THE
BROKEN BLUEPRINT
PART
ONE - B
THE
BEGINNINGS OF
OUR EDUCATIONAL WORK
(1867
- 1904)
BATTLE
CREEK AND WALLA WALLA
Prescott
takes over
Enter
Sutherland and Magan
The
Blueprint at Walla Walla
DeGraw
arrives
Sutherland
and Magan at Battle Creek
More
changes at the college
The
need to leave Battle Creek
Ellen
White endorses the move
College
moved to Berrien Springs
EMMANUEL
MISSIONARY COLLEGE
Berrien
Springs school begins
Opposition
grows at Berrien Springs
More
information about the school
The
opposition intensifies
Preparing
to start again
BATTLE CREEK AND WALLA WALLA
PRESCOTT TAKES OVER
In
1883, the college at Battle Creek was reopened under the direction of
Elder W.H. Littlejohn, a blind minister with no degrees. He served
well for two years; but, in 1885, the board decided to find someone who
had a degree.
The
position was offered to W.W. Prescott, a graduate of Dartmouth College
and an experienced workman who had a print shop and published a
magazine.
Prescott
headed the school for ten years (1885-1895); and, during those years he
himself was more thoroughly converted (although he tended to slip away
from the Spirit of Prophecy after the turn of the century).
By 1889, with the
virtual demise of the work-study program at Battle Creek College, lively
students sought other ways for expending their energies. Baseball,
footfall, soccer, and tennis became popular. Soon teams formed and
competitive matches were arranged. One football game between American
and British students produced unusual excitement. A local press report
of the game came to Ellen Whites attention in far-off Australia.
She was aghast and soon directed a sharp rebuke to President
Prescott. A Seventh-day Adventist school was not to be a place for
students to perfect themselves in sports, Ellen White wrote. This
would be to follow the worldly plan of recreation and amusement, and
would result in loss every time. Prescott and his faculty saw the
danger; matched games were prohibited.--R.W. Schwarz, Light
Bearers to the Remnant, p. 199.
During
those ten years, four more schools were established: Union College at
College View, Nebraska in 1891; Walla Walla College in Washington State
in 1892 (with E.A. Sutherland as principal); Graysville Academy (later
Southern Missionary College) in Tennessee in 1893; and Keene Academy
(later Southwestern) in Texas in 1894.
At the 1893 General Conference
Session, W.W. Prescott made this jewel of a statement:
The basis on which
students should be encouraged to earnest work in securing an education
is an important matter. You know to what extent it is coming to be a
practice in educational institutions in almost every line. The marking
[credit/grading] system very generally encourages a feeling of rivalry.
The basis of the work is thus made to be personal ambition. It is
not so much to personal excellence, nor to reach any certain ideal, but
to be above a neighbor. Of two students, with different capacities, one
may by much less hard work take the higher rank, and yet his fellow
student may do better work and be a better student.
The true basis
seems to me to be this: Every one is endowed with certain capacities and
faculties. God has for him a certain ideal which he can reach by the
proper use of time and opportunities. He is not to be satisfied with the
fact that he outstrips his neighbor. His effort should be to get what
God would have him, and success is to meet the ideal the Lord has for
him in view of his capacity and opportunity. His neighbor, who may have
only half the capacity will reach the same degree of success and will be
worthy of the same commendation if he reaches the ideal that God has for
him in view of his capacity and his opportunity.
The true basis of
credit is not by comparing one with another to see if one secures better
standing or more prizes than his neighbor, but to compare the actual
standing of every student with the ideal which God intends he should
gain in view of the capacities with which he was endowed and the
opportunities Gods providence has given him.
This is a very
different basis than simply the idea of personal ambition to excel
another. It is very much easier for a teacher to impel one to earnest
work by appealing to personal ambition, because it is a trait of human
nature easily cultivated. So many teachers, as being the easiest method
to get work (as they say) out of students, appeal to them on the basis
of their standing as compared with another; but that trait of human
nature needs no cultivation. It is the same old self. When the mind of
Christ is brought into our plans of education, the purpose will not be
to draw out and strengthen elements of self; but it will be, as in all
other parts of the work, to empty ones self, to take a humble
position, and yet by that very means to attain to an exaltation
impossible in any other way.--W.W. Prescott, 1893 General
Conference Bulletin, pp. 357-358.
