same position,” with views that were “similar in a number of places,” and he offered to resign as chair if required.31 Later, he also made the same observation to the General Conference leadership.32
Ford noted that respected biblical scholar Raymond Cottrell had lectured at Andrews University two weeks before his October talk and had “set forth the identical problem.”33 In January1980, Cottrell had also presented the same material at Loma Linda University. In the estimation of the editor of the Australasian Record, Robert Parr, who shared the tapes of Cottrell’s presentation with Parmenter, the material was far more radical and critical of the exegetical problems than what Ford had presented at PUC. The latter, by comparison, was “but a peep and a mutter.”34 But, the tapes of Cottrell’s presentations had not been widely circulated. Ford’s presentation had been.
As Ford acknowledged to Wilson, the reaction and “the result” of his addressing of the problems were “a surprise to me and a matter of deep regret.” He apologized for adding to Wilson’s burdens and regretted being “the cause” of the administrative difficulties.35 The problem confronting administration as a result of the PUC talk was how to manage the unprecedented theological ferment and the turmoil surrounding Ford’s name and personality as much as the exegetical problems. The concurrent emergence of very public problems associated with new material about how Ellen White used literary sources much “more extensively” than previously realized, an issue publicized by Walter Rea of California, and General Conference financial investment irregularities associated with Donald Davenport of California, an issue which also deeply troubled many in the church, greatly complicated the administrative task.36
Preparation for the Glacier View Conference.
During his six-month study leave in Washington, District of Columbia. Ford was given access to materials in the General Conference Archives and the White Estate, and an office for research in the General Conference building. He was also provided with an advisory committee comprised of twelve scholars to provide feedback on the manuscript Ford was developing to document his views. Members of the committee were Fred Veltman, Donald Neufeld, J. C. Cox, William G. Johnsson, Richard Lesher, Thomas Blinco, Gerhard Hasel, Fritz Guy, Kenneth Strand, Gerard Damsteegt, Duncan Eva, Robert Olsen, and Donald Yost. Richard Hammill, former president of Andrews University and about-to-retire vice president of the General Conference, chaired the group and served as Elder Wilson’s liaison for the planning of the meeting at Glacier View.
Four meetings of the committee were held as Ford prepared his position paper and committee members were asked to provide feedback as the six chapters were prepared. According to Ford, responses were of uneven value. Some dealt only with grammatical issues. Only a few dealt with substantive issues. Ford reported that at least four of the committee members agreed largely with his analysis, although not all of the details of his proposed solution.37 Hammill reported that Ford seemed unwilling to make changes in his draft in response to the comments. According to Hammill, discussions in the meetings were lively and sometimes heated. Some in the group “clammed up and made practically no comments at all after it was decided to tape the meetings.”38 Ford also found it difficult to accept advice to shorten the manuscript, which eventually extended to 991 pages.
Entitled Daniel 8.14: The Day of Atonement and the Investigative Judgment, Ford’s manuscript comprised 300 pages in six chapters addressing the issues that had been raised in his Forum presentation.39 The chapters were followed by almost 600 pages of appendices providing relevant documentation of supporting material. Its introductory chapter briefly discussed his methodology and then reviewed the experience of seventeen previous Adventist writers who had attempted to resolve the issues, seven of whom had eventually left the church, and others who “though perplexed remained with the church.” The objective in this 100-page first chapter was not to endorse any particular writer’s position, but to highlight the continuing status of a problem that General Conference Field Secretary M. L Andreasen had pointed out in 1942 to President J. L. McElhany and Vice President W. H. Branson. There were “a large number of ministers” in the church at that time, Andreasen reported, who, though they believed “in a general way” about the Sanctuary teaching, also believed that the problems of Hebrews 6 and 9 raised by A. F. Ballenger in 1905, for example, had “never been fully met and that we cannot meet them.” Such tended, therefore to regard the doctrine as “not vital and relegate it to the background.”40
Chapter two discussed the problem passages in Hebrews which used imagery of the Jewish Day of Atonement and applied it to Christ’s ascension, while chapter three outlined perceived complex problems in Daniel. The Daniel issues related to the identity of the sanctuary, the language of “cleansing” or “restoring” of the sanctuary, and the validity of the year-day principle in interpreting the 2,300 days. Chapter four discussed issues of judgment and sanctuary imagery in the book of Revelation and chapter five outlined Ford’s proposed solution to the numerous problems. “I believe that the problems in Daniel and Hebrews may be solved by applying the apotelesmatic principle.”41 Extending Price’s use of the idea, he explained that “a prophecy fulfilled, or fulfilled in part, or unfulfilled at the appointed time, may have a later or recurring, or consummated fulfillment, with the recurring fulfillment repeating the main idea rather than precise details and each fulfillment being a pledge of that which is to follow.” This enabled him to affirm that "Seventh-day Adventists have been right in seeing the theme of judgment in Daniel 8:14," that “1844 is a key date,” for it was then that "in the providence of God, He brought to birth the movement with the last message to the world."42
The final chapter of the manuscript discussed the nature of authority commonly attributed by Adventists to Ellen White in doctrinal formation and the tension this created with the Protestant principle of sola scriptura. He asserted that Ellen White’s gift was a genuine manifestation of the New Testament gift of prophecy, but its authority was not as “the sovereign interpreter of Holy Scriptures.”43 The entire document was made available to SRC members in America six weeks prior to the meeting and to overseas participants three weeks prior to the meeting.44
During the period between December 1979 and the convening of the SRC at Glacier View in August 1980, the Adventist Review published more than twenty editorials and articles vigorously defending the Sanctuary doctrine and its central place in Adventist theology. Editorials stressed the traditional arguments for the teaching and warned that church members should expect to be “shaken violently” by attacks on it from apostate teachers, and that during the shaking “large numbers will forsake the historic faith.”45 The robust defense extended to the disputed end-time perfectionism, “a level of character development...hitherto never achieved by a significant number of God’s people,” that Wood espoused as “historic” Adventism, but which had earlier caused so much disruption in Australia.46 Another editorial expressed alarm at “the strange winds of doctrine that blow on some campuses,” and warned parents to send their children “only to those schools that teach historic Adventism.”47
