We’re not responsible for your ignorance. You are.
Defining every believer in the near Advent of Christ as an
Adventist is wrong. Millerite Adventists had a distinctive doctrine that set
them at odds with the bulk of Christians looking for the return of Christ.
Almost without exception expositors writing in the pre-Millerite period adopted
Literalism. Literalism came to full flower in Europe in the early 17th
Century (1600s for the easily confused).
Most British writers on prophecy adopted Literalism. It
characterized many of the German and Dutch writers too. Literalism was the
standard approach of almost every American writer until Millerism. It remained
the standard approach outside of Millerism and remains such.
The literalist approach is that the Bible should be taken at
face value. If it says that God would reconstitute Israel, it means the Children
of Abraham, the Jews. It does not mean a spiritualized Church. Millerites
rejected this. Millerites believed Probation doctrine. It astounds me that
people come to this blog unfamiliar with one of Christendom’s basic doctrines.
Probation doctrine teaches that humans are on probation in this life, no matter
what they know of God or the Bible. This life determines their destiny: Hell or
Immortality or alternately Eternal Death or Immortality. Literalists were
divided on this issue, but a significant number of them believed Probation
doctrine false. After leaving the Advent movement, Storrs pointed out that God
gave everyone a fair and sufficient chance at life. For some this would be
after a resurrection. Disparagingly called “second-probationism,” this view was
uniformly rejected by Millerite Adventists.
Adventists hated Russell’s doctrine. They saw none of their
own in it, except for a shared belief in the death state. The belief that “when
you’re dead, you’re dead” did not derive from Adventism. If you’ve bothered to
read Froom’s Conditionalist Faith of Our Fathers, you’d know this. Are we to
consider every American expositor before Miller to be Adventists too? Men like
Elias Boudinot who expected Christ’s return in short order would have cringed
at being called Adventist or Millerite. Aaron Kinne, who believed Christ would
return near 1866, was a Congregationalist minister. He would not have found a
place among the Millerites. Expecting Christ’s return does not make one an
Adventist. If you think it does, you need to hit the books.
Speculation about the date of Christ’s return is not a uniquely
Adventist pursuit either. It has a long history that includes Isaac Newton,
German Lutherans of the 18th Century, an endless number of British
and American writers from before the Millerite movement. Did you ever bother to
read Froom’s Prophetic Faith of Our Fathers? Or did you just read the feculent material
found on many web pages?
Storrs did not lead Russell into Adventism. Storrs abandoned
Adventism in 1844. Here is an excerpt form our Chapter Three:
Leaves the Adventist Movement
The
Millerite failure and a reconsideration of basic Millerite doctrine took Storrs
out of the movement in 1844.[1]
While many within the Adventist community continued to respect him and consider
him a brother in Christ, many more did not. His beliefs were purposely
misrepresented and he was reviled in the Second Adventist press. This story has
dropped out of most Adventist histories. You will not find it in a recent
Advent Christian history. Even some of the older histories such as Johnson’s do
not tell it. There is an element of shame attached to it that Adventist
historians wish to bury.
Storrs
entered the Millerite movement with reservations, though we are uncertain how
loudly he voiced them. He objected to Miller’s cindered-earth doctrine:
We became convinced in the winter of ‘42 and ‘43 that
the view, held by Mr. Miller and his adherents, that this age would close with
the conflagration of the globe, and the cutting off of all men not then prepared
for immortality, and that the next age would open with the new heaven and the
new earth, with none inhabiting it but the immortal ones, was an error; an
error, too, calculated to make thinking men, who were governed more by reason
than excitement, reject the idea of the speedy advent of Christ, altogether.
They saw that much remained to be fulfilled on this earth, and that if
the conflagration of the globe was to take place at the second advent of Christ
that event could not be near.[2]
Storrs
raised this objection by February or March 1843, though we do not know how
widely he voiced it. He preached in Philadelphia in the spring of 1843.