In that same decade of the 1890s,
as noted earlier, a training school was established in South Africa
(Solusi in Rhodesia, modern Zimbabwe, in 1894); and Ellen White
started another one in Australia (Avondale,
in Cooranbong in 1897). During those years, she wrote extensively
on the blueprint for our schools. One person who studied her writings
very carefully was E.A. Sutherland, head of Walla Walla College, who
instituted several important reforms. He would later figure prominently
in the effort to salvage our educational blueprint.
During this time, new academies were starting,
and many of our people were studying the educational blueprint. However,
some schools, including Union College, held solidly to the old line of
liberal arts and degrees.
ENTER
SUTHERLAND AND MAGAN
At
this juncture, we should briefly consider Sutherland and Magan:
Edward
Alexander Sutherland (1865-1955) was of Scotch ancestry and had a
sterling character. In 1885, he went to Battle Creek College; three
years later, he was deeply impressed with the message of righteousness
by faith, taught by Jones and Waggoner at Minneapolis. In the fall of
1888, when Sutherland returned to the college for his third year, he
gained a new friend, P.T. Magan.
Percy
Tilson Magan (1867-1947) was born in Ireland, emigrated to the United
States in 1886, and joined the church that year. The following year, he
worked in Nebraska as a licensed minister. In 1888, he entered Battle
Creek College.
A
strong friendship sprang up between Sutherland and Magan. That fall,
Ellen White invited young Magan to come live in her home. Sutherland
visited there frequently; and, as the coming years revealed, both young
men learned an immense amount.
Although
two years younger than Edward, Percy had a deeper walk with the Lord and
he led his friend into a similar experience. Percy also taught Edward
about work. While Sutherland liked baseball, Percy preferred to help out
wherever he was needed. He worked in the kitchen and learned to cook. In
the machine shop, he became proficient with tools. Gradually, Edward
recognized that Percy was right when he said that the only useful
activity was that which helped people.
Edward graduated in 1890; and, with
his wife Sally, left to head an academy in Minnesota. Meanwhile Percy
did something that, within the coming months, would make him famous
throughout the denomination. In 1889, he went with S.N. Haskell,
secretary of the Foreign Mission Board, on a journey around the world to
check on the possibility of opening new mission stations. Throughout the
journey, Magan wrote 49 extremely interesting articles on their travels;
these were printed in installments in the Youths Instructor
(January 1890 to July 1891).
By
1890, Magan had been appointed associate secretary of the Foreign
Mission Board; and, the next year, he was head of the Bible and History
Departments at Battle Creek College (1891-1901).
THE
BLUEPRINT AT WALLA WALLA
Meanwhile,
in 1892, Sutherland became head of Walla Walla College. Soon after, he
managed to make it the first Adventist institution to serve only
vegetarian food in the cafeteria. More on that soon.
Unfortunately,
the men in charge had been so pressed by finances that, although the
school originally had 120 acres, parcel after parcel was sold
off--until only a small portion of the original acreage
remained. This had occurred before the Sutherlands arrived in the West
to take over the college. Ed Sutherland recognized that the old
mistakes of Battle Creek were being reenacted here at Walla Walla. When
Ellen White, in Australia, heard that most of the land at Walla Walla
had been sold off, she wept again. You will find, in this book, that she
wept many times.
Sutherland
set to work to educate the new faculty into Spirit of Prophecy
principles; and--for the first time--an entire faculty heartily took
hold of them. When farmers who had purchased some of those parcels found
they could not pay for them, Sutherland purchased them back. Before
long, he bought back 80 acres; and Mr. Huddleston, the farm manager,
could begin developing the gardens, orchards, and fields.
