whether egw claimed that god revealed to her the origins of our world in a dream or vision each time she wrote or spoke about it is irrelevant…from a consideration of just Patriarchs and Prophets, easily her seminal work on origins, it is clear that divine revelation as a source of information is a legitimate inference…in the first place, the preface by uriah smith contained in the definitive 1958 edition, which focuses on spiritual gifts and, in particular, the gift of prophecy, leaves very little doubt that our pioneer church considered Patriarchs and Prophets a product of divine revelation, even if there are found in it instances of unattributed borrowing from contemporary authors…
in the second place, egw’s own introduction, contained in the 1950 edition of Great Controversy, which follows closely her final copyrighted 1911 version, also focuses on the spiritual gift of prophecy…given that Great Controversy is the final entry in the Conflict of the Ages series, of which Patriarchs and Prophets is the initial entry, it is legitimate to infer that egw also considered Patriarchs and Prophets a product of divine revelation…
but in the third, most important, place, the language used throughout Patriarchs and Prophets doesn’t nurture doubt as to whether egw is claiming eye witness credibility in her descriptions, from which it is legitimate to infer supernatural vision and dream input, for instance:
“As man came forth from the hand of his Creator, he was of lofty stature and perfect symmetry. His countenance bore the ruddy tint of health and glowed with the light of life and joy. Adam’s height was much greater than that of men who now inhabit the earth. Eve was somewhat less in stature; yet her form was noble, and full of beauty. The sinless pair wore no artificial garments; they were clothed with a covering of light and glory, such as the angels wear.” PP:45.
given the rarity and value of divine revelation, particularly subsequent to apostolic times, it is foolish to not quote ellen white on the subject of origins…she is not, as scientists do, constructing a meta narrative from an interpretation of evidence resting on necessary assumptions…clearly she’s reporting what she was shown…her account is virtually the equivalent of video footage which, had it existed, would entirely remove the subject of origins from the quagmire of conflicting and ever-evolving conjecture in which it is currently, and for the foreseeable future, situated…
in general, i have to say that i find approaches to origins that veer from the biblico-egw account quite unconvincing…this is because important unprovable assumptions that directly affect conclusions are never acknowledged…in this article, for instance, we are told to believe that zealandia completed a split from australia 65 million yrs ago - other references tell us that zealandia and australia completed a split from antarctica 85 million yrs ago - on the basis of a reference to reconstructions of the cenozoic history of the australia-new zealand-south pacific sector of antarctica by steven cande and joann stock…but does anyone for even one moment believe that these scientists aren’t assuming that the observable tectonics and sedimentation rates of today can be legitimately used to come up with definitive time frames of the past…it goes without saying that if today’s plate tectonics rate, for instance, of between 2 and 18 cm per yr reflects an invariable standard, that the ocean floors and mountain ranges we now observe would have taken 100 million yrs, and more, to form…but what if that rate doesn’t reflect what existed in the past…what if a much greater rate was the reality during an earth-altering flood, during which egw informs us that earth’s topography, including plains and mountain ranges, was existentially transformed in proportion to the evil of local human inhabitants, PP:108…
in fact creation scientists have proposed just such a scenario, which they dub “catastrophic plate tectonics”…an example is Catastrophic Plate Tectonics: A Global Flood Model of Earth History, by Steven A. Austin, Ph.D., John R. Baumgardner, Ph.D., Andrew A. Snelling, Ph.D., Larry Vardiman, Ph.D., and Kurt P. Wise, Ph.D…it is hardly necessary to think that deep time is required to explain empirical evidence, or that nature identifies events during a so-called 4.5 billion yr gap between Genesis 1:1 and Genesis 1:2…nature is identifying nothing…it is scientists who are identifying a history that either takes into account the biblical narrative or not…here is the entire substance of the difference between evolutionists and creation scientists…