WILLIAM MILLER AND THE GREAT DISAPPOINTMENT
A LEGACY OF HERESY
BY
CRIS D. PUTNAM
WWW.LOGOSAPOLOGIA.ORG
AUGUST 13, 2012iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. INTRODUCTION………………………………………………………………………………1
II. EARLY LIFE AND CONVERSION ………………………………...……………………….1
III. THE MILLERITE MOVEMENT…………………………………………………………….5
IV. THE GREAT DISAPPOINTMENT…………………………………………………………10
V. A LEGACY OF HETERODOXY…..……..…………………………………………………14
VI. CONCLUSION………………………………………………………………………………17
BIBLIOGRAPHY..........................................................................................................................191
1
INTRODUCTION
The purpose of this paper is to address the life and legacy of William
Miller. From
simple beginnings, he was an accomplished leader who was persuaded by
Bible prophecy from
deism to faith and became a Baptist preacher. Unfortunately, through
apocalyptic date setting, he
inadvertently formed a new sect which became the Seventh-Day Adventist
Church. This
presentation will first give a broad overview and summary of the
Miller’s early life and
conversion, and then it will offer several key points of analysis. The
first point of analysis will be
Millers’ exegesis, which naturally leads to his prediction of the Second
Advent and the resulting
Millerite movement. Next, the “Great Disappointment of 1844” will be
discussed on the basis of
his and others repeated failed predictions. Finally, a legacy of strange
theology will be discussed
in the formation of the Seventh-Day Adventist Church and its principle
prophetess, Ellen G.
White. The paper will attempt to show that although Miller was an
orthodox Calvinistic Baptist,
his insistent date setting, prideful resistance to criticism and lack of
leadership resulted in a
harmful influence and a legacy of heterodoxy.
EARLY LIFE AND CONVERSION
William Miller was born February 15, 1782 in Pittsfield, Massachusetts,
the oldest of
sixteen brothers and sisters. Raised on the frontier of Low Hampton, New
York in a povertyravaged home, his opportunities were meager at best.
Farm life was arduous but young William
compensated for his lack of education by becoming a vociferous reader of
numerous borrowed
books. He was said to have a particular appetite for history. His
mother, the daughter and sister2
of Baptist ministers, was a strong Christian influence who instructed
him in the Bible and Godly
character. Miller had a comfortable, if perhaps naïve, faith until he
moved to the city.
In 1803, Miller married Lucy Smith and moved to the city of Poultney,
Vermont. He
quickly worked his way up the social ladder and became a respected
figure serving as deputy
sheriff and justice of the peace.1 However, he encountered a great deal
of hypocrisy amongst
Christians which caused him to doubt his simple faith. Compounding this,
his new circle of
friends was much more sophisticated and skeptical than the folks on the
farm. They introduced
him to the works of Thomas Paine, David Hume and Voltaire. Critical
arguments like Paine’s in
The Age of Reason were caustic to his immature faith:
There are also many who have been so enthusiastically enraptured by what
they
conceived to be the infinite love of God to man in making a sacrifice of
himself, that the
vehemence of the idea has forbidden and deterred them from examining
into the
absurdity and profaneness of the story.2
An influential founding father, Paine presented a systematic polemic
against the Bible
identifying it as nothing but mythology. This sort of critique cut
Miller to the heart; he felt he
had been duped. He began by questioning the supernatural events in the
Bible and eventually
stopped attending church.
Like his newly acquired urbanite friends, Miller became a deist. Deism
is a religious
belief system that allows for a divine creator but denies that God
interacts personally with His
creation. The universe is seen as a giant clock which the creator simply
wound up and left to
wind down unattended. Drawing from Paine and others like him, deism
holds that “true religion
1Earlke Cairns, “Miller, William” in The New International Dictionary of
the Christian Church.ed. J. D.
Douglas, Earle E. Cairns and James E. Ruark (Grand Rapids: Zondervan
Publishing House, 1978), 660.
2 Thomas Paine, The Age of Reason (New York: The Truth Seeker Company,
1898), 14.3
is a natural religion grounded in reason rather than any authoritative
special revelation.”
3
In this
view, the universe strictly follows natural law leaving no room for the
supernatural. Accordingly,
Miller rejected the inspiration of the Bible, deity of Jesus Christ and
the power of prayer. Even
so, his moral outlook was steady and he did his best to maintain high
character.
At this point, he was an established leader in the community serving as a
constable and
justice of the peace. When the British army threatened, Miller was quick
to join the militia and
quickly rose to Captain during the War of 1812. He was a skillful
soldier who won the
admiration and loyalty of his fellow men. In fact, when Miller
volunteered for service forty
seven other men signed up with him on the condition that they would
serve under his command.4
During the war Miller’s deism was challenged. He is said to have played a
decisive role in the
battle of Plattsburgh at turning point in the war. It seemed miraculous.