Soon
the teachers were working part time with the students in industrial
labor or on the school farm. They taught practical and vocational
instruction as part of the curriculum.
Sutherland
would get up at 5 a.m. each morning to handle his end of the crosscut
saw, with a student as his partner. A great deal of wood had to be cut
to supply the needs of the institution, and Sutherland did his full
share of the work. He demonstrated one of his firm principles--that all
teachers and all students should spend some time every day working
together at productive manual labor.
He
said that Ellen White had earlier told him that, if the youth can have
but a one-sided education, a knowledge of the sciences or a knowledge of
labor for practical life, let it be the latter.
While
still at Walla Walla, he got the school to stop serving meat in the
cafeteria.
Classes at Walla
Walla College began in December 1892. While Prescott added the
presidency of the new school to those he already carried at Battle Creek
and Union, direction was really in the hands of E.A. Sutherland,
principal. A man of strong convictions, Sutherland convened his
faculty for a week or more prior to opening day in order that its
members might jointly study Ellen Whites counsels on education. From
the start, Walla Walla College demonstrated its commitment to health
reform by serving only a lacto-ovo-vegetarian diet; it was the first
Seventh-day Advent school to take this step.--R.W. Schwarz, Light
Bearers to the Remnant, p. 201.
Within two months after the school
opened that first year, the enrollment had increased to 165. The rooms
were occupied as fast as the carpenters finished them. However, there
were only 1,551 Adventists in the Northwest at that time. Nearby
Whitman College had been in operation for 25 years, yet only had about
100 students.
When
the faculty sent a letter to the General Conference, pleading for funds
to solve the problem of the girls and boys dormitories each having
only one shower and bathroom, a letter came back in the mail. When they
opened it, they found inside specific and detailed information on how to
take a bath in a wash basin. So they purchased a pitcher and a basin for
each dormitory room.
DeGRAW
ARRIVES
At
the end of that school year (1893), Sutherland was ordained to the
gospel ministry. Because of its later importance, another event which
occurred that year should be noted. A young lady, M. Bessie DeGraw
(1871-1965), who had just finished a year at Battle Creek College,
arrived on campus. She should have remained to finish her studies at
Battle Creek, but Prescott asked her to journey to Walla Walla to help
at the new college. DeGraw was a woman with a powerful mind and rugged
determination. Rather quickly, Sutherland won her over to the educational
blueprint. For the next 60 years, she worked with the
Sutherlands, to fulfill it.
During the second school year,
courses were offered in cooking, printing, gardening, and dairying.
Students could help earn their tuition by cutting timber in the nearby
mountains, which the school hauled to town and sold.
Sutherland,
officially promoted to the presidency in the schools second year of
operation, was not a believer in traditional curricula or degrees.
Instead he launched a short one-year course designed especially to
prepare mature students as effective church employees.--R.W.
Schwarz, Light Bearers to the Remnant, p. 201.
During
the third year, short courses were offered for those who wished to make
a speedy preparation to enter the Lords work.
Sutherland
attributed the financial, educational, and spiritual progress to a
faculty devoted to the light given through Ellen White. They diligently
studied articles on education coming from Australia, especially during
1895-1896. For this purpose, they often studied together in groups. They
read with deep interest about what was happening at Avondale School in
Australia, where Ellen White was living, which was operating on
blueprint principles. They recognized that finding and knowing the
truth, without prompt and willing obedience could be a snare instead of
a blessing--and they pledged to follow the light, wherever it might
lead them.
SUTHERLAND
AND MAGAN AT
BATTLE CREEK
In
February 1897, the General Conference Session, assembled at College
View, Nebraska, listened in rapt attention to Sutherlands description
of what had been done at Walla Walla during the four years he had been
there (1893-1897), and of the faculty's continued dedication to the
work.
Before
the Session was over, the delegates voted to call the Sutherlands and
Bessie DeGraw to Battle Creek College. Many of those in Battle Creek
wanted him to institute the changes marked out in the Testimonies.
