James Springer White (1821–1881) was a key figure in the Seventh-day Adventist Church and the husband of Ellen G. White.
He played an active part in the Millerite Movement, waiting for Jesus to return in 1844. When this didn’t happen, he joined with other Millerites, including his wife, to continue studying Scripture and eventually begin the Adventist Church.
Though sickly from childhood, he was a driven man who perhaps accomplished more in the history of Adventism than any other individual.
Here’s what we’ll cover about his life:
- An overview of James White’s early life
- His life after the Great Disappointment
- His roles in the Adventist Church
Let’s get a glimpse of his earlier years and how they shaped his ministry.
James White’s early life
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“Courtesy of the Ellen G. White Estate, Inc.”
James White was born on August 4, 1821, in Palmyra, Maine. He was one of the nine children of John White and his wife Elizabeth—godly people who modeled Christian values to their children. He was baptized into the Christian Connection movement at the age of 15.1
But from the beginning, he struggled with his health. A severe illness at three years old left him with terrible eyesight so he couldn’t read or attend school for many years.2
For someone like James with an insatiable love for learning, this was incredibly discouraging!
But finally, when he was 19, his eyesight improved enough for him to complete his teaching certificate during an intense 12-week course for elementary teachers at the Academy at St. Albans, Maine.3 During this time, he spent as much as 18 hours a day studying!4
Later on, he brought that same hardcore commitment into the Millerite Movement.
Joining the Millerite Movement
James White had planned to further his education while working as a teacher. But his plans changed when he heard William Miller’s teachings about Christ’s soon return. He felt God’s call to become a preacher.
Miller’s followers, based on his interpretation of prophecies in Daniel, believed Jesus was going to return in 1844.
When James first heard William Miller’s teachings, he thought they were extreme.
You can imagine his surprise when he found out his mother had accepted the belief of the imminent Second Coming too. As he tried to object, she calmly shared passages of Scripture that worked a change in his heart. Despite his initial concerns, he too became convinced.5
Then, the Holy Spirit’s conviction set in.
James White felt God calling him to return to the town where he had been a teacher before so he could share the Second Coming message with his students’ families.
And so began his journey to become a preacher.
He purchased some publications about the Second Coming and studied them with his Bible. As 1842 rolled around, he began traveling and preaching full-time.
Sometimes he faced opposition—like when a mob followed him to the venue for his meetings and threw snowballs at him through the window.6
But James White was a determined man who longed to prepare others for Jesus’ return. Within two years, he led over 1,000 people to Christ.7 He was also ordained as a minister in 1843, taking on the title Elder James White.8
So what did he do when Jesus didn’t return as expected? Let’s find out.
James White’s life after the Great Disappointment
When Jesus didn’t come on October 22, 1844 (known as the Great Disappointment), James White found comfort in the Word of God. As he and fellow Millerites, like Joseph Bates and Hiram Edson, re-studied the passages of the Bible that led them to expect Jesus’ coming, they found truths that paved the way for the formation of the Adventist Church.
What kinds of truths?
The Millerites had thought the prophecy of Daniel 8:14, which spoke of the cleansing of the sanctuary, referred to the cleansing of the earth by fire at Jesus’ coming (2 Peter 3:11–12).
But they were wrong.
One Millerite leader, O.R.L. Crosier, went back to his Bible and came to a different conclusion:
The sanctuary referred to the heavenly sanctuary (Hebrews 8:1–2), and Jesus had begun a work of judgment there instead (Daniel 7:9–10, 13–14).
Crosier wrote an article on this topic, which James White found and read.9 As he accepted this belief, he entered a new phase of his Christian journey.
Meanwhile, he was also on the path to a new stage in life: marriage.
Marrying Ellen Harmon
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“Courtesy of the Ellen G. White Estate, Inc.”
James White saw Ellen Harmon for the first time in 1843 when he attended meetings in her hometown—Portland, Maine. But it wasn’t until 1845 that the two met in Orrington, Maine, when she traveled there to speak.10 He recognized that her calling came from God and volunteered to travel with her and her sister Sarah as their protector.11
The two had no plans of getting married; they felt Jesus was coming too soon for that!12
But as rumors spread about James White and Ellen Harmon traveling together, they had to make a decision. Here’s how Ellen White described it:
“He told me…he should have to go away and leave me to go with whomsoever l would, or we must be married. So we were married.”13
And that was that! Seems they just needed a little nudge to realize where their hearts were already heading.
