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Is it true that Le Roy Froom changed Ellen White’s writings and “introduced” the doctrine of the Trinity?

Is it true that Le Roy Froom changed Ellen White’s writings and “introduced” the doctrine of the Trinity?

Church 1 min read updated 10 May 2026

In some circles, a conspiracy theory is widespread: Le Roy Froom, a twentieth-century Adventist theologian, supposedly “inserted” the doctrine of the Trinity into Ellen White’s writings and manipulated church documents. But what do the actual documents and research say?

What Le Roy Froom actually did

Le Roy Froom (1890–1974) was an Adventist researcher and theologian, author of the monumental four-volume set “The Prophetic Faith of Our Fathers.” He was engaged in the systematization of Adventist theology and participated in the publication of the book “Questions on Doctrine” (1957). This book stirred controversy — but over its position on the nature of Christ, not because of any “insertion of the Trinity.”

White’s Trinitarian theology — in the original texts

Ellen White’s texts containing clearly Trinitarian statements are present in the original publications — long before Froom:

“The Holy Spirit is the third person of the Godhead, equal with the Father and the Son.” — The Desire of Ages (1898), ch. 73

The 1898 edition of The Desire of Ages is available in the original. There is no evidence whatsoever of manipulation of White’s original text.

About Freemasonry and conspiracy theories

Claims about Froom’s Freemasonry have no documentary support whatsoever. This is a classic tactic of discrediting through unverified labels.

Practical meaning

  • The Adventist Trinitarian position is grounded in Scripture, not in human manipulation.
  • Conspiracy-theory versions require careful source verification—not simply reposting from non-Trinitarian websites.
  • If you have doubts, look for the original documents at egwwritings.org.

The doctrine of the Trinity emerged in Adventism through deeper study of Scripture, not through manipulation. This version is documented—the conspiracy-theory version is not.

The mission of the Seventh-day Adventist Church is to convey the message of God's great love for every person, leading them to accept Jesus as their personal Savior, which in turn motivates every believer to make changes in their own lives and serve God and their neighbors.

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