Thousands heard him and received a specially prepared edition of Six
Sermons. This was one of his first opportunities to voice his objections to
Millerite theology. If he did so, we cannot find a record of it. After
preaching in Cincinnati for several months (from the Fall of 1843 into the
Spring of 1844), he returned to Philadelphia for a brief visit in December
1843. Storrs message was well received. He wrote to the editor of The
Western Midnight Cry describing the enduring interest there:
The work there is taking a new start; about 30 were
forward for prayers last Sabbath evening – some of them found peace in believing.
In this city (Philadelphia) I preached a week ago last Sabbath eve, to about
three thousand deeply interested hearers, and the cause here is evidently
rising higher and higher – no dying away. … I believe the Lord is at
the door, and we shall not have to wait long. Tell the brethren and
sisters, to be strong and fear not, for our God will come, and come quickly.[3]
Leaving Philadelphia he
returned to the Midwest, evangelizing in parts of Indiana. He was in Philadelphia
again in November 1844 with the Seventh-Month message but with Literalist
rather than Adventist beliefs. He remained there until 1852.[4]
The
sources of Storrs doctrine, who influenced whom, and many of the details of
doctrinal shifts are issues for someone else’s research. They have little bearing
on Zion’s Watch Tower’s theology. However, we do know some things.
Charles Fitch started teaching “probation for the heathen after the Advent.”
According to Lewis Gunn, at least by October 1844, some of the Philadelphia
Adventists had adopted Storrs’ views. Gunn believed that “many of the Jews will
be miraculously converted, and hail His appearing with the exclamation,
‘blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord.’” They had, wrote Gunn,
“changed from their former belief, and differed entirely from Mr. Miller, and
the great body of advent believers in this country – but agreeing with the
Literalists.”[5]
Storrs
elaborated at length on his doctrine as it was in 1844 and as it, with some
modifications, remained until his death. His Literalism served as a growing
wedge between him and the Adventist community:
We have since (1843) advocated the doctrine that the
advent of Christ as King … is an event nigh at hand – that it will be
ushered in with a great and terrible destruction of his enemies, especially
among those who have heard the gospel and rejected it; but that there will be
“left of the nations,” in the flesh, who will become subjects of the government
of Christ and his immortal saints, who shall then rule the nations on this
earth, having the seat of empire in Jerusalem, and on mount Zion, from whence “the
law shall go forth” to all “left of the nations.” That under this
administration “justice and judgment would be executed in the earth,” and “the
whole earth be filled with the glory of God,” according to his own oath and
promise …. That this period, or age, of the personal reign of Christ … on this
earth, is the true millennium, which may be a thousand years; or
possibly a much longer period …. That period to close with the final
resurrection, judgment, and execution of the judgment on all men:
at which time the age of the new heaven and new earth would be ushered in. …
For holding such views we have been renounced, shunned, and avoided by a large
part of the adherents of Mr. Miller’s theory, who call themselves “Adventists.”[6]
Undeniably,
Storrs was one of the leading lights in Philadelphia. Massive crowds gathered
outside the Millerite chapel to hear him and others. Every event was wildly
exaggerated by the press. Someone was reported to have stolen money from the Millerite
treasury. This was false. Children were said to have frozen to death. This was
false. The Philadelphia Ledger, appealing to its barely literate
readership, described the Millerite gatherings with scorn, ridicule, and exaggeration.[7]
The Philadelphia Evening Chronicle reported:
Portions of the population of all the large eastern
cities in this country, have been more or less, the victims of a singular and
fantastical delusion. They call themselves Millerites, and implicitly believed
the delirious and impious ravings of one Miller, who had prophesied that the
second advent would certainly occur on the twenty-third instant, when this fair
globe would certainly be destroyed by conflagration! Here, in Baltimore, and in
Boston, the civil authorities have been compelled to close their churches by
force, in consequence of hundreds of them having assembled, and thrown the
neighbourhood into wild alarm by their yelling and howling cries and
lamentations. On the evening of the twenty-second instant, many hundreds of
these crazy people repaired to camps near this city, attired themselves in long
white cotton dresses, which they called their “ascension robes,” and were seen
wandering through the woods and on the banks of the rivers by moonlight, like
sheeted ghosts. They left their business and their families, and many children
would have perished, had it not been for the kindness of their fellow citizens.
