The false teaching of the "Investigative Judgement" is nothing more than a cover up for the false prediction of William Miller's false claim of Jesus returning on October 22, 1844 AKA "The Great Disappointment", wave the magic wand and poof the false prediction is now the "Investigative Judgement" cover up, the Millerite movement was out and the name 7th Day Adventist was shortly born thereafter
Ellen G. White claimed to have over 2,000 dreams and visions from God?
Sunday Observance Is The Mark Of The Beast?
Soul Sleep Upon The Wickeds Death, In Denial Of A Literal Hell Fire?
The Doctrine Of (The Investigative Judgement) Was Created in 1844 After The Second Coming Prediction Failed In (The Great Disappointment)?
Ellen G White And Her Husband James Are Buried Under The Occultic Freemasonry Egyptian Obelisk?
Wikipedia: The Great Disappointment in the
Millerite movement was the reaction that followed
Baptist preacher
William Miller's proclamation that
Jesus Christ would return to the Earth by 1844, which he called the
Second Advent. His study of the
Daniel 8 prophecy during the
Second Great Awakening led him to conclude that Daniel's "cleansing of the sanctuary" was cleansing the world from sin when Christ would come, and he and many others prepared. When Jesus did not appear by October 22, 1844, Miller and his followers were disappointed.
[1][2][3][4]
These events paved the way for the
Adventists who formed the
Seventh-day Adventist Church. They contended that what had happened on October 22 was not Jesus's return, as Miller had thought, but the start of Jesus's final work of atonement, the cleansing in the
heavenly sanctuary, leading up to the
Second Coming.
Wikipedia: The investigative judgment, or
pre-Advent Judgment (or, more precisely, the
pre-Second Advent Judgment), is a unique
Seventh-day Adventist doctrine which asserts that the divine judgment of professed
Christians has been in progress since 1844. It is intimately related to the
history of the Seventh-day Adventist Church and was described by one of the church's pioneers
Ellen G. White as one of the
pillars of Adventist belief.
[1][2] It is a major component of the broader Adventist understanding of the "
heavenly sanctuary", and the two are sometimes spoken of interchangeably.