Having left the
Seventh-day Adventist Church, Dudley and his family briefly considered joining the
Methodist Church, but finally settled upon the
Baptist Church. On March 5, 1887, he, his wife and their daughter Veva (Genevieve) were accepted into the Otsego Baptist Church. On the 17th he was given a license to preach, and two days later was ordained and made the Church's salaried pastor. He remained in this position until 1889. In September 1890, Dudley and his family left Otsego, moving to
Grand Rapids, Michigan. There, he became Pastor Emeritus of the Berean Baptist Church, an office he held for only a year. During his time as pastor of these churches, he occupied himself in writing his 413-page critique,
Seventh-day Adventism Renounced, which was published in 1889. In 1915, he and his brother Jasper attended the funeral of
Ellen G. White, during which he reportedly exclaimed, "There is a noble Christian woman gone!" In March 1916, Canright accompanied an old Adventist friend, J.H. Morrison, to a church workers' meeting in Battle Creek. Afterward, they went to Morrison's house. Following that visit, Canright walked to the local Baptist church, where he had a key to the basement. Unaware that extensive remodeling had taken place, and arriving at the church after dark, Canright fell through an open hole into the basement, broke his leg, and remained there for two days. He was taken to the local hospital, and then to the
Battle Creek Sanitarium, where his leg was amputated. He spent the last 3 years of his life with his daughter Genevieve, who had converted to
Christian Science. Canright died on May 12, 1919. Two months later, his final book,
The Life of Mrs. E.G. White, was published. In it he criticised White heavily and maintained, among other charges: • that the early doctrines held in 1844 and up to 1851 failed utterly • that in some cases her prophecies were wrong, and then suppressed afterwards • that she rebuked and controlled peoples' conduct, purportedly by spiritual knowledge, but factually by informings that often attacked an innocent party • that she plagiarized many of her purportedly God-inspired texts from other authors, and had to revise one of her books at an expense of $3,000 In 1933, the
Review and Herald published
In Defense of the Faith: A Reply To Canright. Written by W.H. Branson, an Adventist minister, the book sought to correct what the author alleged were Canright's distortions and misrepresentations of Adventist doctrine. In 1971, the church published ''I Was Canright's Secretary'', by Carrie Johnson, a memoir of her work for D.M. Canright in the early 1900s. ==References==