For days this flame of dangerous superstition and enthusiasm spread like
wild-fire. There was no stopping it. In two or three instances the victims
anticipated the end of the world by suicide: one named Culp, threw himself into
the cataract of Niagara; and now that the day has passed over, many are found
to be (incurably perhaps) delirious. Such scenes … have alluded to have not
probably occurred for centuries, and I hope that centuries will again roll
away, before such sorry evidences of the weakness of human nature, and the
distress which invariably attends them, will harrow up the feelings.[8]
Almost
nothing in this article is true. The Philadelphia and Boston papers were
particularly nasty, full of falsehood and ridicule. That they dressed
themselves in ascension robes and similar claims were all false. Jane Marsh
Parker, Joseph Marsh’s daughter, took pains to refute the Ascension Robes
slander. J. V. Himes did as well.[9]
Some refutation of the most scandalously false reports was made in the
Millerite press, but others wanted to make plain that those in Philadelphia
were not “true” Millerites. Lewis Gunn wrote to the Philadelphia papers blaming
the whole thing on Storrs and others who had adopted Literalist views:
Some … were not looking for the destruction of the
earth, nor for its complete physical renovation, at the present time; they
looked for the introduction of the millennium by the personal coming of Christ
to the earth; they think this will be the commencement of the promised
restitution of all things, to be carried forward until all things shall be made
new; they think that probation will close to those who have heard the gospel,
but not so with the heathen and all those who have not heard of his fame; they
think it will be the beginning of a new dispensation to the heathen, during
which it will be emphatically true that the leaves of the tree of life will be
for the healing of the nations. These were the published views of Geo. Storrs.
… In these views they differed entirely from Mr. Miller and the great body of
Advent believers in this country, but agreeing with the Literalists of England
(Millennarians) …[10]
By 1845 Storrs “embraced the
full Literalist doctrine.” Enoch Jacobs, editor of The Day Star
(Cincinnati) wrote: “He has finally gone off into Judaism,” Storrs made the
issue clear in 1849, writing that it was “true that we were drawn into Mr.
Miller’s theory for a time, but renounced all his peculiarities
more than four years ago, and some of them more then five years since; and have
had no connection with his peculiar view for more than four years past.”
He noted that Millerite “leaders … are among our opponents.”[11] Sometime in late May or early June 1849, two
“brethren” wrote to Storrs objecting to his comments about Millerite opposition
to his work. They defined themselves as Millerites: “We are what the world, the
church, and Br. Storrs calls Millerites. Why are we this? Is it not because we
believe with Br. Miller that the Lord is soon coming?” Storrs replied that they
had misapprehended the original article, but he also suggested that their
definition of Millerite Adventism was wrong:
Whatever the “church” or ‘the world’ may understand by
Millerism, I understand it to have three peculiarities, and nothing
more: viz. “Definite time for the advent,” …. That view I gave up in the
winter of ‘44 and ‘45; and time has since demonstrated that I was right in so
doing. The two other peculiarities of Millerism I gave up, one in the
month of Feb. ‘44, and the other in June ‘45. The three may be summed up thus,
1. “Definite time for the advent, not to go beyond ‘47.” 2, “No return of the
literal posterity of Jacob to the land wherein their fathers have dwelt.” 3,
“The earth all to be melted at the time of the advent, and none of its
inhabitants left upon it.”