While the General Conference president later defended the stance of the Review editors as doing “what the church expects them to do on the church’s clear positions,” other respected senior scholars protested strongly that the Review had set a negative climate. They objected to the use of the terms “heretic” and “apostate” as prejudicial to a fair hearing and they deplored the editor’s policy of attempting to ensure that “Ford and his questions had to be publicly discredited in advance.”48 Widespread apprehensions that the “primary purpose” of the SRC was for “disciplinary action,” led President Wilson in early July to clarify that the issues at stake were in fact “much greater than a person or persons.” It was right, he explained, that changing definitions and new terminology meant that the issues should be examined, but he reassured the Church that new light “does not make void the old,” and it was not expected that the “restudy of our distinctive truths” would “weaken the pillars of our message.”49 Pacific Union College President John Cassell, who had agreed to the arrangements for Ford on the basis of assurances that the process of inquiry and trial would be fair, later came to the conclusion that circumstances had become so complex that some in administration had predetermined an outcome.50
The Glacier View Conference Meets
The members of the SRC that gathered at Glacier View August 10-15 were chosen to be widely representative of Bible teachers and administrators. Initially, eighty-two were selected from Bible teaching, editorial, ministerial, or university contexts and fifty-seven from local, union, or General Conference administrative backgrounds.51 In the event, only 114 actually attended.52 At the Sunday evening opening session, President Wilson reviewed the background to the meeting, welcomed participants, and declared that “Dr. Ford was not on trial but that his ideas were.”53 Each morning, members participated in seven groups of sixteen to discuss set study questions related to the four broad areas that were the topics of the chapters in Ford’s manuscript, although the manuscript itself was not studied. Fifteen other papers had been distributed on various related topics in addition to the primary document by Ford. Each working group was tasked with formulating a consensus statement on the questions before the group which were then verbally shared with the afternoon plenary sessions. Evening sessions were given to the reading of papers and further discussion of consensus statements.
One of the most influential papers of the meeting, presented on Tuesday by Fritz Guy of the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary, was, according to Cottrell, received “with instant and enthusiastic approval from all the delegates” because it pointed beyond “the confusing exegetical problems and focused attention on the ultimate reality.” Participants from all perspectives felt this was the most meaningful way forward, to a deeper theological synthesis.54
In an effort to divorce the issues from personality, Wilson explained that Ford had not been appointed as a member of the committee and the initial plan was not to have him speak during the meetings other than to be available to answer questions if needed. Upon the request of delegates, however, a decision was taken to invite Ford to answer questions at the conclusion of the last three afternoon plenary sessions.55 These sessions introduced a number of dramatic exchanges through a misunderstood question from Edward Heppenstall and follow-up confrontations between Wilson and Ford about his perceived unwillingness to take counsel to change. In an effort to have Ford affirm his confidence in the church’s distinctive mission and message, Heppenstall had asked Ford about his understanding of what actually happened in 1844, thinking he would use his apotelesmatic principle to explain the date and defend his position showing how it was in “harmony with the tradition.” According to Veltman, Ford mistook the question and his answer failed to affirm what Heppenstall and others understood Ford to believe. The disagreement between Ford and his mentor upset Elder Wilson and the discussion began to focus on personal issues. Later, intense exchanges also involved Parmenter, Wilson, and Ford, and attempts at reconciliation involving Jack Provonsha, an influential theologian and ethicist at Loma Linda University.56 The editor of Ministry later wondered if it might not have been better to have followed the “original plan of dealing exclusively” with Ford’s document and not have him speak at all.57
For his part, Ford, felt that many scholars agreed with him, at least in recognizing the problems if not his proposed solution, but that they felt unable to support him publicly in the meetings. Richard Coffen, book editor and then vice-president of the Review and Herald Publishing Association also noticed the silences. For example, he was “shocked” when Heppenstall “demurred” and failed to affirm Ford in his analysis of Hebrews 9:24 when it was known by “Heppie’s” students, of whom Coffen was one, that he held exactly the same view. This incident too may have been a misunderstanding, but it “bewildered” Ford. In Coffen’s view, the “silence” was true of other scholars.58 On the other hand, Veltman, as a supportive colleague, observed in a set of notes made shortly after the meeting that Ford found it difficult to “present his viewpoints in a noncontroversial” way using “as much traditional language as possible.” If he had adopted less of a “polemical” approach in his answers and discussion of questions and if he had appeared more “teachable,” it would have helped to put “the best perspective on his work.” Instead, according to Veltman, Ford made “the case difficult for himself” not seeming to sense a greater need for “pastoral sensitivity,” and this led to “disappointment” on the part of scholar colleagues and “a general sadness” on the part of other friends anxious to help. Apprehension and fear of disclosure or embarrassment through association factored as an important part of the dynamic at the meeting.59
New Testament professor Kendra Haloviak Valentine, present at the Glacier View conference as a thirteen-year-old because both of her parents were involved in the meetings, remembered the event as highly wrought with emotion. She witnessed numerous participants in earnest discussion with their colleagues, distressed and quietly weeping as they walked the grounds or around the lake during breaks or after meetings.60 Participants cared deeply about the issues at stake and, for the large part, they deeply respected Ford.
Unavoidably at the center of the debate, Ford was highly respected by his teaching colleagues at Avondale. Most of them saw him as a person with a quick, rapier-sharp intellect, prodigious memory, and rapid recall matched by a warm charitable spirit and a deeply compassionate modeling of Christian grace and winsomeness. His rhetorical ability to communicate gospel principles with homely illustrations and memorable aphorisms drew large audiences. His confident assertiveness of a point of view was not off-putting to South Pacific colleagues, most of whom knew and admired him. In Australia, his assertive characteristics were simply part of who he was, which attracted many conversation partners who entered with enthusiasm into good-natured, earnest debate. Australian culture, with its emphasis on camaraderie, “mateship,” and direct, even blunt, exchanges, did not perceive this as offensive conversation style. As William Johnsson later observed, “factoring in the culture,” is critical in order to “grasp the dynamics” of the Ford’s perceptions.61 To many in America or elsewhere outside his home country, Ford’s manner and attributes were often perceived negatively. To administrators unfamiliar with Australian conversational culture, and for those who did not share his point of view or who were not persuaded by his arguments, he came across as an over-confident crusader with a “know it all” attitude bordering on arrogance, observed Neal Wilson.62 To those who disagreed with him, particularly on points of doctrine, or found his emphasis on justification by faith as the cardinal doctrine foundational for the Christian life overdrawn, he was an enigma and a potentially dangerous influence to be silenced. For those church leaders who found his ministry a blessing, and this was true of many in Australia, he was a huge asset.