Percy
Magan had been on the Battle Creek faculty for several years, and the
two men were together again. But now they had a third team member:
Bessie DeGraw. The three of them labored earnestly to fulfill the Spirit
of Prophecy blueprint for the college at Battle Creek. Under their
influence, the school became vegetarian. Encouraging them in their
reforms were A.T. Jones and Dr. J.H. Kellogg.
On
July 27, 1897, Magan was ordained to the ministry in the Tabernacle. His
friend, Sutherland (who had been ordained in 1895), preached the sermon.
Under their leadership, the college
altered its course of study. The curriculum became more flexible,
enabling the students to choose the subjects they desired. On November
1, 1897, the Review carried an announcement from President
Sutherland, offering short courses for mature students,
missionary workers, teachers, bookkeepers, and canvassers. These short
courses were only 12 weeks in length.
In
1898-1899, the college, operating under a new charter, discontinued the
granting of academic degrees. The August issue of the school journal,
the Advocate, included a quotation from a Roman Catholic
pamphlet: The conferring of degrees was originated by a pope. The
announcement was made: The College, under its new organization,
ceases, with this year to grant degrees. Preparation for usefulness in
the cause of Christ will be the subject constantly held before students,
replacing the courses and diplomas of the past.
Beginning
with its second year, the little journal was renamed The Training
School Advocate, and was sent to believers in a wide area.
Sutherland edited the paper, DeGraw assisted, and Magan published it.
But
instead of a new faculty which they could educate into the blueprint,
Sutherland and Magan had a faculty on their hands which were quite
satisfied with the classical methods of earlier years at Battle Creek.
Go to class, teach some Latin, and go home again that afternoon, without
getting ones hands dirty in the garden. It was hard for some to
recognize that the Testimonies were a revelation from God.
MORE
CHANGES AT THE COLLEGE
Another
big problem was the fact that the campus of Battle Creek College only
covered seven acres and could not expand. It was right in town. Both men
recognized that much would be lost if they could not unite physical
effort with mental labor. Ellen White had warned against allowing
students to occupy their leisure hours with frivolous pleasures which
weaken the moral powers.
So,
one Sunday morning, Ed Sutherland held the plow and Magan drove the team
while 225-lb. J.G. Lamson sat on the beam--and the three of them plowed
up the tennis court and turned it into a vegetable garden.
Then friends came forward and donated
money with which to purchase an 80-acre farm. Although it lay at some
distance from the campus, fruit trees, shrubs, and vines were set out on
30 acres; and the remainder was planted with vegetables, legumes, and
root crops that would supply the college with fresh produce. Another
advantage was that the new farm provided employment for students.
In
January 1899, great emphasis was placed on regular missionary work. A
mission was established in Jackson, 40 miles to the east. Eight students
would work there for two to four weeks, treating the sick, ministering
to the needy, and holding meetings in the evening. Homer Salisbury, one
of the faculty members, directed this project. Other students carried on
similar work in Battle Creek.
It
was at about this time that Sutherland came across a poem which he
treasured for years:
Then be content,
poor heart. Gods plans, like lilies pure and white, unfold. We must
not tear the closed shut leaves apart--time will reveal the chalices of
gold.
In October 1900, the Advocate announced
a new book by Sutherland, a 400-page volume published by the Review,
entitled Living Fountains or Broken Cisterns. This
well-researched book traced true and false education from the Garden of
Eden down through history, showing the effects of paganism and
Catholicism which, among other things, brought competition into the
classroom. Although her name did not appear, much of the research and
preparation of the book was done by DeGraw. (Later, she helped S.N.
Haskell on two of his books, The Story of Daniel the Prophet and The
Story of the Seer of Patmos.) Magan also wrote a book (The Perils
of the Republic) and many articles for the Advocate. All
three of them--Sutherland, DeGraw, and Magan--were researchers,
writers, hard workers, and loyal to the Spirit of Prophecy. An excellent
combination!