Consequently, Miller
believed that God had intervened and his faith was rekindled.
At the conclusion of the war in 1815, Miller moved back to Low Hampton,
New York
and purchased a two hundred acre farm near his boyhood home. The events
at the battle of
Plattsburgh haunted him and he began to ponder religious matters.
Consequently, he soon began
to attend a local Baptist church pastored by his Uncle. One Sunday, he
was asked to read a lesson
concerning Isaiah 53, a very compelling Messianic prophecy, precisely
describing Jesus’
suffering and sacrificial death some six hundred years prior to His
birth. Aware of his own need
of Savior, Miller described his reaction:
3 C. Stephen Evans, Pocket Dictionary of Apologetics & Philosophy of
Religion (Downers Grove, Ill.:
InterVarsity Press, 2002), 32.
4 Anne Devereaux Jordan, The Seventh Day Adventists: A History (New
York: Hippocrene Books, 1988),
26.4
I saw that the Bible did bring to view just such a Saviour as I needed;
and I was
perplexed to find how an uninspired book should develop principles so
perfectly adapted
to the wants of a fallen world. I was constrained to admit that the
Scriptures must be a
revelation from God. They became my delight; and in Jesus I found a
friend. The Saviour
became to me the chiefest among ten thousand; and the Scriptures, which
before were
dark and contradictory, now became the lamp to my feet and light to my
path. My mind
became settled and satisfied.5
This culminated in 1816 with his rededication to the Lord.
6 Miller then dedicated himself to
Bible study in order to resolve the alleged contradictions and
absurdities that had devastated his
former faith. He resolved to harmonize Genesis to Revelation letting
scripture interpret scripture.
As a means of avoiding presuppositions, he resolved to employ only a
concordance in his quest.
It was during this two year period of intense study that Miller like
many in his day
became fascinated with prophecy, especially end time prophecy. The early
nineteenth century
was the apex of the historicist school of prophetic interpretation, a
tradition that had been
building for centuries since the reformation. The historicist approach,
posits that the book of
Revelation provides a detailed accounting of Revelation and Daniel’s
prophecy which supplies a
synopsis of Church history from the first century until the second
coming of Christ. Biblical
scholar, G.K. Beale, characterizes historicism in this way, “Typically
this view identifies parts of
the Apocalypse as prophecies of the invasions of the Christianized Roman
Empire by the Goths
and the Muslims. Further, the corruptions of the medieval papacy, the
reign of Charlemagne, the
Protestant Reformation, and the destruction wrought by Napoleon and
Hitler have been seen as
5 William Miller as quoted in Ellen Gould White, The Great Controversy
Between Christ and Satan,
(Nampa, ID:Pacific Press Publishing Association, 1911), 319.
6 Mark Galli and Ted Olsen, 131 Christians Everyone Should Know,
(Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman
Publishers, 2000), 190.5
predicted by John.”7 This was by far the dominate view of the day.
According to Collins, Miller
was not alone in positing 1843, “That year was a date commonly put
forward by historicist
premillennialists in Britain and America.”
8
In fact, David Rowe argues that Miller’s appeal was
his rationality and traditional hermeneutic.9 The nineteenth century was
replete with various
ideas predicting the Second Advent and Miller soon became one of the
most famous.
THE MILLERITE MOVEMENT
After two years he was convinced he understood the key to the return of
Christ based on
Daniel 8:14: “For 2,300 evenings and mornings. Then the sanctuary shall
be restored to its
rightful state” (Da 8:14). Miller interpreted this passage to refer to
the cleansing of the earth, as
the “sanctuary” by Jesus Christ at his second coming. But as was popular
at the time, Miller used
the year-day formula found in other prophecies like seventy weeks of
Daniel 9 and Ezekiel 4:6b
"…Forty days I assign you, a day for each year." He believed the seventy
weeks which ended at
the crucifixion were within the 2300 years. Thus, he employed the
seventy weeks point of origin
to set a beginning point at 457 BC, the decree to rebuild Jerusalem by
Artaxerxes I of Persia, and
moved forward 2300 years. Miller wrote, “I was thus brought, in 1818, at
the close of my two
years’ study of the Scriptures, to the solemn conclusion, that in about
twenty-five years from that
7 G. K. Beale, The Book of Revelation: A Commentary on the Greek Text
(Grand Rapids, Michigan: W.B.
Eerdmans, 1999), 46.
8 William P. Collins, “Millennialism, the Millerites, and Historicism”
World Order 30 (December
1998):17.
9 David Rowe, The Disappointed: Millerism and Millenarianism in the
Nineteenth Century (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1987), 13.6
time [1818] all the affairs of our present state would be wound up.”10
In other words, he arrived
at 1843 as the date of the Second Advent.