On Thursday afternoon, as the conference neared its end, the mood darkened with the reading of an emotional letter from the absent former president, R. H. Pierson, that appealed to delegates not to “repudiate landmarks of truth” and implied that Ford had been teaching “cheap grace,” “Calvinistic predestination,” and “a life of spiritual defeat.”63 To Ford, the letter reflected what Pierson had earlier read in Standish’s and Clifford’s discredited attack on him. Pierson accused Ford of being “morally and ethically dishonest” in continuing to work for the church. The letter was warmly received by many participants, but distressed as many others, and Ford had no opportunity to respond to the charges.64 In a similar vein, Walter Blehm, president of the Pacific Union Conference, faulted Ford for dividing churches and causing pastors to lose faith. “Anything that divides this church or leads to doubt is wrong,” he asserted.65
During the week, two smaller work groups had been tasked with synthesizing the various daily consensus statements into a general unified consensus statement with two parts, one on “Christ in the Heavenly Sanctuary,” and another on “The Role of Ellen G. White Writings in Doctrinal Matters.” The resulting fifteen-page document was carefully read by the plenary session on Friday morning and formally endorsed by consent of the entire committee page by page. The response to this achievement, Robert Olsen of the White Estate observed, was a joyful sense of unity. “The seven groups have all come to the same conclusions. This is our best understanding at the present time.66 As Cottrell later reported, “all present, including Dr. Ford, found the statement viable, some because it affirmed the traditional interpretation and others because it recognized the problems and need for further study.”67 Both Cottrell and Veltman noted the several areas where the document had conceded key points that Ford had raised and where it made progress toward a common understanding on the issues.68 Others, such as Francis Wernick, a General Conference vice president, on later reflection felt uncomfortable with the consensus statement because it conceded an important issue Ford had raised and because Ford said he could agree with it.69 The consensus statement would eventually be published in the Ministry and in the Review, although both publications downplayed its significance, apparently because of a concern that the documents conceded too much to Ford.
Following the approval of the consensus statement, as time ran out on the concluding morning of the conference, Wilson quickly introduced a further document that was read out to the full assembly, but not circulated. This “response” document had been hastily drafted overnight by a small group of six of the committee members. It was not an overall critique of Ford’s position paper, but rather a statement of ten points where the six writers felt that Ford differed from traditional Adventist teaching.70 The six writers were unaware of how the document would be used. Wilson explained to delegates at the final meeting that the “ten-point critique” was not being voted by the SRC because it was considered "preliminary" until Ford and the conference screening committee of twenty-six could review the accuracy with which it reflected Ford's position. As Cottrell later observed, although formulated at Glacier View, the ten points did not “reflect the thinking of the Sanctuary Committee, which did not discuss it or vote on it.” Fearful that such a document might be misrepresented, systematic theology professor from Andrews University, Fritz Guy asked if “orthodoxy would be determined by the ten-point critique.” Elder Wilson replied that "no, the document would not be used in that way."71
The Dismissal of Ford from Ministry
By Thursday afternoon, as the SRC moved toward conclusion, the focus of church leadership turned from doctrinal discussion to the urgent problem of management of church conflict and the person at the center of this particular conflict. At its Thursday afternoon meeting, the sixteen available members of the General Conference President’s Executive Advisory Committee (PREXAD), with two invitees, developed a consensus among themselves concerning the conditions that should be set for Ford’s continuing employment in the church.72 These conditions included a requirement that he acknowledge in writing that he could be wrong on some matters in his document and that it was not therefore his final argument; that he dissociate himself from the unofficial circulation of his document and express regret for its release; that he would “give complete support” to the statement of Fundamental Beliefs approved at the General Conference held earlier in the year at Dallas, Texas; and that he issue an appeal to young workers to follow the counsel of the church rather than himself.
On Friday afternoon, President Wilson called a smaller ad hoc panel of seven General Conference and two Australasian Division officials to meet with Dr. and Mrs. Ford for the purpose of discussing the employment terms agreed by PREXAD the previous day. The three-and-half-hour meeting focused first on Ford’s perceived attitude. The “impression” that “most people” gained from the meetings, Wilson observed, was that Ford was “totally unyielding and contentious.” Addressing Ford directly, he reported that it seemed for many in leadership, that it was “quite impossible for you to be wrong.” Ford appeared to be “always the teacher” and not able “to learn from anyone else.” In order to be a team, there was need for flexibility in attitudes, Wilson stressed. Members of the panel were aware that he had a “charisma, a disarming way to rally people” around him, but they were concerned that he gave the impression that he was “the one person who could lead the church out of its theological morass.”73 The second issue concerned a perceived “lack of judgment” and absence of concern about the damage being done by unauthorized circulation of the tapes and the document. There was puzzlement that he could neither see his way clear to protest their circulation, nor to clearly dissociate himself from Robert Brinsmead by some public statement.
The third issue taken up with Ford in the Friday afternoon meeting was the doctrinal disagreement. This was discussed after Ford was given the ten-point document that set out ways in which his manuscript was assessed as being “incompatible” with “fundamental beliefs.” Ford responded that he agreed with eight of the points, but suggested that two others were not accurately stated. Ford pointed out, however, that the consensus statement had acknowledged a number of important points he had made in his document, that he would “feel very comfortable preaching under the umbrella of the consensus paper,” and that he could evangelize and baptize on that basis. He pointed out also that significant changes had been made in the doctrinal language of the 1980 Dallas Fundamental Beliefs statement, which encouraged him, and he thought that over time there would be more adjustments. “The brethren have made tremendous progress these past few days. Your position is closer to mine than ever before.” As Cottrell would observe later, the ten-point critique was indeed inconsistent with the consensus statement for it “condemned Ford for the very things the consensus statement implicitly commends him [for].” The critique, as Cottrell would also point out, became the basis for administrators later misrepresenting the scholars. “The Bible scholars were represented as saying the precise opposite of what they actually did say there – emphatically and repeatedly.”74 Several of the administrators in the meeting, however, did not “think the consensus paper showed such a shift.” Wilson observed that “statements made by some in the meetings are not necessarily the position of the church.”