Even though their life together began with unusual circumstances, it was evident that they loved one another deeply. James later wrote about his wife:
“We were married August 30, 1846, and from that hour to the present she has been my crown of rejoicing.”14
And Ellen White affectionately called him “the best man that ever trod shoe leather.”15
So began their life together. Along the way, they would have four children:16
- Henry Nichols (1847–1863)
- James Edson (1849–1928)
- William Clarence (1854–1937)
- John Herbert (1860, died at 3 months)
But unlike most couples who settled into the routine of home and work life, James and Ellen White knew that God had called them into ministry together. This would be a key focus of much of their life together.
Working together with Ellen White
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“Courtesy of the Ellen G. White Estate, Inc.”
James and Ellen White were a power team in the Adventist Church—traveling, speaking, writing, encouraging believers, and helping organize churches. Often, when they went to churches or camp meetings, James would speak and then his wife would share her message.17
He was supportive of his wife’s role, never losing faith in the messages that God gave her.
This trust was significant. As a clear thinker, he was not swayed by extreme views, and people respected him for that discernment. As a result, he was able to use his influence to show the validity of her messages.18 He also “acted vigorously to implement what she advised and what to him seemed common sense.”19
In turn, she supported him and became his strength when he hit a health crisis.
Struggling with health
Unfortunately, James White’s early struggles with health continued throughout much of his lifetime. In 1865, at only 44 years of age, he suffered his first of five strokes.
This was likely due to overwork—something science is now showing us can increase the risk of strokes and shorten a person’s life.
He was so dedicated to God’s work that he found it difficult to delegate his responsibilities. He worried that no one else would invest the same effort and energy that he had, so he pushed himself to his limits.20
In the end, he cut his own efforts short too, dying on August 6, 1881, at only 60 years old. He was buried at Oak Hill Cemetery in Battle Creek, Michigan.
Despite his short life, James White’s accomplishments went far in helping the newly formed Seventh-day Adventist Church become a solid organization.
James White’s role in the Adventist Church
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“Courtesy of the Ellen G. White Estate, Inc.”
James White was one of the co-founders of the Adventist Church and one of its leaders from the beginning. Both before and after marriage, he traveled, preached, and helped organize churches. He served as the president of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists (the highest level of church leadership) for a total of ten years.
He also filled these roles:
- Developing fundamental beliefs and incorporating the church
- Publishing
- Starting and leading church institutions
- Encouraging Adventist health reform
Let’s look at each of these in detail.
Developing fundamental beliefs and incorporating the church
James White’s discerning and analytical mind was a valuable asset in developing Adventist doctrine. From 1848 to 1850, he and his wife attended the first conferences of Sabbath-keeping Adventist believers, where they earnestly studied the Bible.
James especially helped study the following Fundamental Beliefs:21
- The Second Coming before the millennium
- The seventh-day Sabbath
- The state of the dead
- The three angels’ messages
- The sanctuary
- Baptism by immersion
- The prophetic gift
As the doctrines became established, he urged the church to become an official organization—something that many early Adventists opposed at first.
What were his reasons for pushing for organization?
The church needed a way to own land and institutions and a way to provide credentials for ministers and pay them.22
Ever the go-getter, James White wrote five articles in 1853 that advocated for church organization.
Over time, other church leaders saw the light in his suggestions. In October 1861, the Michigan conference was organized. And the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists became official in 1863.
Before long, James White was pioneering the Church’s ministries and institutions, too.
Publishing
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“Courtesy of the Ellen G. White Estate, Inc.”
Throughout his lifetime, James White was involved in publishing materials that would lead people to a deeper understanding of Bible truth.
In 1849, his wife had a vision that instructed him to start a periodical. With this counsel in mind, he began publishing the Present Truth, later known as the Second Advent Review and Sabbath Herald (the Adventist Review today).
He also began a periodical for young people, called the Youth’s Instructor.
As the publishing work grew, James and Ellen White established a press in Rochester, New York, in 1852.23 That little press became the Review and Herald Publishing Association.
Never one to settle, he started another periodical, the Signs of the Times, on the West Coast in 1874. He also helped buy land for a publishing house there, starting the Pacific Press in 1875.24
Starting and managing church institutions
Besides establishing the church itself, James White founded and led many of its institutions. These include its first school, Battle Creek College (1868), and its first health center, the Battle Creek Sanitarium. With his aptitude for business and management, he helped institutions out of financial difficulties as well.
The Review and Herald was one.
Because of sickness, he had to step down from its management for a year, and while he was gone, its financial situation plummeted. However, when he took it over again, it regained what was lost and made a profit.25
James White was large-hearted and generous, and at times he would even use own resources to support the church’s work. He believed in the work and was determined to move it forward.