Modern scholars understand these to be literal days signifying the
period from 170 BC to
the death of the high priest Onias III on December 14, 164 when Judas
Maccabeus cleansed and
rededicated the temple (1 Mac. 4:52).11 Accordingly, a criticism often
leveled against Miller is
that his isolation and self-taught hermeneutic led to his erroneous
conclusions. For example,
Richard Abanes writes, “His difficulties were compounded by his refusal
to use scholarly
resources (such as Bible commentaries), lack of formal training, and
limited linguistic skills.”12
However, it is important to recognize that Miller was not alone in his
historicist hermeneutic.
Christian leaders from a broad spectrum, Jonathan Edwards to John
Wesley, believed that Jesus
was likely to return 1260 years from AD 606 when the Pope had declared
himself universal
bishop based on Revelation 12:6 and other passages. For instance, the
Revelation commentary
heralded by Spurgeon and others in the nineteenth century, Horae
Apocalypticae, set a date as
well:
At the same time that the fall and complete commencement of the period
appeared on
strong and peculiar historic evidence (especially that of the then risen
ten diademed
Romano-Gothic Papal horns) to have about synchronized with the epoch of
Phocas’
decree A.D. 606; and the corresponding epoch of end with the year
I866.13
Thus, it seems that the use of commentaries might have only resulted in a
date some twenty years
subsequent. Miller’s hermeneutic was not at all far from the norm of his
day.
10 Leroy Froom, The Prophetic Faith of Our Fathers, vol. 4 (Washington
D.C.: Review and Herald
Publishing Association, 1954), 463.
11 The ESV Study Bible (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles, 2008), 1604.
12 Richard Abanes, End-Time Visions: the Road to Armageddon? (New York:
Four Walls Eight Windows,
1998), 214.
13 Edward Elliot, Horae Apocalypticae vol. 4 (London : Seeley, Jackson,
and Halliday, 1862 ), 237.7
At first Miller only told his friends and family about his conclusions.
He attended a
particular Baptist church where his friends and family encouraged him to
share his ideas. While
initially reluctant, Miller describes hearing from God:
It came home to me with more force than ever, “Go and tell it to the
world." The
impression was so sudden, and came on with such force, that I settled
down into my
chair, saying. “I can’t go Lord.” “Why not?” seemed to be the response;
and then all my
excuses came up, my want of ability, etc.; but my distress became so
great, I entered into
a solid covenant with God, that, if he would open the way, I would go
and perform my
duty to the world.14
He seems sincere and it appeared to Miler that his prayer was
immediately answered as an
invitation to speak at a neighboring church came in that very day.
Indeed, at his first appearance
in Dresden, New York, a revival broke out in 1831.15 This bolstered his
confidence and certainty.
Shortly thereafter, he was invited by Baptist, Methodist, and
Congregational churches all over
the northeast, so many that after a year he could accept no more
invitations.
Beginning in 1832, he wrote a series of articles promoting his
prediction in a local Baptist
paper, the Vermont Telegraph. In 1833, he put this into pamphlet form
and that same year he was
licensed as a Baptist preacher.16 Also in 1833, a dramatic meteor shower
occurred which seemed
to be a harbinger of the end times as per Jesus’ teaching on "…great
signs from heaven" (Lk
21:11). One eyewitness reported, "The whole firmament, over all the
United States, being then,
for hours, in fiery commotion! No celestial phenomenon has ever occurred
in this country, since
its first settlement, which was viewed with such intense admiration by
one class in the
14 R. M. Devens, American Progress: The Great Events of the Greatest
Century, (Topeka, KS: Herbert S.
Reed, 1896), 308.
15 “Millennialism in America” in J. Gordon Melton, Encyclopedia of
American Religions (Detroit: Gale
Research, 2003), 121.
16 Earlke Cairns, “Miller, William” in The New International Dictionary
of the Christian Church.ed. J. D.
Douglas, Earle E. Cairns and James E. Ruark (Grand Rapids: Zondervan
Publishing House, 1978), 660.8
community, or with so much dread and alarm by another."17 Given these
seeming marks of
authentication, it is easy to empathize. Everything Miller experienced
appeared to confirm his
eschatological hypothesis and his message increasingly gained traction
in the culture. For the
next decade, he was an itinerant evangelist, preaching the imminent
return of Jesus to large
crowds. It is abundantly clear that he sincerely believed every word of
it.
In 1836, he published what became a bestselling book on the subject,
Evidence from
Scripture and History of the Second Coming of Christ, About the Year
1843.
18 The book was
such a success that many prominent pastors including Josiah Litch,
Joseph Bates, Henry Dana
Ward and Charles Fitch joined Miller.19 Most remarkably, Joshua Himes
invited Miller to preach
in his Boston church. Himes had the promotional talent to lift the
movement into national
prominence. In March of 1840, Himes began publication of the movement’s
magazine, Signs of
the Times. In October, they held a transformative conference at Chardon
Street Church in
Boston. The “Millerite” movement took on national prominence.