The minutes of the Friday meeting clearly indicate that Ford was focused on theology and the shifts in understanding that he saw had taken place. The administration was concerned about the urgent need for pastoral concern for members and how to manage the ferment. Parmenter had reported to the SRC that in Australia the conflict had become a crisis of “tremendous magnitude.”75 “How can you help us with the fallout?” was how Francis Wernick posed the problem to Ford. Could he not “speak out on unity,” and let it be known “that you are not with those with whom you are identified [Brinsmead],” asked W. D. Eva.76
The dramatic Friday afternoon session moved to a conclusion with Parmenter reading to Ford a draft letter setting out in narrow and specific terms what he expected of Ford. The letter assumed that the Glacier View discussions had not made any advance in understanding, but simply affirmed “confidence” in the “fundamental beliefs” and had identified “several positions” where Ford was “at variance” with “presently held fundamental doctrines.” The letter saw Ford as “still challenging the pillars of our faith” (Parmenter referenced “the Sanctuary and the role of the Spirit of Prophecy”). Would Ford state publicly that “he could be in error” and “yield to the judgment and counsel” of his brethren? And that “from henceforth your teaching and preaching will be in harmony with the ‘Fundamental Beliefs’ of the church?”77 Ford, perceiving that the Dallas statement was now being used as a creedal measure of his orthodoxy, responded that he did not need a long time to think about his answer. “I cannot conscientiously agree to your request.” He could not “lie.” He believed he could “still be a blessing to the church,” but could never be so “if I go against my conscience.” Gillian Ford, who had been tearful, requested permission to speak and commented about the negative climate set by the Review for the Glacier View meetings, the perception of many that the outcome had therefore been prejudged, and the damaging influence of the unfair personal attacks on Ford through the reading of the Pierson letter and Wilson’s rebuff of Ford following the misunderstanding conveyed in his response to Heppenstall. The meeting neared its conclusion with appeals to the Fords to reconsider their decision to reject Parmenter’s conditions. Eventually, the Fords requested the appeals to stop and the highly stressful meeting ended.
Wilson had not initially planned that the discussion with Ford about continued employment would follow the SRC discussions so quickly. Parmenter, however, had arrived at the meeting from Australia with a pressing demand. Before leaving Australia, he had arranged for meetings with ministers in various conferences to be held immediately following the SRC in order to deal with the problem and felt he needed a resolution quickly to both the theological issues and the status of Dr. Ford. Parmenter had reported to PREXAD that turmoil in the Church in Australia had been sharply exacerbated by the widespread unauthorized circulation of the 991-page study document and had assumed that Ford was responsible.78 According to a later account by Robert Brinsmead, Elder Parmenter had been visited by John Brinsmead, Robert Brinsmead’s younger brother who was upset by Robert Brinsmead’s publishing activity. John Brinsmead mistakenly believed that Ford had assisted Robert Brinsmead in writing his provocative 1844 Revisited and conveyed this perspective to Parmenter. John Brinsmead also reported his understanding that Ford had colluded with Brinsmead’s organization in the circulation of the 1979 Forum tape.79 The reports from John Brinsmead were untrue. He had seriously misunderstood the situation and misrepresented Ford, who firmly denied any involvement in the release of the document and any cooperation or collusion in any way between himself or his wife with Robert Brinsmead. The Australian administration also believed that Brinsmead had colluded with Ford in circulating the 1980 manuscript.
It was not until 2007 that Gillian Ford would learn that Dr. Dean Jennings, a physician at the St. Helena Sanitarium had obtained permission from Mrs. Reuben Figuhr to make a copy of her husband’s copy of the manuscript and that Jennings had been responsible for making it available to people in Australia.80 The “misrepresentation and mistrust” had a damaging impact on administrative perceptions of Ford’s attitude, suggesting an apparent “lack of pastoral care” and a lack of “loyalty to the denomination.” These misperceptions and Ford’s unwillingness to speak against Brinsmead strongly influenced the outcome of the meetings at Glacier View.81
In the weeks immediately following the SRC meeting there was a further exchange of letters between Ford and Parmenter. During this exchange, Ford affirmed his acceptance of the new Dallas Statement of Fundamentals, but also indicated twelve significant doctrinal issues where the consensus statement had, in his view, embraced positions he had set out in his document. PREXAD considered Ford’s letters and felt they were too carefully nuanced and conditional to provide a basis for continued employment, particularly given the exceptionally difficult situation that had arisen in the South Pacific. Trust had broken down and schism needed to be avoided. It seemed best to PREXAD that, in order to defuse the situation, Ford should not continue in employment. They recommended to the Australasian Division leaders that they revoke Ford’s ministerial credentials and dismiss him from denominational service if he did not resign.