In
spite of the opposition in the community and among some of the faculty
and students, other students were thrilled at the changes. When Sutherland came to Battle Creek College, it was $100,000 in debt; but
he set to work, and much of it was eliminated. The students alone raised
$6,000. Another source of income came from the sale of Christ's
Object Lessons.
In
1901, Volume 6 of the Testimonies came off the press and
included this passage:
Though in many
respects our institutions of learning have swung into worldly
conformity, though step by step they have advanced toward the world,
they are prisoners of hope. Fate has not so woven its meshes about their
workings that they need to remain helpless and in uncertainty. If they
will listen to His voice and follow in His ways, God will correct and
enlighten them, and bring them back to their upright position of
distinction from the world.
When the advantage
of working upon Christian principles is discerned, when self is hid in
Christ, much greater progress will be made; for each worker will feel
his own human weakness; he will supplicate for the wisdom and grace of
God, and will receive the divine help that is pledged for every
emergency.
Opposing
circumstances should create a firm determination to overcome them. One
barrier broken down will give greater ability and courage to go forward.
Press in the right direction, and make a change, solidly, intelligently.
Then circumstances will be your helpers and not your hindrances. Make a
beginning. The oak is in the acorn.6 Testimonies, p. 145.
THE
NEED TO LEAVE BATTLE CREEK
The
cramped and urban campus at Battle Creek was not well-suited to the
educational concepts of Sutherland and Magan, who wanted a spacious
rural setting like that of the recently founded Avondale College in
Australia. Ellen White had said that agriculture was the ABCs of
Christian education.
At
the Michigan campground in the summer of 1898, Sutherland met Dr. David
Paulson, medical director of Hinsdale Sanitarium, another loyal
supporter of the Spirit of Prophecy counsels. The two men worked
together interviewing the scores of students who wanted to attend Battle
Creek College. Paulson told Sutherland it was a shame that so many
could not attend because the college lacked a farm so they could work
their way through school. Then Paulson said, You should move the
college to a large farm and establish industries where students can earn
their school expense. Sutherland replied that this was the message
they had been getting from Ellen White for years. Cadwallader
describes the incident:
The
two had experienced some depression one day when they met a large number
of youth who wanted a college education, but could not finance it. The
two men discussed the problem, and Dr. Paulson made the suggestion that,
if he were in Sutherlands place, he would establish a school which
would turn away no student who was willing to work. He suggested that
the school ought to own a large tract of land and provide work for
students.--E.M. Cadwallader, A History of Adventist Education.
Arriving
back at Battle Creek, Sutherland told this to Magan, who replied,
Lets do it, Ed. Lets move the college out of Battle Creek!
Writing
25 years later, Magan tells us there was also another reason for moving
the college out of Battle Creek:
Another reason for
taking the Battle Creek College out of Battle Creek was to get away from
the worldly influences which it was very clear to some of us that J.H.
Kellogg was bringing in. At the time we moved the school, approximately
one-half of our students were working for their expenses in the Battle
Creek Sanitarium, and the doctor held a sword of Damocles over us
that made it impossible to remain in Battle Creek and carry out the
simple lines of education which we were anxious to inculcate. This was
an important reason for getting out of Battle Creek.
We said little
about it at the time because we were anxious to have Dr. Kellogg buy the
property, and we were in no position to antagonize him; but felt sure
that he was determined in time to have the Battle Creek College a more
or less worldly concern, granting degrees, and catering to worldly
ideas, customs, and practices. The end result is that our fears have all
been justified . .
Sutherland and I
saw this coming. We knew we were in no position to stop it, but we were
determined to make a break in such a way that the doctor could not get
at us, and that the denomination would have its school in the Lake
District separate and distinct from his plans and machinations. In this
we succeeded.--P.T. Magan, letter to Warren Howell, January 13,
1926.
Fortunately,
the tightly knit group of four leaders were ready for the crisis.
What were those
like who had fought for the move? Sutherland[s] . . friends found him
patient and stubborn. He loved children and wanted them all to be
saved . .