These three points constitute the whole of what
I call Millerism. … The second personal advent of Christ – that advent
premillennial – nigh, even at the door – the kingdom of God on earth, or the
earth the inheritance of the saints – the earth renewed, Paradise restored, and
all those kindred doctrines relating to the kingdom of God, are no part nor
parcel of Millerism: They had a distinct existence from his theory, and
before his views were published to the world. The fact that some who embraced
his theory had no knowledge that these other points had been published, by
English Literalists, years before they heard from Mr. Miller, does not make
them really any part of his peculiarities: they are not, and
never were, any of his peculiar views. … The three points I have
named are all that constitutes the peculiarities of Millerism.
The leaders in his theory did not like to retain the
name of Millerites after 1843-4 passed by, though they gloried in being
called so in those years. No sooner did the time pass away, and they
commenced the work of organizing churches, than they assumed the name of Adventists;
thus showing they were unwilling to go forward under their former one, and so
assumed that which is equally appropriate to all believers in the speedy return
of Christ and his personal reign on earth, of whom there are many who never
were Millerites. In assuming the name Adventists they wronged this
latter class of believers; who thus became, in the public mind, identified with
them; and they were as really a sect as any other. Why should they have left
the name Millerite, by which they were every where known, to assume another
without having given up one of Mr. Miller’s peculiarities? Was it to cover
their errors without “confession?” It certainly has that appearance,
whatever might have been their design.[12]
Storrs pointed back to Miller’s
letter as printed in Voice of Truth, saying that Miller and his
associates, unable to fault his reasoning, faulted him. Attacks from Millerite
Adventists continued throughout Storrs’ career. Apollos Hale and Sylvester
Bliss issued a list of ten key doctrines that Storrs was supposed to have
abandoned. It was largely and knowingly false. Storrs pointed out the
misrepresentation, showing that Hale and Bliss did in fact know the truth of
the matter. He called them “reckless in a degree and to an extent that must
fill every honest mind with disgust who knows the facts.” He said that their
attack “bears on the face of it the evidence of design to stigmatise [sic] us willfully.”
Storrs set what he’d actually written side by side with Hale and Bliss’s contrivances,
pointing out that they had the original article by Storrs at hand. Their
behavior was inexcusable: “This effort to blast our character and destroy our
influence is not the first that has issued from the same quarter, which has
been borne in silence; and it gives us pain to feel that duty now calls us to
rebuke openly those who have sinned in this matter. We have long time holden
our peace while a stream of slander has been poured over the land concerning us
from men who, if their professions could be relied upon, are as truly
the representatives of Jesus Christ as the Pope is of St. Peter. But God will
judge between us.”[13]
James
White republished Storrs’ 1843 article on the return of the Jews in the Advent
Review and Sabbath Herald, failing to note that it was not his current
belief. “When an association, or individuals publish sentiments which the
author has publicly renounced – and give no notice of the renunciation –
all men, who have knowledge of the facts must pronounce it an act of
dishonesty,” Storrs wrote. White replied in the May 12, 1853, issue of The
Review and Herald:
We much regret the date of this discourse was not
given. We also regret that we did not state that George Storrs had renounced a
portion, at least, of the truth contained in that discourse; for we never had
the least desire to conceal this fact. Our object in publishing it was for the
truth it contains …
We also much regret that the Editor of the Examiner
should so rashly charge us with “dishonesty,” and then withhold from us his
paper containing this charge. Had it not been for the kindness of a brother in
Massachusetts … we might have been ignorant of the charge to this day.
Whether the course pursued by the Examiner is,
or is not, in accordance with the gospel of Christ, we now leave the sincere to
judge.[14]
Our
historian’s sympathies rest entirely with Storrs. The Whites would gather
well-deserved accusations of plagiarism and misrepresentation throughout their
careers. White’s sniffing complaint that Storrs hadn’t sent them the issue of Bible
Examiner containing his exposure of the Review and Herald’s
dishonesty was a bit of misdirection. It blames the wronged party for being
wronged. Storrs was kinder than we are, “cheerfully” forgiving them upon
receipt of the apology.