Many in the scholarly community were dismayed. Larry Geraty, professor of archaeology and history of antiquity at the Seventh-day Adventist Seminary, expressed protest at PREXAD’s unwillingness to acknowledge “the growth and development” in theological understanding that had taken place at Glacier View and that the church had “benefitted from many of his [Ford’s] insights. He also acknowledged that some insights seemed “to lack sufficient biblical support for his [church] community to modify its traditional positions.” The failure to take Ford’s letters at “face value,” he reported, had produced expressions of protest from many scholarly colleagues “all over the country” who had engaged in the discussions in “good faith” but now feared they had been betrayed.82
Ford declined to resign. Thus, at a six-and-a-half-hour joint meeting of both the Australasian Division Committee and the Avondale College Board on September 18, 1980, with strong opposition from members of the board, action was taken by secret ballot to remove Ford’s ministerial credentials and dismiss him. The chairman declined to declare the numbers in the ballot. The division in-house attorney, Kenneth Eastman, who had previously warned division officers that the proceedings were irregular and outside the requirements of New South Wales employment legislation, insisted that the action to terminate be subject to advice of the usual external legal firm retained by the division. His amendment to the action was approved. Persuaded of the doubtful legality of the meeting and alarmed that the failure to follow Australian employment termination due justice procedures would subject the church to legal challenges, Eastman subsequently sought external advice for the Church.83 Division officers declined to report the external advice even to Eastman with whom relationships broke down. Ford declined to seek redress, but Eastman continued to be distressed at the illegality of the proceedings.84
Aftermath of the Conference
As quickly as possible after the conclusion of the SRC and the follow-up meeting of PREXAD with Ford, official church publications reported to church membership on the proceedings and the outcome, and interpreted the significance of the meetings. The Adventist Review of August 28, 1980, carried a prominent back page announcement headlined “Variant Views Rejected.” The article stated that while there was “a need for further study in certain areas,” the meeting had “clearly affirmed the doctrinal positions the church holds and which were adopted by the General Conference session in Dallas.”85 It did not indicate anywhere that Ford may have contributed to better understanding of some of the issues, which led a respected participant in the meetings to protest that the statement was “at best a half-truth.”86 The following week the Adventist Review gave almost half of its twenty-four pages to a report on the meetings.87 William Johnsson provided an overview of the background to the conference, its procedures and the work of the discussion groups. He noted the documents that had resulted and that they reflected “the strong confidence of the Sanctuary Review Committee in our historic sanctuary doctrine.” He also reported that polls taken at the close of the meeting “showed a clear trend among delegates in the direction of our traditional interpretations,” although Cottrell would interpret these differently. Again, Johnsson did not indicate that any advancement in understanding may have been made as Ford and other participants had claimed. Instead, the Review featured the ten-point statement of differences with Ford before providing the overall consensus statement as two separate documents.88 In later use, the general consensus would be thought of as two consensus statements.
Ministry magazine devoted an entire special issue to its report on the SRC with a lengthy personal introductory assessment by the editor.89 The issue included copies of the correspondence between Ford and Parmenter with an appraisal by the editor and a brief account of several follow-up meetings between Ford and Wilson that had taken place in August and September. According to Ministry, Wilson cited Ford’s unwillingness to yield his apotelesmatic principle, or his belief that Antiochus Epiphanes was a partial fulfillment in Daniel, or to see “the difference between general and apocalyptic prophecies,” or to affirm Ellen White as “a reliable, inspired commentary of scripture,” as examples of his refusal to take counsel from his brethren.90 The Ministry devoted the second half of its special issue to a section entitled “Questions and Answers on Doctrinal Issues” that had been prepared with the assistance of Seminary professors Gerhard Hasel, William Shea, and Raoul Dederen, which represented a formal assertion of the traditional positions and set forth a detailed rebuttal of many of Ford’s arguments.91 The special Ministry issue also carried a sampling of nine letters from university presidents, administrators, and Bible teachers who commented positively on the format of the SRC meetings and the commitment the church had made in convening the meeting. Other Adventist publications also devoted substantial space to coverage of the developments and carried correspondence.92
The Andrews Society for Religious Studies (ASRS), the scholarly association to which most Adventist religion teachers in the United States belonged, issued a statement of protest at the unbalanced reporting in the Adventist media. The scholars saw the consensus statements “as being in significant continuity with traditional understanding, while incorporating new understandings, reflecting the contribution of all the documents prepared for the Sanctuary Review Committee. We view these consensus statements as a stimulus to further study, and not as definitive formulations to end discussion. They were not intended to be used as a test of loyalty or orthodoxy.”93 A letter from Wilson to institutional leaders and conference presidents in North America defended the administrative decisions but also sought to give assurances that the church was “not embarking on a hunting expedition to find pastors who teach variant doctrines,” or who might be sympathetic to Ford and some of the positions he had articulated.94
Richard Hammill, who had coordinated the Glacier View meeting, was not aware that Wilson had decided to appoint the small group to identify points where Dr. Ford’s document differed with the Church’s traditional teaching (the ten-point statement). Hammill felt that this “was a serious mistake in strategy,” and that it was “an affront to the members of the Sanctuary Review Committee.” He understood that “the Bible teachers felt that they had been betrayed and that their work was just window dressing.”95 All but two of the theology department teachers at Southern Missionary College, for example, sent a jointly signed letter of protest at Ford’s dismissal.96 Hammill also expressed himself as being “very disappointed in the Ministry report.” In “several important respects,” he noted, “its articles were contrary to the intent” of the SRC. In its comments, for example, on the doctrinal issues arising from the Hebrews passages, it “did not present the view of the Sanctuary Review Committee.” In fact, it presented an “opposite” explanation and also ignored Ford’s major arguments about aspects of the cleansing of the sanctuary that had in fact been conceded by the committee.97 Others at the Seminary, such as Old Testament professor Larry Geraty, were “appalled” at the “biased and one-sided” view of Ford given in Ministry and protested the editor’s lack of “fair, evenhanded” treatment of Ford’s positions. He reported that many of the students on campus “were disillusioned with the capacity of the Adventist press to be fair.” The special issue represented, “a terrible abuse of the power of the press.”98
Hammill acknowledged the problem posed for administration. In spite of his having “several long talks” with Ford during the session, Ford had “declined to budge from any of his views,” and had chosen “his uniqueness above the community welfare.” In Hammill’s view, Wilson had not prejudged Ford, but had hoped “that in some way Dr. Ford could be salvaged, for…his lifestyle was above reproach and he was a gifted preacher and teacher.” In Hammill’s assessment, it was the need for a rapid solution in Australia that forced the General Conference president’s hand.99
In Australasia, numerous meetings were held with ministers in the last months of 1980 in order to answer questions and diminish the conflict, but these were only partially successful. Various estimates have been made of the loss of ministers and church membership during the decade that followed Ford’s dismissal. Some estimate 180 ministers in Australia and New Zealand (40% of the total employed) left the ministry of their own accord or were dismissed for reasons related to Glacier View. Substantial losses were also experienced in the United States and elsewhere.100 At the General Conference, on the recommendation of Hammill, the Biblical Research Institute reactivated a Daniel and Revelation Study Committee to give attention to the problems Ford had explored. During the decade following Glacier View, the committee, known as DARCOM, produced a series of seven major volumes defending and reaffirming traditional understandings. Edited by Frank Holbrook and known as the Daniel and Revelation Committee Series, the set included such volumes as Selected Studies on Prophetic Interpretation (revised edition, 1992); Symposium on Daniel (1986); The Seventy Weeks, Leviticus, and the Nature of Prophecy (1986); Issues in the Book of Hebrews (1989); Doctrine of the Sanctuary: A Historical Survey (1845-1863) (1989) and two volumes entitled Symposium on Revelation (1992).101
Upon his dismissal from the Adventist ministry, Desmond Ford undertook a gospel preaching and teaching ministry with Good News Unlimited (GNU), a radio and television independent outreach based in Newcastle, California, organized in 1981 by Adventist church members for the purpose of supporting Ford in a continued ministry. He retained his membership in the Pacific Union College church until his return to Australia in 2000 when it was removed. During the last years of his life, Ford attended the Caboolture Adventist church near his home in Caloundra, Queensland, where he shared in teaching a Sabbath School class.
