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Today, Seventh-day Adventists are known for their healthcare
institutions and their work in the field of medicine, but it wasn't
always that way. In the late 1800s and early 1900s the Adventist
Church was still in its infancy, and the medical work was just
getting started. As with the introduction of anything new, there
were bumps in the road as the church embarked on the work of
obeying the divine instruction to combine taking care of physical
needs with gospel proclamation. But did the way need to be so
rough? Three Adventist Titans: The significance of heeding or
rejecting the counsel of Ellen White examines the lives of three
prominent Adventist leaders-John Harvey Kellogg, physician at the
Battle Creek Sanitarium; Arthur G. Daniells, president of the
General Conference; and Percy Magan, founder of Madison College and
later president of the College of Medical Evangelists-who each
played an important role in founding the medical and evangelical
work of the church. The book provides an in-depth look at the lives
of these three men, their work in the church, their personal
communication with Ellen White, their regard for the counsel of the
Spirit of Prophecy, and their adherence or rejection of that
counsel.
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