< Prev 1 2 3 4 5
"Ellen White's Contradictions on Jewelry"
Update: January 4, 2006
Dirk Anderson kindly forwarded us a reply from Sidney Cleveland
regarding our discovery of his doctored photograph:
By the way, I did not trust the [James White Library at Andrews
University] to mail the photos to me, I personally stood at the
counter, looked through the files and requested they make copies of the
pertinent photographs on their copy machine. I did not "doctor"
any of the photographs (period, exclamation point, et cetera
-- it's the SDAs who "doctor" their photos!).—"Re: Jewelry and EGW," August 27, 2005, bold added.
|
Pretty emphatic, isn't he? And yet Sidney went on to say:
You will see in some of of the photos published in White-Washed
an inhancement [sic.] of the image (i.e. increasing/decreasing the contrast
or exposure) in order to make a particular portion of the photo
subject more visible. For example, the original photo shown
on page 203 of White-Washed clearly showed the silver/gold chain
on EGW's chest -- but the screening process used to reproduce
that picture required increasing the contrast to make the jewelry
more visible (as you know, 2d and 3rd generation photo copies
tend to block up and obscure details . . .).—Ibid., bold added.
|
As we have shown by comparing Sidney's picture with
the original, he apparently purposely adjusted the contrast of a little portion of the picture, a
portion in the shape of a chain, just where he wanted a gold chain to appear. He did not adjust the
contrast of the entire picture equally. That's even more apparent when one compares the
picture his book
now uses with Dirk's old copy of what his book used to use.
Unfortunately, when Sidney thus selectively adjusted the contrast, he
ended up drawing the chain on a part of Ellen White's dress where it wasn't supposed to be.
Thus we are left with an odd situation: Sidney admits that he did doctor the picture, but
at the same time he assures us that he did no such thing.
Next Sidney says that what we call "the original":
. . . (which didn't show the chain) was one of
the photos that the [Review and Herald Publishing Association]
retouched and subsequently published.—Ibid.
|
Of course that can't possibly be true. What we call the original is the
photgraph available through the
White Estate's web site, a photgraph that appears to never have been printed. And we also have called the
original the one that appears in
Spirit of Prophecy Treasure Chest, the very picture the current edition of Sidney's book "plagiarizes."
And both these examples of the original clearly show that Ellen White was wearing a pocket watch
attached to a chain made of gold, silver, brass, leather, or hemp.
At any rate, it is now far past time for both Sidney and Dirk to inform their readership that:
- Ellen White was wearing a pocket watch.
- She never condemned the wearing of pocket watches as contrary
to the Bible's counsel against jewelry.
- Sidney and Dirk mistakenly used a picture in their accusation in which
Sidney had purposely drawn the chain on the dress by selectively
adjusting the contrast.
< Prev 1 2 3 4 5
|