Conclusion
The Glacier View Sanctuary Review Committee meeting was the most important twentieth-century attempt to affirm, clarify, and renew Adventist understanding of its foundational story and mission as expressed in its central doctrinal formulations about the heavenly sanctuary, the investigative judgment, and related prophetic interpretations. The task involved the challenge of addressing exegetical difficulties perceived in several passages of scripture traditionally relied on for support of the doctrinal formulations. These exegetical difficulties had been identified both by non-Adventist critics of the doctrine and by Adventist scholars, but were raised to an uncomfortable level of public notice in the address given by Desmond Ford in late 1979. The SRC was perceived by church leadership as having succeeded in affirming confidence in the church’s teaching, and continuity in both the broad outlines of the sanctuary doctrine and the church’s historicist approach to prophetic interpretation. Their focus for the next few decades would be to promote apologetic studies addressing matters identified in the ten-point critique of the positions Ford took in his study document. In contrast, a large section of the scholarly community would teach and preach within the parameters of the consensus statement created at Glacier View. This was seen as allowing for some re-interpretation of the doctrine to accommodate the exegetical difficulties and formulate a more biblically consistent apologetic for the teaching that removed in-built tensions with the doctrine of justification by faith.
Following Glacier View, further extensive study given to the exegetical problems by the BRI produced results that the BRI considered a strong basis for the Church to officially continue its traditional teaching of an investigative judgment, but using the terminology of “pre-Advent judgment,” and a “two-phase” rather than a two-apartment ministry of Christ in the heavenly sanctuary. Within the context of the consensus statement, the interpretation of the sanctuary teaching has continued to expand to include broader theological dimensions implied in the sanctuary teaching with emphasis on the concepts of refuge, safety, and Christian assurance in the judgment along with an emphasis on and deeper appreciation of the social justice implications and Christian accountability aspects of the doctrine. The emphasis on the conviction of prophetic destiny for the church has also broadened for many scholars to embrace a providential view of mission and identity.
Church administration felt the dismissal of Ford was necessary in order to manage the intensified and hyper-partisan church conflict in Australia. The close proximity of the dismissal to the doctrinal enquiry, however, led to misunderstandings and mistrust of administrative intent on the part of large numbers of scholars and the ministerial work force both in America and Australia. In the years immediately following the conference, perceptions of the treatment of Ford as unfair intensified debate and led to significant numbers of ministers and church members withdrawing from the Church. While large parts of the Church felt the right administrative decision was made and there was a need to move past the conflict, a substantial body of opinion, particularly in the South Pacific, has continued to hope that some form of rapprochement with Ford could have been achieved with church leadership before his death on March 11, 2019, and that some gestures might have been made to redress the lingering sense that Ford was treated unjustly. In the twenty-first century, the debate has subsided and the issues have become less pressing as the consensus statement has provided scope for growth in a range of interpretive perspectives in continuity with the established understanding of the doctrines.
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Notes
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Raymond F. Cottrell, "The Sanctuary Review Committee and Its New Consensus" Spectrum, November 1980, 2.↩
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Richard Hammill, Pilgrimage: Memoirs of an Adventist Administrator (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 1992), 197.↩
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Walter C. Utt, “Desmond Ford Raises the Sanctuary Question,” Spectrum, 1980, 3-8.↩
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Ibid, 4; Milton Hook, Desmond Ford: Reformist Theologian, (Portland, OR: Adventist Today Foundation, 2008), 227; John Cassell Jr. to Trevor Lloyd, January 13, 1999, Avondale College, Heritage Room, New South Wales Australia.↩
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“Investigative Judgment Forum transcript, October 27, 1979,” complete transcript with the response by Eric Syme and the follow-up questions and answers in Desmond Ford, Seventh-day Adventism, the Investigative Judgment and the Everlasting Gospel: A Retrospective on October 29, 1979, (Published by the author, n.d.), 7-35, accessed March 4, 2019, https://www.desford.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/160105-Ford-Investigative-Judgment-free-ebook.pdf.↩
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Utt, 4.↩
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George Eldon Ladd, The Presence of the Future (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1974), first published as Jesus and the Kingdom (New York: Harper and Rowe, 1964).↩
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George McCready Price, The Greatest of the Prophets (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press Publishing Association, 1955), 16.↩
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Ibid.↩
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“Investigative Judgment Forum transcript, October 27, 1979,” 23.↩
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Ibid, 27-34.↩
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Ibid, 26.↩
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E. A. Heppenstall to D. Ford. November 3, 1979, cited in Hook, 230, 231.↩
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E. Heppenstall to Richard Lesher, November 2, 1979.↩
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Utt, 5.↩
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Gillian Ford to Ted N. C. Wilson, October 22, 2017, copy in author’s possession. Robert Brinsmead was not responsible for the mass distribution as was commonly believed nor did Ford have a part in or authorize the distribution of tapes, although as a general policy he did not object to people copying his work if they desired. An archived version of the audio tape is part of the Andrews University Digital Library collection and can be listened to at https://adventistdigitallibrary.org/islandora/search/Desmond%20Ford?type=edismax&cp=islandora%3Aroot&islandora_solr_search_navigation=1&f%5B0%5D=mods_typeOfResource_ms%3A%22Spoken%5C%20Word%22, accessed April 8, 2019.↩
