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Spiritualizers 1EGWLM 927

Another Millerite Adventist, Orlando Squires, began publication of the Voice of the Shepherd in Utica, New York, during March 1845. This paper spiritualized almost every tangible aspect of Christian belief. These included rejecting a literal heaven,36

Orlando Squires, “Where is Heaven?” Voice of the Shepherd, March 1845, pp. 4, 5.

a literal destruction of the world by fire,37

C. H. Fenton, “The Harvest of the Earth,” Voice of the Shepherd, March 1845, p. 1.

a literal resurrection,38

S. Fenton, “The Resurrection,” Voice of the Shepherd, March 1845, p. 8.

a literal “body of Jesus in the universe of God,” and a literal Second Coming.39

Orlando Squires, “This Same Jesus,” Voice of the Shepherd, March 1845, p. 5.

The Voice of the Shepherd proposed that all of these were accomplished in a spiritual sense within the Christian's own experience. This spiritual “Second Coming” they understood to have occurred at the time of the disappointment in the fall of 1844. 1EGWLM 927.2

Ellen White's third major vision, in which she was shown the new earth (spring 1845), directly countered the spiritualizing view. She was transported to the future and walked with Jesus and the saints in the earth made new. There were literal trees, grass, animals, and food. Jesus was a real person, as were the resurrected saints.40

White, Spiritual Gifts [vol. 2], pp. 52-55.

She and others who became Sabbatarian Adventists did all in their power to oppose the spiritualizers. 1EGWLM 927.3