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Seventh Day Adventism Renounced

SKU:
9780892251636

$22.99
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Product Description

by D. N. Canright

First published in 1898, this is the personal testimony of one of the early leaders of Seventh-day Adventism who was a personal friend of Ellen G. White. After 28 years in the movement Canright saw through the whole system and penned this very revealing insight into the inner workings of this deceptive organization. Fascinating and powerful reading.

Product Reviews - +

  • 5
    Charles Darwin Revisited

    Posted by Truth For This Time "Present Truth" on Jun. 2, 2013

    D.M. Canright, like Charles Darwin are so-called icons with the same problem that will follow them right up to the point of the day of judgment. They both have turned so many would be believers against God, that the blood that is on their hands will not stop flowing until Jesus comes. As in the "end of life recantation" offered by Charles Darwin in renouncing his Origin of the Species theory. No one takes the well needed time to tell the "rest of the story."

    "Well here is the rest of the (untold) story."

    From the Book Omega II, by Lewis Walton, pgs 32-32, we read...

    "While still an Adventist minister, Canright had once complained that he could have become an acclaimed preacher were it not for the unpopularity of the Advent message. For a time he may have enjoyed a bit of the glory for which he had dreamed. His book was accepted by a major New York publisher, and curious people came to hear this once-talented Adventist debater ridicule his former church. (His book would still be used in the late Twentieth Century by evangelical critics of Adventism.) But Canright's brief day in the sun ended like a classic tragedy. Turned out of his pastorate in a prominent Protestant church, he finally roamed ghost-like around Battle Creek, selling shopworn books (some of them Adventist) for a meager door-to-door living. At last he found himself with nothing except lonely memories of what might-have-been. In 1919, with the shadows of his last illness deepening about him, he would reach out from the twilight into which he was descending, for one last appeal to his brother: " Stay with the message, Jasper. I left and I know I am dying, a lost man.