Bill Arp’s endorsement was used to promote the book to
other editors.
Charles Henry
Smith, Writing as Bill Arp, Reviewed
The Plan of the
Ages for the Atlanta Constitution
[Photo]
A
Viola Gilbert, the widow of a wealthy New Yorker,[1]
used it to approach The Brooklyn Eagle. Her
success was limited, however. The paper only printed a single sentence: “Viola
Gilbert, New York, announces “Millennial Dawn, the Plan of the Ages,” which is
vouched for by no less a journalistic authority than “Bill Arp.”[2] Following
her February 1888 endorsement of Millennial Dawn, she organized a
meeting at Cooper Union. The New York Daily Tribune reported:
Mrs. Viola Gilbert
spoke in the large meeting-room at Cooper Union yesterday on “The Plan of the
Ages,” and explained by means of charts her ideas of the restitution of man to
his original normal spiritual condition. Mrs. Gilbert is a slender woman, with
a head that an artist would long to paint. She has mobile, refined and delicate
features, while she speaks with an emotion that tends to carry conviction. The
fall of man she interpreted for mankind’s good, as because of it man is to be
restored, not only to the plane from which Adam fell, but it is to be elevated
to a spiritual and finally a divine plane. The evangelistic services conducted
by Mrs. Gilbert are made interesting from the delicacy, grace and tact with
which she conducts them The millennium exists around man now, she holds, and
all that he needs to realize it is to place himself in harmony with the Divine
mind. This will result in physical as well as spiritual health.[3]
[1] Viola Gilbert’s name does not
appear in Zion’s Watch Tower, and
little is known about her. A letter from her to the editor of The New York Times appears in the April 13, 1899, issue. She signed
herself as “Viola Gilbert, Evangelist.” The letter was a comment on
wife-beating as endorsed by a judge in St. Louis.
She published at least one tract against Christian Science after having
“studied with” Mary Baker Eddy. The Christian Science Church denied the claim
that she had studied with Eddy. (Letter to “Mul,” The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, January 26, 1901.) She did not continue
her association with Zion’s Watch Tower, but
remained independent until 1902 when she re-joined Plymouth
Church, New York City. (The New York Sun, May 5, 1902)
Gilbert
rejected inherent immortality doctrine. In 1890 she preached at Zion’s
Temple on Fulton Street
in Brooklyn, often on topics familiar to Second
Adventists and Age-to-Come believers. Gilbert was noted for standing on the
street representing her pet causes by holding a tall cross festooned with
purple streamers. A reporter for the New York Sun wrote: “Her refined
appearance and her tall cross with its purple streamers and urgent message
attracted the attention of even the least observant of the throngs of shippers
hurrying by.” (See the October 6, 1901,
issue.) By 1891 she was involved with the Progressive Party and a delegate to
the Pennsylvania Yearly Meeting of Progressive Friends. She is quoted in the
report as saying: “I have worked in the missionary field a long time, have pointed
out the way to Christ to many different persons, but they can't live on faith.
The condition of affairs is constantly growing worse. I see before us a great
revolution. The rich are growing richer and the poor poorer. Faith and works
must go together.” – Report, page 72.
[2] Brooklyn Daily
Eagle, February 5, 1888.
Untitled paragraph.
[3] Explaining the “Divine Plan of the
Ages,” The New York Daily Tribune, March 16, 1888.