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“Some Observations Regarding Dr. Desmond Ford’s Presentation,” [undated]. The letter was jointly signed by W. R. Fouston, W. B. Ochs, M. L Venden, Erwin E. Roenfelt, D. A. Ochs, G. M. Mathews, and S. T. Borg. RG 11, N. C. Wilson Glacier View Files (hereafter cited as GV Files), General Conference Archives (hereafter cited as GCA).↩
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A. L. White “Comments on the SDA Forum Presentation at Pacific Union College,” unpublished paper, November 18, 1979, Adventist Heritage Center, Cooranbong, Australia.↩
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C. O. Franz, “Teacher Given Leave to Prepare Doctrinal Paper,” ARH, December 20, 1979, 23.↩
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Utt, 4.↩
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J. W. Cassell, “Notes for Meeting with General Conference PREXAD,” [2009].↩
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Gillian Ford email to G. M. Valentine January 30, 2019, cites specific examples of the “concerted effort” and the deliberate hostility in “systematic” attempts to have Ford removed from teaching.↩
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Russell R. Standish and A. John Clifford, Conflicting Concepts of Righteousness by Faith in the Seventh-day Adventist Church-Australasian Division (Wahroonga, New South Wales: George Burnside Press, 1978), 1.↩
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Gilbert Valentine, “Fear, Hidden Agendas and the Social Context of the Ford Controversy (1979-80),” West Coast Bible Teachers Fellowship Annual Conference, April 5-6, 2019, unpublished paper, 8-10.↩
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Ibid.↩
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Desmond Ford, interview by Gillian Ford, Shelly Beach, Queensland. Australia, August 28, 2007, 6, copy in author’s possession.↩
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Robert Brinsmead, 1844 Re-examined (Fallbrook, CA: Verdict Publications, 1978).↩
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Desmond Ford to N. C. Wilson, December 12, 1979, RG 11 NCW; GV Files.↩
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Richard Hammill, Pilgrimage: Memoirs of an Adventist Administrator (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 1992) 186, 189; Valentine, 11, 12; Desmond Ford interview, 13, records Ford as saying, “I was frustrated because Keith Parmenter back home had already sent me a letter saying I was not going to be teaching at Avondale anymore, I was going back into pastoral work. So, I was a bit frustrated. The brethren had not kept their promises about meetings to be held dealing with the problems, hadn’t kept their promises about Avondale. Parmenter hadn’t even listened to my side of the story.” See also Trevor Lloyd, “Interview with Desmond Ford,” Sydney, March 12, 1995, 5, copy in author’s possession.↩
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Desmond Ford to N. C. Wilson, December 12, 1979.↩
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F. Veltman to J. W. Cassell and Gordon Madgwick, July 12, 1980.↩
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F. Veltman to N. C. Wilson, C. E. Bradford, F. W. Wernick, and W. Duncan Eva, September 15, 1980.↩
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Ibid; Raymond F. Cottrell to D. Ford, November 17, 1979, copy in author’s possession.↩
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Robert H. Parr to W. Duncan Eva, March 11, 1980, copy in author’s possession. “The hearing of the Cottrell tapes was the most mind-blowing experience I have had for a long time.” The criticism of Ford he thought, “seems completely out of proportion,” compared to what Cottrell had said.↩
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Desmond Ford to N. C. Wilson, December 12, 1979.↩
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Neal C. Wilson attempted to calm the alarm in the church over this issue in “This I believe about Ellen G. White,” ARH, March 20, 1980, 8.↩
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Desmond Ford, interview by Gillian Ford, August 28, 2007, 14.↩
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Hammill, 189.↩
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Ford provided a short, convenient précis of his larger study in “Daniel 8.14 and the Day of Atonement,” Spectrum, November 1980, 30-36.↩
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M. L. Andreasen to J. L. McElhany and W. H. Branson, December 25, 1942, cited in Ford, “Daniel 8:14 and the Day of Atonement,” 31.↩
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Ibid, 34.↩
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Ibid.↩
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Ibid, 38.↩
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Hammill, 190. The manuscript was republished in three volumes by Desmond Ford Publications as Daniel 8:14, the Day of Atonement and the Investigative Judgment in 2018.↩
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Kenneth H. Wood, “Satan Versus the Church,” ARH, January 24, 1980, 13.↩
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Kenneth H. Wood, “Church of Destiny: A People Who Will Triumph,” ARH, August 21, 1980, 11.↩
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Kenneth H. Wood, “Colleges in Trouble,” ARH, February 21, 1980, 3.↩
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N. C. Wilson, “Opening Address,” SRC August 10, RG 17, R. Lesher GV Files. GCA; Walter Utt, “Journalistic Fairness,” Spectrum, 1980, 63; L. R. Geraty to J. R. Spangler, October 6, 1980, in Desmond Ford and Gillian Ford, The Adventist Crisis of Spiritual Identity (Newcastle, CA: Desmond Ford Publications, 1982), 51-53.↩
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Neal C. Wilson, “Update on the Church’s Doctrinal Discussions,” ARH, July 3, 1980, 24.↩
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J. Cassell to Trevor Lloyd, January 20, 1999 cited in Hook, 242.↩
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Hammill was responsible for making up the list and having it approved by PREXAD; Hammill, 192.↩
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J. R. Spangler, “Editorial Perspectives,” Ministry, October 1980, 6.↩
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SRC Minutes, August 10, 1980, 1, 5, RG 17, R. Lesher, GV Files, GCA.↩
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Cotttrell, 22.↩
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Ibid, 8.↩
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A summarized transcript of some of these tense exchanges can be found in Cottrell, 10-12.↩
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Spangler, 8.↩
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Richard Coffen, “Glacier View: A Retrospective,” Adventist Today [online], August, 10, 2016, accessed April 9, 2019, https://atoday.org/glacier-view-a-retrospective/.↩
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Fred Veltman “Sanctuary Review Committee,” [1980], 4, 5. 11.↩
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Kendra Haloviak Valentine, “Sanctuary,” Spectrum, Spring, 2008. 22, 23.↩