Encouraging health reform
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Photo by Dex Ezekiel on Unsplash
Ellen White was convicted by the Holy Spirit about the importance of simple health principles, such as water, exercise, fresh air, sunlight, and a healthy diet. When her husband’s health took a turn for the worse in 1865, they realized the need to live out these principles.
After James’s first stroke, Ellen White took him to a health center in Dansville, New York, that specialized in water therapy and natural healing. The couple stayed there for three months, but he saw little improvement in his health.26
What to do?
Soon after, she recognized God’s calling for the church to start its own health center in Battle Creek in 1866. Unlike the center in Danville, this one would also incorporate a spiritual component and rejuvenating activity (as opposed to complete bed rest) into its program.27
As she put health reform principles into practice, she saw James improve too. But it was difficult to keep him from going back into his habits of overworking. His inability to manage his workload may well be the reason he suffered four more strokes and died young.
Though James White didn’t fully benefit from the health reforms because of his tendency to overwork, they became an important part of Adventist health teachings and went on to benefit many others.
An ardent pioneer of the Adventist Church
James White contributed to the Adventist Church in countless ways: from helping start the church, to studying its fundamental beliefs, to growing it into a denomination.
Who would have thought that such a sickly young man could do so much? He went against all odds to become a teacher, and then brought that same determination into his work for God.
He deeply loved the Bible’s truths and committed himself to the success of the Adventist Church—even at the cost of his health and life.
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Related Articles
- Foster, Ray. “Elder James White,” Lest We Forget, vol. 5, no. 1, 1995 [↵]
- White, James. Life Incidents, (Seventh-day Adventist Publishing Association. 1868), p. 12 [↵]
- Foster. “Elder James White [↵]
- White. Life Incidents. p. 13 [↵]
- Cooper, Richard. “A Unique Partnership,” Lest We Forget, vol. 5, no. 2, 1995[↵]
- White, James. Life Incidents. p. 77 [↵]
- Bischoff, Fred. “Qualified for the Job,” Lest We Forget, vol. 5, no. 3, 1995 [↵]
- Foster. “Elder James White” [↵]
- Steinweg, Marlene. “James White: A Man of Action,” Lest We Forget, vol. 5, no. 3, 1995 [↵]
- White, Ellen. Christian Experience and Teachings of Ellen G. White, Pacific Press, 1922. p. 69 [↵]
- Maxwell, C. Mervyn. Tell It to the World, Pacific Press, 1977. p. 60 [↵]
- Maxwell. p. 200 [↵]
- Steinweg, Marlene. “Her Husband’s Crown,” Lest We Forget, vol. 5, no. 2, 1995 [↵]
- White, James. Life Sketches, SDA Steam Press, 1880. p. 126. [↵]
- White, A. L. Ellen G. White: The Early Years: 1827–1862, vol. 1, Review and Herald, 1985. p. 111. [↵]
- Ibid. p. 46 [↵]
- Cooper, Richard. “A Unique Partnership,” Lest We Forget, vol. 5, no. 2, 1995 [↵]
- Douglass. p. 53 [↵]
- VandeVere, Emmett K. “Years of Expansion, 1865–1885,” The World of Ellen G. White, p. 67, quoted in Douglass. p. 53 [↵]
- Douglass, p. 54 [↵]
- Steinweg, Marlene. “James White: A Man of Action,” Lest We Forget, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1995 [↵]
- Douglass. p. 184 [↵]
- White, Jame. Life Incidents. p. 293 [↵]
- Loughborough, J. N. The Great Second Advent Movement, Adventist Pioneer Library, 2016. p. 243 [↵]
- Maxwell. p. 200 [↵]
- Douglass. pp. 301–305 [↵]
- Ibid. [↵]
More Answers
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Christian growth is the experience of allowing Jesus Christ to work in our lives through the Holy Spirit and restore in us the image we were designed for—God’s image of selfless, other-centered love.
What Do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the New Earth?
Seventh-day Adventist, like other Christians, believe that after the second coming of Christ, God will cleanse our earth by fire and then restore it back to Eden-like perfection.
What Adventists Believe About the Millennium and the End of Sin
As most Christians, Seventh-day Adventists hope for the time when sin and evil will no longer exist. The Bible teaches that God will bring an end to sin after a thousand-year period of time called the millennium.
What Are Seventh-day Adventists Beliefs on Death and the Resurrection?
The thought of dying can seem scary. And the idea of being resurrected—or coming back to life—can seem a little uncomfortable.
What Do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about The Second Coming of Christ?
The second coming of Jesus Christ is an event the Bible prophesies will occur at the end of this world’s history. It’s called His second coming to distinguish it from His first, when Jesus was born to Mary and lived as a human before dying on the Cross.