End Excerpt
In the comment trail someone suggested that belief in the
second advent makes one an Adventist. This is unreasoned idiocy. The near return
of Christ is the common belief of Christendom. Adventism has distinctive
doctrines, as Storrs noted. Most churches remain in the Literalist tradition,
even if they don’t know the history.
In chapter four, A Separate Identity, we consider the early
Bible Class in Allegheny. We trace their beliefs to original sources. The
beliefs we consider in detail are: End of the Age; Second Probation, Ransom and
Atonement, Parousia and Restitution, Restoration of the Jews, World Burning, Baptism,
Resurrection, End Times Chronology and Prophetic Framework, The Trinity, Devil
and Demons, Great Pyramid, and Church Ordinances.
We tell you what books Russell read, who he knew, and from
where each of his doctrines came. Millerite Adventists rejected Russell’s
teaching in each area except for two: The Trinity and Devil and Demons. Every
other doctrine came from the Literalist community. In America, by Russell’s
day, they were called Age-to-Come believers. Russell’s contacts centered on a
small group associated with The Restitution.
Some of you insist Russell was an Adventist because he
believed in Christ’s return. Do you have any idea how stupid that is? Did you
bother to read one – just one – year’s worth of Bible Examiner? Did you notice
who wrote for it, what they said, their view of Adventism? The other magazines
and newspapers are not impossible to find. Did you look, or did you take intellectual
poison by the spoonful? We are not responsible for your ignorance.
Did you know that Stetson abandoned Adventist doctrine for
age to come belief. Did you know he wrote for The Restitution, a journal that
opposed Adventism, and for The Rainbow, a British Literalist publication?
Probably not.
Your definition of Adventism is wrong. No Adventist in the
Russell era would have accepted it. No one else would either. The pastor of the
Congregationalist church Russell attended wrote and preached on Christ’s
return. This is not a secret. Anyone can find this. If you read his published
sermon on the topic, you will see that
he did not teach Millerite doctrine. He taught Literalist doctrine that most
American and British writers found scriptural.
In chapter one, Developing a Religious Voice, we tell you
about Russell’s introduction to prophetic thought. Contrary to what’s usually
written, this happened in his youth. Here are two excerpts from that chapter:
1. Russell
read religious books and magazines, apparently most interested in those that
focused on leading a Christian life. He was impressed with Bunyon’s Pilgrim’s
Progress, referring to it in articles and sermons throughout his life.[15]
He tells us very little about his childhood reading. We know he read religious
periodicals because he tells us so. He read tracts. He tells us that too. We
believe he read juvenile literature. Almost without exception books for
children were religious and often published by tract societies. The American
Tract Society was an especially prolific publisher of children’s tracts and
small books. Some of this material predisposed Russell to doctrines he would
maintain for the rest of his life. Millennialist views, primarily British
Literalist,[16] found their way into
young people’s books.
Books
by Mary Martha Sherwood, a British writer, were widely circulated in the United
States and were standard fare in Sunday School libraries. One of her earlier
books was entitled The Millennium; Or, Twelve Stories Designed to Explain to
Young Bible Readers, the Scripture Prophecies Concerning the Glory of the
Latter Days. The belief system she presents is colored by the Trinity and
Eternal Torment doctrines, but the Atonement and Millennium are presented in
ways that Russell believed were scriptural. The Christ stands in the stead of
sinful humans; the Millennium is a period of restored blessings on an earth
again made paradise. “It was the children of Adam,” she wrote, “who owed this
debt to God; and that Christ our Saviour, before he could be admitted to stand
in our place, and pay our debt, was obliged to become one of us, and to be born
a child of Adam after the flesh.” Christ’s millennial rule was to be “the happy
days when the kingdom of Christ shall prevail on the earth.”[17]
Millennialist views pervaded Sherwood’s books, and there is very little of it
that Russell did not accept.