Magan, a homely
Irishman, delighted all with his brogue and humor . . Understanding the
students and sympathetic with their problems, he often invited them to
seek him for counsel after the Friday evening meetings. He had the
talent of associating agreeably with people in all levels of society.
M. Bessie DeGraw
was always on duty. Tall, bright-eyed, and healthy in a time of
poor physical health, she dressed fastidiously. Acquaintances considered
her brilliant, fluent, sincere, and somewhat mystical . .
Another strong
personality was Mrs. Nellie Rankin Druillard . . Everyone banked on her
business deals because of her ability to make uncanny financial
investments.--Emmett K. Vande Vere, The Wisdom Seekers, pp.
104-105.
More
about Nellie Druillard later.
ELLEN
WHITE ENDORSES THE MOVE
The
biennial Session of the General Conference convened in Battle Creek in
1901; and Ellen White, who had returned the previous year to the States
from Australia, was in attendance.
During
the Session, one morning at five, Magan was awakened and told to go at
once to Ellen Whites room.
She asked him if he
remembered when he and Professor Sutherland had through correspondence
discussed the moving of the college out of Battle Creek. I told you
at the time, she said, not to do it. Now I am ready to tell you to
do it. What we will do with the old plant I do not know.
I think possibly we
may be able to sell it to the sanitarium. I do not think even then that
we will be able to realize enough to pay off anything on the principal.
Perhaps we will get enough to pay its debts. We will have to go out
single-handed--empty-handed. It is time to get out now, for great
things will soon be happening in Battle Creek. Merlin Neff,
For God and CME, p. 70.
God wants the
school to be taken out of Battle Creek. Let us take away the excuse
which has been made for families to come into Battle Creek . .
Some may be stirred
about the transfer of the school from Battle Creek. But they need not
be. This move is in accordance with Gods design for the school before
the institution was established.--EGW, General Conference Daily
Bulletin, 1901, p. 216.
She
had been forewarned that a great crisis was headed toward Battle Creek.
As you know, the years 1902 through 1908 would be difficult ones. First,
the pantheism crisis; then the Ballenger crisis; and then the final
split between Kellogg and leadership, when large numbers in town chose
one side or the other. Many workers were deeply shaken by the ongoing
controversies.
COLLEGE
MOVED TO BERRIEN SPRINGS
In
one of the meetings at the 1901 Session, Ellen White told the delegates
that a good start had been made at Battle Creek College, but they should
now move the school out onto a farm and complete the blueprint. At the
close of her talk, the delegates met and voted to do just that! They
authorized the College Board to move the college to a place which
Sutherland should locate.
The
Battle Creek property was sold to the Sanitarium and Dr. Kellogg later
used it as part of his American Medical Missionary College (which was
lost to the denomination in 1907 and permanently closed in 1910).
Before
anyone could change their minds, Sutherland and Magan arranged with
the railroad for 16 freight cars to haul everything 90 miles south to a
location they had found on 272 acres, which had been purchased for about
$18,000 near Berrien Springs, Michigan. It was named Emmanuel Missionary
College. (For details on the finding of the location, see History of
the Great Second Advent Movement, Lesson 18, pp. 7-8.)
They
recognized that the educational blueprint called for a country location,
plenty of fertile land, teachers and students working together--as the
students learned how to support themselves so they can leave to do
successful missionary work.
Among
other subjects, they also knew that the Word of God had to be studied in
the classroom, so the students would become grounded and gain a deep
experience in the things of God.
During
the summer of 1901, a denomination-wide summer school for about 150
active and prospective church schoolteachers was held in tents beside
the river on the new school site.
The
selection of a site for an institution is always important. The original
plan was to locate the main buildings on Whites Point, overlooking
the river. Acreage around it was initially cleared for this purpose. But
plans suddenly changed.
Two unforeseen
problems suddenly altered the early plans--the shortage of safe water
and the scarcity of money. They could not obtain good, usable water for
a reasonable cost at Whites Point, with the result that they finally
placed the principal building back from the bluff on the flatlands by
the Garland house. The change in plans placed the institution on a site
that would allow later expansion.--E.K. Vande Vere, The Wisdom
Seekers, p. 105.