What Adventists Believe About Jesus’ Ministry in the Heavenly Sanctuary
The ancient Israelite sanctuary had a daily service and a yearly service. Jesus’ death on the Cross and His ministry in the heavenly sanctuary reflect these services.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Marriage and Family?
The Seventh-day Adventist Church believes God established marriage and the family unit to be blessings to humanity. They make up a relational structure that can reflect the multifaceted nature of God’s love.
What Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Christian Behavior
The patterns of actions and words that make up behavior are central to any type of belief system because they flow from those beliefs. Seventh-day Adventists look to the Bible, with Jesus as the perfect example, for guidance on shaping our daily behavior.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Sabbath?
Seventh-day Adventists believe that the biblical Sabbath is a beautiful gift of rest that God gave to us at Creation and that remains valid to this day. Falling on the seventh day of the week—Saturday—it connects us to God in a special way and offers us a weekly opportunity to be physically, mentally, and spiritually refreshed.
What Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Stewardship (and What Does It Mean?)
Love for God and our fellow humans is the overriding principle of the Seventh-day Adventist faith. And we express that love in an overarching way through how we manage the things—material and immaterial—that God has entrusted to us.
What Do Adventists Believe About the Law of God?
Seventh-day Adventists believe that God’s law reflects His character of love (1 John 4:8; Romans 13:10). It is perfectly summarized in the Ten Commandments given to Moses on Mount Sinai, showing us the practical application of loving God and loving other people.
What Do Seventh-day Adventists Believe About the Gift of Prophecy?
Adventists believe the gift of prophecy is a spiritual gift that the Holy Spirit gives to specific individuals to help the church carry out Jesus’ Great Commission (Matthew 28:16–20). Prophecy helps strengthen, encourage, and comfort His people (1 Corinthians 14:3).
What Seventh-day Adventists Believe About Spiritual Gifts in the Bible
Seventh-day Adventists believe that spiritual gifts are talents that the Holy Spirit gives to believers and followers of Jesus Christ. These gifts are different but complementary, and they often equip followers of Christ with the ability to spread the good news about Jesus and encourage its members.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Lord’s Supper (Communion)?
Like many Protestant Christians, Seventh-day Adventists believe in the practice commonly called the Lord’s Supper or Holy Communion. They drink grape juice and eat unleavened bread in obedience to Jesus’ direct instructions to do it in remembrance of Him (1 Corinthians 11:24–25).
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Baptism?
Like many Protestant Christians worldwide and throughout history, the Seventh-day Adventist Church believes in baptism, a ceremony in which individuals go under water to publicly demonstrate dying to an old life and beginning a new life in Christ. We baptize people by immersion, as taught and exemplified in the Bible.
What Do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Unity in Christ?
Seventh-day Adventists believe in biblical unity—the idea of believers in Jesus being united by the truth of the Bible and the common goal of representing God and His love to the world.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Remnant and its Mission?
The “remnant” are a group of faithful believers that have existed throughout history and proclaimed God’s truth, love, and plan to save humanity. They “remain” with God even amid persecution and also when it seems everyone else has rebelled against God or compromised their beliefs.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Church?
Seventh-day Adventists believe that the idea of the church is an important biblical concept.
What Adventists Believe about The Experience of Salvation?
The Seventh-day Adventist Church believes that salvation is a gift that anyone can receive through faith in Jesus Christ, the Son of God. When we accept His sacrificial death in our place, He saves us from the penalty and power of sin (or evil), which prevents us from experiencing true freedom.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Life, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus?
Jesus Christ, a person who lived in first-century Palestine, is the foundation of the Adventist faith. This is because it’s only through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus that any of us have hope of life beyond the toil, suffering, and death of this world.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about The Great Controversy?
The “Great Controversy” is the phrase Seventh-day Adventists typically use to describe the cosmic spiritual conflict between the forces of good (God) and the forces of evil or sin (Satan/the devil).
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Creation?
Seventh-day Adventists believe that God is the creator of our world. They come to this conclusion from the first book of the Bible—Genesis. The account there tells us that God took six literal days to form the earth and all it contains, including us humans.
What Do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about the Father?
Like most Protestant Christians, Seventh-day Adventists believe in God the Father as part of the Godhead. We call Him Father because of His role towards Jesus. Jesus Himself encouraged us to also call Him Father.
What do Seventh-day Adventists Believe about Sin and the Nature of Humanity?
Seventh-day Adventists believe that humanity was created perfect and that, at our very core, we crave this kind of perfection and unity with God. But unfortunately, the Bible teaches that we chose to be wise in our own eyes and disobey God, which led to a natural tendency to be sinful, evil, and selfish.
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