
Chapter 23: The First
Angel's Message
I saw that God was in the
proclamation of the time in 1843. It was his design to arouse the people, and
bring them to a testing point where they should decide. Ministers were convicted
and convinced of the correctness of the positions taken on the prophetic
periods, and they left their pride, their salaries, and their churches, to go
forth from place to place and proclaim the message. But as the message from
heaven could find a place in the hearts of but a very few of the professed
ministers of Christ, the work was laid upon many who were not preachers. Some
left their fields to sound the message, while others were called from their
shops and their merchandise. And even some professional men were compelled to
leave their professions to engage in the unpopular work of giving the first
angel's message. Ministers laid aside their sectarian views and feelings, and
united in proclaiming the coming of Jesus. The people were moved everywhere the
message reached them. Sinners repented, wept and prayed for forgiveness, and
those whose lives had been marked with dishonesty, were anxious to make
restitution.
Parents felt the deepest solicitude for their
children. Those who received the message, labored with their unconverted friends
and relatives, and with their souls bowed with the weight of the solemn message,
warned and entreated them to prepare for the coming of the Son of man. Those
cases were the most hardened that would not yield to such a weight of evidence
set home by heart-felt warnings. This soul-purifying work led the affections
away from worldly things, to a consecration never before experienced. Thousands
were led to embrace the truth preached by Wm. Miller, and servants of God were
raised up in the spirit and power of Elijah to proclaim the message. Those who
preached this solemn message, like John the forerunner of Jesus, felt compelled
to lay the axe at the root of the tree, and call upon men to bring forth fruits
meet for repentance. Their testimony was calculated to arouse and powerfully
affect the churches, and manifest their real character. And as they raised the
solemn warning to flee from the wrath to come, many who were united with the
churches received the healing message; they saw their backslidings, and, with
bitter tears of repentance, and deep agony of soul, humbled themselves before
God. And as the Spirit of God rested upon them, they helped to sound the cry,
Fear God, and give glory to him, for the hour of his judgment is come.
The preaching of definite time called forth great
opposition from all classes, from the minister in the pulpit, down to the most
reckless, heaven-daring sinner. No man knoweth the day and the hour, was heard
from the hypocritical minister and the bold scoffer. Neither would be instructed
and corrected on the use made of the text by those who were pointing to the year
when they believed the prophetic periods would run out, and to the signs which
showed Christ near, even at the doors. Many shepherds of the flock, who
professed to love Jesus, said they had no opposition to the preaching of
Christ's coming; but they objected to the definite time. God's all-seeing eye
read their hearts. They did not love Jesus near. They knew that their
unchristian lives would not stand the test; for they were not walking in the
humble path laid out by him. These false shepherds stood in the way of the work
of God. The truth spoken in its convincing power to the people aroused them, and
like the jailer, they began to inquire, What must I do to be saved. But these
shepherds stepped between the truth and the people, and preached smooth things
to lead them from the truth. They united with Satan and his angels, and cried,
Peace, peace, when there was no peace. I saw that angels of God had marked it
all, and the garments of those unconsecrated shepherds were covered with the
blood of souls. Those who loved their ease, and were content with their distance
from God, would not be aroused from their carnal security.
Many ministers would not accept this saving
message themselves, and those who would receive it, they hindered. The blood of
souls is upon them. Preachers and people joined to oppose this message from
heaven. They persecuted Wm. Miller, and those who united with him in the work.
Falsehoods were circulated to injure his influence, and at different times after
he had plainly declared the counsel of God, applying cutting truths to the
hearts of his hearers, great rage was kindled against him, and as he left the
place of meeting, some waylaid him in order to take his life. But angels of God
were sent to preserve his life, and they led him safely away from the angry mob.
His work was not yet finished.
The most devoted gladly received the message.
They knew it was from God, and that it was delivered at the right time. Angels
were watching with the deepest interest the result of the heavenly message, and
when the churches turned from and rejected it, they in sadness consulted with
Jesus. He turned his face from the churches, and bid his angels to faithfully
watch over the precious ones who did not reject the testimony, for another light
was yet to shine upon them.
I saw that if professed Christians had loved
their Saviour's appearing, if their affections were placed on him, if they felt
that there was none upon earth to be compared with him, they would have hailed
with joy the first intimation of his coming. But the dislike they manifested, as
they heard of their Lord's coming, was a decided proof that they did not love
him. Satan and his angels triumphed, and cast it in the face of Jesus Christ and
his holy angels, that his professed people had so little love for Jesus that
they did not desire his second appearing.
I saw the people of God, joyful in expectation,
looking for their Lord. But God designed to prove them. His hand covered a
mistake in the reckoning of the prophetic periods. Those who were looking for
their Lord did not discover it, and the most learned men who opposed the time
also failed to see the mistake. God designed that his people should meet with a
disappointment. The time passed, and those who had looked with joyful
expectation for their Saviour were sad and disheartened, while those who had not
loved the appearing of Jesus, but embraced the message through fear, were
pleased that he did not come at the time of expectation. Their profession had
not affected their hearts, and purified their lives. The passing of the time was
well calculated to reveal such hearts. They were the first to turn and ridicule
the sorrowful, disappointed ones, who really loved the appearing of their
Saviour. I saw the wisdom of God in proving his people, and giving them a
searching test to discover those who would shrink and turn back in the hour of
trial.
Jesus and all the heavenly host looked with
sympathy and love upon those who had with sweet expectation longed to see him
whom their souls loved. Angels were hovering around them, to sustain them in the
hour of their trial. Those who had neglected to receive the heavenly message
were left in darkness, and God's anger was kindled against them, because they
would not receive the light he had sent them from heaven. Those faithful,
disappointed ones, who could not understand why their Lord did not come, were
not left in darkness. Again they were led to their Bibles to search the
prophetic periods. The hand of the Lord was removed from the figures, and the
mistake was explained. They saw that the prophetic periods reached to 1844, and
that the same evidence they had presented to show that the prophetic periods
closed in 1843, proved that they would terminate in 1844. Light from the word of
God shone upon their position, and they discovered a tarrying time. -- If the
vision tarry, wait for it. -- In their love for Jesus' immediate coming, they
had overlooked the tarrying of the vision, which was calculated to manifest the
true waiting ones. Again they had a point of time. Yet I saw that many of them
could not rise above their severe disappointment, to possess that degree of zeal
and energy which had marked their faith in 1843.
Satan and his angels triumphed over them, and
those who would not receive the message, congratulated themselves upon their
far-seeing judgment and wisdom in not receiving the delusion, as they called it.
They realized not that they were rejecting the counsel of God against
themselves, and that they were working in union with Satan and his angels to
perplex God's people, who were living out the heaven-born message.
The believers in this message were oppressed in
the churches. Fear had held them for a time, so that they did not act out the
sentiments of their heart, but the passing of the time revealed their true
feelings. They wished to silence the testimony which the believers felt
compelled to bear, that the prophetic periods extended to 1844. With clearness
they explained their mistake, and gave their reasons why they expected their
Lord in 1844. The opposers could not bring any arguments against the powerful
reasons offered. The anger of the churches was kindled against them. They were
determined not to listen to any evidence, and to shut their testimony out of the
churches, so that others could not hear it. Those who dared not withhold from
others the light God had given them, were shut out of the churches; but Jesus
was with them, and they were joyful in the light of his countenance. They were
prepared to receive the message of the second angel.
See Malachi 3; John 14:1-3; Revelation 14:6.
Index
Next: |