Richard
Newton, an Anglican clergyman and children’s writer, also elaborated on the
millennium and a child’s place in it. In 1857 he published Rills From the
Fountain of Life: or, Sermons to Children containing a sermon based on
Isaiah 11:6. Entitled “The Millennial Menagerie,” it suggested that the
interaction between animals and children as described by Isaiah was meant to be
literally fulfilled.[18] While
we could develop a significant list of children’s authors who wrote similarly,
these are, I think, sufficient to show the type of literature to which Russell
was exposed. We believe that Russell was prepared to accept millennial
doctrines of this flavor by early exposure to them.
More
adult writing also presented a view of the millennium that he would find
agreeable. While we cannot with surety prove he read any one book, we think it
likely he was exposed to Charlotte Elizabeth Tona, a popular English author
with a strong American following. She died shortly before Russell’s birth but
remained popular in the United States and more than one uniform edition of her
works was printed. Her Personal Recollections contains a very clear
statement of millennial beliefs along with supporting arguments. It would have
been hard for Russell to escape exposure to books like these, even if he did
not read these exact books. They would have prompted him to accept Millenarian
views, though not Adventist views.
Later we write:
2. Exposed to
Millennialist Preaching
Henry D. Moore and others in Pittsburgh’s
broad Calvinist community swayed Russell in ways he never fully discusses.
Moore was a prophetic student, preaching on premillennial themes. An example of
this type of sermon is his An Argument for the Second Personal Coming of
Jesus Christ.[19] Moore
was Literalist, approaching prophetic interpretation from that standpoint,
writing that doctrine should be established clearly and unambiguously “by
ordinary and natural interpretation of language.” Russell was made comfortable
by this sensible approach to scripture and would carry it into his own
prophetic enquiries.
The Calvinist
community in Pittsburgh had a vibrant premillennialist element extending back
at least to the 1820s, and in 1844 Presbyterians in Pittsburgh republished
Archibald Mason’s Observations, Doctrinal and Practical on Saving Faith.[20]
Mason (1753-1831) was a Scotch Covenanter with a strong interest in
prophecy. His works were circulated in the United States, and his expectations
for Christ’s return just past mid-Nineteenth Century influenced several
expositors including Second Adventists.[21]
In Two Essays on Daniel’s Prophetic Numbers, written in 1820, Mason
postulated that the 2300 days of Daniel 8:14 would end in 1844. Within Russell’s
acquaintance was William James Reid, pastor of the United Presbyterian Church
in Pittsburgh. Reid preached on prophetic themes, and his sermons on the
Revelation were collected together and published as Lectures on the
Revelation.[22] Reid’s lectures were
strongly influenced by Seiss, Elliott, Albert Barnes, and by continental
Literalists.
Zydek
presents as fact his belief that Russell read The Time of the End:
A Prophetic Period, Developing, as Predicted, an Increase of Knowledge
Respecting the Prophecies and Periods that Foretell the End.[23] This is the
merest of speculations. The book was compiled from the writings of E. B.
Elliott and others with the views of the anonymous Congregationalist author
included. Zydek’s claim that “it has been reported that young Russell is seldom
seen without a copy of The Time of the End” is puzzling. No contemporary
source reports this; no nearly contemporary source presents this. This is, as
is nearly all that Zydek presents about Russell’s early years, a bit of fantasy
fiction.
End excerpts
Russells approach
to prophecy did not vary from the Literalism adopted in his youth. He was
predisposed to it. The Alleghny Church to whom Wendell preached was not an
Adventist body. It’s listed in the Restitution as an approved One Faith-Age to
Come church. Did you know that? That’s not hard to discover. Did you look?
For some of you,
buying our book when it’s published next year will be a waste of money. I can
see that from emails and from some comments posted here. You have an idea you
do not wish to abandon, no matter what the evidence is. Some of you will find
interesting new details. Volume one will be something over 300 pages, It takes
you from Russell’s ancestry to the blow up between him and Barbour. In those
300 or so pages we will tell you things you did not know. But if you’re fixed
in your ideas, don’t waste your money.
