SLAVERY, THE CIVIL WAR AND VISIONS
In January of 1861, James and Ellen White were invited to attend the dedication of the first organized Sabbatarian Adventist Church in Parkville Michigan. Ellen White spoke during the service and moments after she sat down she received a vision which lasted about 20 minutes.
After the vision had ended she shared what she had seen with those present. “There is not a person in this house who has even dreamed of the trouble that is coming upon this land. People are making sport of the secession ordinance of South Carolina but I have just been shown that a large number of states are going to join that state and there will be a most terrible war”
On the 20th of December 1860, South Carolina had seceded from the Union and was followed by Mississippi, Florida, and Alabama on the 9th, 10th and 11th of January. Ellen White along with everyone else in the room was fully aware of the secession of South Carolina, however, she may not have been aware of the secession of the other three states in the three days immediately prior to her vision.
Regardless of that, the war didn’t begin until April of 1861 when the Confederate forces fired on Fort Sumter at Charleston, South Carolina. Most American Historians would generally agree that at the time that Ellen White received her vision the general consensus in the North was that the country would most likely avoid a Civil War or in the unlikely event that one should break upon them, that it would be short-lived.
However, neither of these sentiments proved to be true. Three months to the day prior to the outbreak of the war, Ellen White received her vision regarding it and was given a number of predictions regarding what was to take place. In addition to being told plainly that there would be a war, she was shown that it would be a long war with large armies on both sides and significant casualties. She was also shown that parents sitting in the audience on the day of her vision in Parkville would lose sons in the war. It was a somber message for all those present to take in and digest.
A year later, when John Loughborough visited Parkville all three of Ellen White’s predictions had been fulfilled. Not only was there a war but it had turned into a long and bloody affair with terrible casualties on both sides. Among the casualties was the only son of one of the men who had sat in the congregation listening to Ellen White share her vision. He was not the only one. Loughborough records that there were at least four other families who had been present that day that suffered a similar fate.