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William J. Johnsson, “The Perils of Being Right,” Spectrum [online], March 13, 2019, accessed March 17, 2019, https://spectrummagazine.org/news/2019/des-ford-perils-being-right. See also the discussion of cultural differences in Valentine, Ibid., 19-23.↩
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Neal C. Wilson, “Report to members of the Theological Consultation,” a subsequent meeting of scholars at Glacier View commencing Sunday August 17, RG 11, Neal C Wilson GV Files.↩
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Robert H. Pierson, “An Appeal to the Sanctuary Review Committee,” 6, RG 17, R. Lesher GV Files. GC Archives. The letter was read by Clyde Franz.↩
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Ibid. W. D Eva indicates that the Pierson manuscript distressed Ford. “Notes on Meeting with Dr. Desmond Ford, [August 15, 1980],”15, RG 11, N. C. Wilson GV Files.↩
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W. D. Blehm “Comment at the Sanctuary Review Committee,” RG 11, VP-C B Hirsch GV Files, GCA.↩
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Cottrell, 15.↩
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Ibid.↩
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Fred Veltman “Sanctuary Review Committee,” [1980], 5, 6; Raymond F. Cottrell, “Group Dynamics at Glacier View,” 12, 13.↩
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In a confidential paper Wernick sent to Wilson, Wernick expressed concern that the SRC had allowed the interpretation that Daniel 8:14 referred “mainly to a judgment upon the ‘little horn’ and a final end to the cosmic controversy,” rather than to the idea that “confessed sins” of the saints had “polluted the heavenly sanctuary.” Wernick worried that if the SRC statement conceded this “then there was nothing of real significance that happened in heaven in 1844, other than the beginning of a message to prepare for the end.” He feared that the “historic teaching” without some effort to preserve it, “could soon disappear.” Francis Wernick to Neal. C. Wilson, September 3, 1980, 4, September 3, 1980. RG 11 NCW, GV Files, GCA.↩
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PREXAD Minutes August 13, 1980, (7.45 am Meeting), Document File PREXAD 90, GCA. The decision to form this small group was not part of the original planning. Members of the group of six were J. Robert Spangler, Raoul Dederen, Herbert Douglass, Arthur Ferch, James Londis, and Norman Young.↩
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Cottrell, 15.↩
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PREXAD Minutes August 14, 1980, (12.45 pm Meeting).↩
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“Notes on Meeting with Dr. Desmond Ford,” 3. This document is a “reconstruction of what took place” at the meeting “based on notes taken by J. R. Spangler and Charles Hirsch. Other members of the group. but not Ford, submitted in written form their recollections. The contents correlate closely with the personal manuscript Wilson used to report to members of the Theological Consultation that met at Glacier View commencing Sunday, August 17. RG 11. Neal C Wilson GV Files.↩
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Cottrell, 20, 22.↩
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Ibid, 11.↩
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Ibid, 16, 17.↩
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K. S. Parmenter to D. Ford, August 15, 1980, in “Ford-Parmenter Correspondence,” Ministry, October 1980, 10.↩
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R. D. Brinsmead email to Gillian Ford, October 18, 2007. Copy in author’s possession.↩
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Gillian Ford, “The Distribution of the October 27, 1980 Forum Cassette,” (2007). Copy in author’s possession.↩
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Gillian Ford, “Glacier Review Reflections,” 2017, copy in author’s possession.↩
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Valentine; Ibid., 19.↩
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Larry T. Geraty to Neal C. Wilson, September 15, 1980, copy in author’s possession.↩
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Kenneth Eastman to Australasian Division Officers, September 12, 1980; Kenneth Eastman to Ron Taylor, September 19, October 30, 1980; Kenneth Eastman to Keith Parmenter, September 26, November 19, 1980; Kenneth Eastman, “Points and Queries to be Raised with Messrs Allen, Allen and Hemsley,” unpublished paper September 25, 1980; Kenneth Eastman to Milton Hook, December 8, 2006. All cited in Hook, 273-278.↩
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Kenneth Eastman to Australasian Division Officers, February 18, 1981, cited in Hook, 278.↩
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“Ford Document Studied; Variant Views Rejected,” ARH, August 28, 1980, 32.↩
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Larry T. Geraty to Kenneth Wood, September 15, 1980, copy in author’s possession.↩
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ARH, September 18, 1980, 4-15.↩
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W. J. Johnsson, “Overview of a Historic Meeting,” ARH, September 4, 1980, 4-11.↩
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J. R. Spangler, Editorial Perspectives, Ministry, October, 1980 4-7.↩
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J. R. Spangler, “Events Since Glacier View,” Ministry, October, 1980, 14-15.↩
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Larry Geraty to J. R. Spangler, October 6, 1980.↩
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Spectrum, for example, published two representative major papers presented at the conference, one by William Shea and the other by Fritz Guy, an interview with Desmond Ford by the PUC professor who had invited Ford to give his 1979 Forum talk and other analysis. See Walter Utt, “Journalistic Fairness?” and “Ford’s First Reply,” Spectrum, November 1980, 63, 64; 76.↩
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The full statement can be found in “Theologians’ Statement,” Spectrum, November 1980, 65.↩
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“Wilson Responds,” Spectrum, November 1980, 65-67.↩
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Hammill, 196.↩
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Cottrell, 22.↩
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Hammill, 195-198.↩
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Larry Geraty to J. R. Spangler, October 6, 1980.↩
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Hammill, 196.↩
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See the discussion in Wikipedia on Glacier View, accessed April 9, 2019, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanctuary_Review_Committee.↩
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Frank Holbrook, ed., Daniel and Revelation Committee Series, 7 vols. (Washington D.C.: Biblical Research Institute of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, 1986-1992), https://adventistbiblicalresearch.org/sites/default/files/pdf/selected_studies_on_prophetic%5B1%5D.pdf.↩