William Miller Prophet of End Time. |
Baptist
preacher William Miller developed a large following based on his
interpretations of the prophecies in the Book of Daniel 8:14 “Unto two
thousand and three hundred days; then shall the sanctuary be cleansed.” Millerite congregations sprang up after
Miller began to preach his doctrine of the Earth
scourged by fire and the Second
Advent of Christ come to save
believers in 1831. He calculated that Jesus Christ would return to earth and appear to the saved some
time in 1843-44. The movement spread over much of the northern states which had previously
been gripped the religious frenzy of the Second
Great Awakening.
Although Miller never set a precise
date he argued that the Advent would occur during the Jewish Year 5604, between March 21, 1843 and March 20, 1844.
Many of his followers gave up all of their possessions to await the end.
When March 20, 1844 came and went without either Fire or Jesus, many of his
disciples were discouraged. But many kept the faith, even when Miller
admitted he had been in error, and sought explanations.
At a Millerite camp meeting in Exeter, New Hampshire in August Samuel S. Snow, announced that he had
discovered the error in Miller’s original calculation, which were based on one
day=one year from 457 B.C. when Artaxerxes
I of Persia granted permission for the Jews
to rebuild their Temple in Jerusalem. Using the calendar of the Karaite Jews instead of the Rabbinic calendar consulted my Miller,
Snow determined that “The tenth day of the seventh month [Jewish] of the
present year, 1844” as the true date. He equated that with October 22,
1844.
The predicted Rapture was hyped in illustrated newspapers of the day. |
Aided by sensationalized press
accounts, Snow’s prediction spread like wild fire. Not only was it
accepted by—with Miller approval—the sect, but it spread to other Evangelicals. On
October 22 tens of thousands gathered, on high ground if possible, surrounded
by their families. Many, taking a cue from Scripture wore white robes for
the Rapture. When
nothing happened they drifted off facing rebuilding their lives. They
called it the Great Disappointment.
Many, if not most of the Milerites
abandoned their faith and returned to the conventional and orthodox
denominations from which they had come. Those who had not been committed
Milerites, but accepted the prophesy were especially bitter. Milerite
churches in several towns and cities were attacked or burned and adherents
violently attacked. Miller himself commented on the cruel mockery of
small children he had to endure.
Skeptics mocked the Millerites with cartoons like this. |
But a core group remained true
believers. However they soon split into three factions. The first
faction, initially the largest, believed that Oct. 21 had “shut the door to
salvation” to all but the “Wise Virgins—those
who believed in the message. This group awaited daily rapture.
The second group soon eclipsed the
first. It held that the Oct. 21 date was in err. Led by Joshua Hines who eventually recruited
Miller himself, argued that since the door was not shut, people newly coming to
the faith might also be saved in an imminent, if unknowable, Second
Coming. This group eventually founded the Advent Christian Church.
The third group was the most
successful of all. The believed that Oct. 22 was a correct and
significant date, but that it had been misinterpreted. The “sanctuary” cleansed that day was not on
Earth but in Heaven. Eventually a “light would be given and their
disappointment explained.” Out of this group arose the Seventh Day Adventist Church and all of its many
splinters, each with its own interpretation.
Oddly the Baha’i incorporated Miller’s prophesy and identified the return of
Christ with their avatar the Báb who proclaimed himself in Persia in 1844.
Miller, the founder of all of this
excitement, died in 1849 still waiting daily for the End.
There other reported “ends of the
world” in American history. Notably the Jehovah’s Witnesses predicted the end in 1914, 1918, 1925, and
1942. They were wrong, too. As were Chuck Smith and Edgar Whisenant in the ‘80’s and ‘90’s and radio evangelist Harold Camping as
recently as 2011.
It is apparently a game anyone can
play. Anybody up for an End of the
World pool? Winner takes the
pot and has eternity to spend it.
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