Appendix
Personal Experiences of Ellen G. White as a Welfare Worker
[.WM 321.1
.WM 321.2
.WM 321.3
]WM 321.4
E. G. White Instructed to Set an Example.—After my marriage I was instructed that I must show a special interest in motherless and fatherless children, taking some under my own charge for a time, and then finding homes for them. Thus I would be giving others an example of what they could do.WM 321.5
Although called to travel often, and having much writing to do, I have taken children of three and five years of age, and have cared for them, educated them, and trained them for responsible positions. I have taken into my home from time to time boys from ten to sixteen years of age, giving them motherly care and a training for service. [.WM 321.6
] I have felt it my duty to bring before our people that work for which those in every church should feel a responsibility.
While in Australia I carried on this same line of work, taking into my home orphan children, who were in danger of being exposed to temptations that might cause the loss of their souls.—The Review and Herald, July 26, 1906.WM 322.1