Foreword
- Foreword
- Preface
- Did Ellen White Contradict Herself?
- The Betrayal of the Negro: 1895-1910
- “The Southern Field Is Closing!”
- The Age of Booker T. Washington
- Crisis in Mississippi
- Quietly at Work for the Negro
- “We Have Been Eating of the Large Loaf”
- Why Did We Choose Nashville?
- Ellen White on Racial Equality
- Conclusions
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Foreword
Ronald Graybill has placed certain statements by Ellen G. White on race relations, which have been misunderstood, in their correct historical setting, and conclusively demonstrated their true meaning in terms of the situation that called them forth. In so doing he has performed a most valuable service for the church, by removing the cause of misinterpretation—ignorance of historical context.EGWCRR 6.1
This important work could form the basis for a completely new approach to race relations in the church. The source materials he has used set the record straight beyond doubt or question. I have read the manuscript twice, and believe you will agree with me that this book should have been written thirty years ago.EGWCRR 6.2
E. E. CLEVELAND
Associate Secretary
Ministerial Association of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists