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The Truth About The White Lie - Contents
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    Did some of Ellen White’s literary assistants turn against her and criticize her? 4The White Lie, pp. 116, 201, 202.

    The one literary assistant to criticize Ellen White was Fannie Bolton. All of the known documents and letters relating to her experience with Ellen White are now published as The Fannie Bolton Story: A Collection of Source Documents.TAWL 11.11

    Ellen White was concerned about Miss Bolton’s spiritual immaturity from the first time she employed her. In the course of her employment, her experience was very unstable. Fannie criticized Mrs. White, then, on more than a dozen occasions, wrote out “confessions” of her wrong course. Yet, through all this, Mrs. White’s patience was so great that she continued to employ Fannie through many of these cycles of criticism and confession, and on the occasions when she did dismiss her from employment, she hired her again. In the end, Fannie left Mrs. White’s employment by her own choice.TAWL 11.12

    The allegation that Mrs. White was also criticized by Mary Clough, another of her literary assistants, has no foundation in contemporary documents, but is based only on a memory statement of G. B. Starr recorded many years later. Mary Clough was a niece of Ellen White, but she was not a Seventh-day Adventist. She was separated from Ellen White’s work not because of any criticism, but because she chose not to abide by the standards of the home in Sabbath observance.TAWL 11.13