EMMANUEL MISSIONARY COLLEGE
BERRIEN SPRINGS SCHOOL
BEGINS
During
the regular 1901-1902 term, while the new campus was being developed,
the school was held in the former county courthouse, the sheriffs
home and jail, an office building, and a summer hotel. Enrollment
reached 100.
Part
of the plan was that, when enrollment reached 250, a new college would
be started somewhere else. A late spring issue of their paper, the Advocate,
said this:
By 1902 a true
concept of a correct college plant had evolved in
Sutherlands mind. We want our building, he wrote, to be
simple and small . . for that is the kind of buildings our students will
find in the mission fields. There must be no large and handsome main
building, nor must the buildings be erected on the quadrangular plan,
but on a meandering line in order to get plenty of fresh air and
sunshine. Furthermore, such an arrangement will discourage the growth of
pride and institutional spirit. Advocate, May 1902.
With
the help of student labor, four frame buildings were erected. Sutherland
purposely kept them plain in appearance. A.S. Baird, an experienced
builder had arrived from Nebraska and taught the students how to build
homes.
In such a place as
Berrien Springs the school can be made an object lesson, and I hope that
no one will interpose to prevent the carrying forward of the work.--EGW
to managers of the Review office, July 12, 1901.
Ownership
of the college was transferred from the General Conference to the newly
established Lake Union Conference. Magan continued to supervise the
rapid development of the school while Sutherland made many fund-raising
trips. One of his goals was to make the new school self-supporting.
To
encourage self-government and a good group spirit, faculty and students
assembled weekly for frank discussion of college problems of all kinds.
Spirituality and evangelistic fervor pervaded
the campus. Since many students worked all day long, much of the
instruction was given in the evening.
One
unusual feature started by Sutherland was having each student work on
only one subject each of the three terms in the nine-month school year.
(It should be mentioned that, many years later, a similar program was
started at the University of Chicago in the mid-twentieth century with
outstanding success. Recent secular educational research has disclosed
that students learn far more by studying only one or two subjects at a
time than by taking five or six per term, attending 50-minute classes in
each of these, and then rushing to a different class for another
subject.) Later, Sutherland changed this to three classes at a time.
With this plan,
they reasoned, a student at the end of nine months (three terms) could
receive certificates or credits from three or four courses as
before, but if he had attended only one term, he would have gotten a
complete course rather than merely a third of one.--E.K. Vande
Vere, The Wisdom Seekers, p. 110.
When
the General Conference formed the Department of Education in 1902, Ed
Sutherland was one of the three men placed in charge of it. In addition,
he led out in a central training school for church schoolteachers; and,
with DeGraw, provided the first elementary textbooks.
In some
respects, one of the most radical reforms was the textbooks. Instead of
pagan sentiments and quotations, worthwhile books were produced, among
which the Bible occupied first place.
Every subject
will be presented from the standpoint of the Bible and with a view
to preparing the student for actual [missionary] field work in the
shortest time, promised the Calendar.--E.K. Vande Vere,
The Wisdom Seekers, p. 110.
Enemies
soon circulated the rumor that the Bible was the only textbook. But that
was not true. Other books were also used; yet all of them were in
agreement with the Bible. During the 1900 summer school at Battle Creek,
a book committee was appointed to prepare suitable textbooks.
Between 1900 and 1904, Sutherland and
DeGraw authored a set of readers, The Bible Readers, and the
book, Mental Arithmetic.
Mental
Arithmetic was
unlike any math book anywhere at the time. It was immensely practical
and contained problems about the bones of the body, the difference in
cost between beans and beefsteak, distances in the Holy Land, Old
Testament chronology, building a schoolhouse, making a canvassers
report, and figuring up ones tithe.
According
to one of our official history textbooks, the first normal
(teacher-training) school in our denomination was at Berrien Springs in
1902 (Lessons in Denominational History, p. 184).
