## Resume of Apostasy **George A. Irwin** served as General Conference President from 1897 to 1901 — the administration that immediately preceded both the 1901 Battle Creek reform session and the 1904 corporate incorporation. His tenure is a hinge point in the apostasy: the last GC president to serve before Ellen White publicly repudiated the General Conference's claim to speak as the voice of God. ## Career Timeline | Year | Position / Action | |------|------------------| | 1843 | Born Illinois | | 1860s–1880s | Entered Adventist ministry; conference leadership development | | 1880s–1890s | General Conference field work and executive service | | **1897** | **Elected General Conference President** | | **1901** | **1901 Battle Creek GC Session** — EGW declares GC committee "not the voice of God" (GCB April 3, 1901); Irwin replaced by A.G. Daniells | | 1901–1904 | Continued in lower GC roles under Daniells administration | | **April 15, 1904** | **Daniells signs Articles of Incorporation** — the "new organization" EGW warned against; Irwin's successor system does what Irwin's era never dared | | 1925 | Died | ## The 1901 Indictment and Transfer of Power At the **April 3, 1901 General Conference Session** in Battle Creek, Ellen White delivered the most severe public rebuke of GC leadership in Adventist history — delivering it while George Irwin was still technically the outgoing president: > *"That these men should stand in a sacred place, to be as the voice of God to the people, as we once believed the General Conference to be — that is past. What we want now is a reorganization. We want to begin at the foundation, and to build upon a different principle."* > — Ellen G. White, GCB April 3, 1901, par. 25 This statement was directed at the GC Executive Committee and its accumulated power structure — the structure Irwin had led and administered. Three years later, Irwin's successor Daniells did not build "upon a different principle." He incorporated the same power structure under federal law. ## The Handoff to Daniells When Irwin departed the GC presidency in 1901, he handed the administration to **Arthur Grosvenor Daniells** — who would then: - Preside over the 1904 incorporation of the General Conference Corporation of Seventh-day Adventists - Ignore EGW's repeated warnings against the "new organization" - Build on the centralized power base Irwin's administration had cultivated Irwin's presidency was not characterized by the explicit apostasy of 1904 — he did not sign the Articles of Incorporation. But his administration established the **centralized GC power structure** that made 1904 possible. ## The EGW Warning During His Watch Ellen White's January 1902 letter (written just after Irwin's term ended) stated in unmistakable terms: > *"The Lord has a controversy with His people. He is not pleased with the way in which matters have been managed at Battle Creek."* The "matters managed at Battle Creek" referred directly to the executive overreach that had developed under Irwin's administration and would reach its logical conclusion in the April 15, 1904 incorporation. ## Verdict George A. Irwin was not a signatory to the 1904 Articles of Incorporation. But he presided over the administration that made 1904 inevitable — nurturing the centralized GC bureaucracy, building the executive machinery, and then handing those keys to Daniells. He was present for the **1901 rebuke** that should have reversed course. It did not. **He governed the structure EGW condemned. Daniells incorporated it. The apostasy was a team project.** --- *Sources: GCB April 3, 1901 — Ellen White | 1905 SDA Yearbook pp. 135–149 | Selected Messages Book 1, p. 204 | Pioneer biography files*