Our readers are
responsible for themselves. It is not our responsibilty to define every phrase,
word, idea, profile very person you may not find familiar. We expect you to
think and to assume responsibility for your own study.
[1] J.
Gordon Melton is in error when he suggests that Storrs was ever a member of the
Advent Christian Church. (Encyclopedia of American Religions, page 615.)
[2] G.
Storrs: The Age to Come, Bible Examiner, May 1850, page 74.
[3] Letter
from George Storrs dated November 29, 1843, found in The Western Midnight
Cry, December 9, 1843, page 5. Storrs residence in Brooklyn was at 62 Hicks
Street. The house still exists. Cornelia Davenport, Alexander Russell’s
daughter and C. T. Russell’s first cousin, was his neighbor living at 74 Hicks.
[4] Storrs’
itinerary is given in Six Sermons, 1856 revised edition, page 14, 17.
[5] Julia
Neuffer: The Gathering of Israel: A Historical Study of Early Writings,
Digital Edition, page 4.
[6] G.
Storrs: The Age to Come, Bible Examiner, May 1850, page 74.
[7] See
A. S. Braham: The Philadelphia Press and the Millerites, The Pennsylvania
Magazine of History and Biography, April 1954, page 189ff.
[8] As
reprinted in The Christian Messenger and Reformer, December 1844, page
205. Christian Messenger was published in London, England.
[9] J.
M. Parker: Did the Millerites Have Ascension Robes? The Outlook: A Family
Magazine, October 15, 1894, page 582-583.
[10] Wellcome,
op. cit, page 382.
[11] G.
Storrs: Tour East with Various Observations, Bible Examiner, May 1849,
page 73.
[12] G.
Storrs: Misapprehension Corrected, Bible Examiner, July 1849, page 106.
[13] G.
Storrs: Misrepresentations Corrected, Bible Examiner, August 1851, pages
127-128.
[14] J.
White: Hear Us; Then Judge, Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, May 12,
1853, page 208.
[15] eg. C. T. Russell: Characteristics of a Sound Mind, The
Watch Tower, September 1, 1912, page 280.
[16] For a discussion of Literalist belief see the next chapter.
[17] 1829 edition, pages 27, 37.
[18] Evangelical Book Society, Philadelphia, 1857. The sermon
begins on page 170.
[19] Cincinnati, 1874.
[20] Published by A. Jaynes, Franklin Head, Pittsburgh, 1844.
[21] Among Mason’s prophetic works were Three Discourses on
the Millennium and A Scriptural View and Practical Improvement of the
Divine Mystery. The latter was strongly Literalist, a belief system adopted
by Age-to-Come adherents and Russell himself.
[22] Stevenson, Foster & Co., Pittsburgh, 1878.
[23] Published by J. P. Jewett, Boston, 1856.
8 comments:
-
I'd say that's telling it like it is. Well done. Well said.
Thanks Sha'el, Princess of Pixies.
Marvin Shilmer
Not convinced....
I have appreciated your last articles. Potent and wonderful articles.
Compliments, Bruce and Rachael.
Dear Anon.
Of course you're not. Any further comments from you on this blog must have your real name attached.
Some people love, cook, and eat "fried air" instead of food.
To each his own.
I enjoyed every bit of your research here presented. Please keep it up! I just found out from here that you or those you work with on this blog have written a blog about Barbour; I would like to obtain a copy - I'm quite sure it will be informative.
ebook at b and n. or paper at lulu.com. ebook is cheapest at lulu.com too.
While I am an avid user of an eReader for fiction, and for occasional preliminary reading of sample chapters, etc., I think that that a book with so many illustrations and footnotes calls out for the printed page to do it full justice.
Post a Comment