OPPOSITION
GROWS AT BERRIEN SPRINGS
By
1904, a low-level earthquake was in progress in Battle Creek, as the
controversy between Dr. Kellogg and the General Conference deepened. But
another one was rumbling in Berrien Springs. Sutherland and Magan had a
divided faculty on their hands. Many missed the comforts of Battle Creek
and disliked all the strange innovations at the new school. Lastly, they
did not like the emphasis on the Word of God as the central authority in
all lines of study. It bothered some people to have the Inspired
Writings considered more important than the words of men. It still does.
When
it was recommended by the college board that Prescott replace
Sutherland, because he was young and inexperienced, Magan and
Ellen White came to his defense.
MORE
INFORMATION ABOUT THE SCHOOL
Sutherland
remained in charge, and the teachers and students more fully united
their efforts to farm and to build. Teaching was done for half the day,
and the other half was spent in working with the students.
Emmanuel
Missionary College shattered the bands that bound the denominational
schools to popular education.
You
might inquire, What was the purpose of these blueprint schools?
They were instituted to quickly train workers to go out and share the
three angels message of Revelation 14:6-12, the message of obedience
to the laws of God, by the enabling grace of Jesus Christ--which is the
message given to the remnant (Revelation 12:17). Teachers and students
believed that the end of the world was near, and people must be warned.
Do we believe this today?
Although
some may say, He delayeth His coming, the faithful are to believe
and work; work and believe.
When
the school opened in the fall of 1893, there were about 300 persons
living on the campus. Three large homes, each with 7 to 9 rooms, had
been completed. The Manual Arts building had been erected the year
before, and its basement used for the kitchen and dining room. The
second story housed the college store and carpenter shop. The Domestic
Arts building, just finished, housed the college girls in the attic. The
college boys were located here and there in various attics and corners
of other buildings.
Sutherland
and Magan had determined that they would build no faster than they had
the funds in hand. They would not repeat the Battle Creek College debt
(which they had not been responsible for). Yet they must have textbooks;
so Sutherland, Magan, and DeGraw each personally borrowed $600 and used
it to print the textbooks.
THE
OPPOSITION INTENSIFIES
In
1903, both the General Conference and Review moved to Washington, D.C.;
and Percy Magans wife, Ida, became ill that spring. The continual
opposition heaped on Sutherland and her husband, Percy, grieved and
crushed her. On May 19, Ida Magan passed to her rest.
A few
days after Idas death, Ellen White spoke in the college church,
praised Idas faithfulness, and said she died because of the cruel
criticism directed at Magan and Sutherland. It has cost the life of a
wife and a mother.
Another
death also occurred that year. Alvan and Aunt Nell Druillard had
just returned from missionary work in Africa. He died on December 29. We
mention this because Nellie Druillard (1844-1938) would later figure as
a key worker.
By
this time, a number of church leaders were determined to get rid of
Sutherland and Magan. Meanwhile, the two men had been discussing the
situation for several months; and, learning that the Lake Union spring
session would be held on the campus of EMC, they decided to resign at
that time.
When,
at the session, it was seen that the implacable spirit had not
diminished, they turned in their resignations. They had no anger and
knew they had done right in upholding Spirit of Prophecy standards.
PREPARING
TO START AGAIN
For
years, both men had been interested in the Southern States, still
handicapped by the crushing defeat in the War between the States. Now
Mother White suggested that they go south.
It
had been revealed to Ellen White that the blueprint could be fulfilled
by independent ministries which, although fully faithful to our historic
beliefs, were not controlled by the denomination.
In
Part Two of this book, we will continue this story as Sutherland and
Magan journeyed south. After that, in Part Two, we will look at one
final attempt by Ellen White to fulfill another phase of the blueprint
in a denominational institution.
With
Ellen Whites encouragement, Sutherland and Magan were determined to
perfect a blueprint educational missionary school in the South.
Meanwhile, out on the West Coast, an effort would be made by Ellen White
to start a blueprint medical missionary school.
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