Danny Whatley was on top of the world — and not just because he worked as a bush pilot in the U.S. state of Alaska.
Danny owned a thriving tour company that offered private hunting trips to the world’s movers and shakers. Clients included Citibank’s president and the Rockefeller family.
“I wanted to be in the elite”, Danny said. “I did not want to be a regular person. I loved those people”.
But then he received a copy of “The Great Controversy”. Danny had dated a former Adventist and through her started playing basketball and volleyball at the Adventist church in his hometown, Palmer. A church member gave him the book.
Danny took the book with him on his next bush trip and read how the seventh-day Sabbath was changed to Sunday. He had never heard of author Ellen G. White, but he instantly felt convicted that this was truth.
Back in Palmer, Danny was preparing for the hunting season when church members invited him to an evangelistic series. The opening presentation about the Daniel 2 prophecy captivated him.
“I was hooked right away”, he said. “People who say evangelism doesn’t work have never been on the receiving end of an evangelism series”.
The next night Danny brought his father.
When the preacher, Vern Snow, spoke about baptism one night, a battle broke out in Danny’s mind. He didn’t want to lose clients because of the Sabbath.
“The battle went for the whole meeting”, Danny said. “At the end, I had to make a decision. I went to Vern and said, ‘I want to be baptized.’“
At that moment he surrendered everything, including his business, to Jesus.
“I was a hunting guy who could do it all on my own, and now I realized that I could not do it all on my own”, he said.
At the baptism, the pastor declared, “Here is a trophy hunter who is now a hunter of souls”.
Danny’s father and stepmother were baptized the following Sabbath. Other people also have joined the church through Danny’s influence.
At work, Danny told clients that they could no longer hunt on Saturdays. Instead, he said, they could enjoy the day in nature at no cost. With trips costing 1,500 a day, clients happily embraced the new pricing plan.
Two years later, Danny sold his flourishing business. He also lost his desire to be in the elite.
“I had wanted to travel like them”, said Danny (pictured left), today a successful serial entrepreneur. “But now I go on mission trips, which are much better”.