The Boston conference was so wildly successful that other conferences in
cities across
the Northeast and Midwest were held to herald Miller’s apocalyptic
message, which Himes had
sloganeered as ‘‘the midnight cry.’’ While he never intended to start a
new denomination, he was
drawing followers from nearly all of the protestant churches.
Intentional or not, the “Millerites”
had formed a new sect that was also labeled the “Adventists.” One such
Adventist wrote, “Most
of them loved their churches, and could not think of leaving. But when
they were ridiculed,
oppressed, and in various ways cut off from their former privileges
…they shook off the yoke,
17 Devens, American Progress, 228.
18 Douglas, The New International, 660.
19 Melton, Encyclopedia of American Religions, 121.9
and raised the cry, 'Come out of her, My people.'”20 They were leaving
their home churches to
follow Miller. While some grew militant, others later regretted it.
Miller was unwavering and did little to mitigate the attrition of local
congregations. As
the movement grew, the established denominations began to increasingly
speak against Miller’s
alarmism. In response, some of the Adventists grew increasingly
intolerant of Christians who did
not accept their prophetic scheme. In other words, they were so
confident they were unwilling to
accept any dissent. For them, the exegesis was sound and the logic
incontrovertible. This is a
common error amongst fanatics: they become too enamored by their own
opinions to be
objective. They soon began to label the holdouts and their churches as
“Babylon” based on
Revelation 17. Miller did little to dissuade them. As a leader, he
should have. As the date
approached it is estimated that Miller gained well over 50,000
followers, some estimate up
100,000.
21
The backlash from the abstaining churches ensued as Millerites were
subjected to church
discipline and excommunicated. In fact, an annual meeting of Methodist
ministers adopted a
resolution which is likely characteristic of the mainline opinion:
Resolved, that the peculiarities of that theory relative to the second
coming of Christ and
the end of the world, denominated Millerism, together with all its
modifications, are
contrary to the standards of the church, and we are constrained to
regard them as among
the erroneous and strange doctrines which we are pledged to banish and
drive away.22
20 Emma Howell Cooper, The Great Advent Movement, (Washington D.C.:
Review and Herald Publishing
Association, 1968), 31.
21 William M. Alnor, Soothsayers of the Second Advent (Old Tappan, NJ.:
Fleming H Revell Co, 1989), 58.
22
Cooper, The Great Advent, 31.10
Adventists began being expelled from their churches. Notably, at the
Maine Conference of the
Methodist Episcopal Church, L. S. Stockman, a leader in the
denomination23
, was tried before
his presiding elders and expelled for heresy.
24 Also, Robert Harmon, the father of soon to be
prophetess, Ellen G. White, was removed along with the entire family.25
To add fuel to the fire,
the increasingly charismatic behavior at Adventist tent meetings fueled
the popular press and the
New York Christian Advocate carried a series of critical articles
against Millerism.
William Miller stood firm. Rather than moderating his claims or
extending charity to the
churches, he proclaimed certainty. It is fair to argue that Miller was
sincere and his prayers were
seemingly confirmed. Perhaps, this prideful resoluteness was a greater
error than his prediction
because even the apostles expected to see Christ to return in their
lifetime. While he had only
named the year 1843 in the book and articles, on January 1, 1843 he got
more specific:
I believe the time can be known by all who desire to understand and to
be ready for His
coming. And I am fully convinced that sometime between March 21st, 1843,
and March
21st, 1844, according to the Jewish mode of computation of time, Christ
will come, and
bring all His saints with Him; and that then He will reward every man as
his work shall
be.26
It is important to note that he set no day nor hour in deference to “But
concerning that day or that
hour, no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only
the Father" (Mk 13:32).
In this way, he claimed to accept Jesus’ admonition but believed the
year was crystal clear by
23
“Minutes of the annual conferences of the Methodist Episcopal Church”
(T. Mason and G. Lane for the
Methodist Episcopal Church, 1840).
24 Melton, Encyclopedia of American Religions, 121
25 Cooper, The Great Advent, 31.
26 William Miller quoted in Francis D. Nichol, The Midnight Cry
(Washington, DC, Review and Herald
Publishing, 1945), 48.11
exegesis. Even so, a deadline is inferred by the outward bound of the
range which is a specific
day.
In late February, an unexpected large comet appeared in the sky, a
seeming harbinger of
the Second Advent. This is known as “the great comet of 1843” and is
listed as one of the
greatest of all time. According to astronomers, it is from a group of
comets “which has produced
some of the most brilliant comets in recorded history.”
27 Thus, it is not surprising that
anticipation mounted amongst the true believers. A huge Millerite temple
was built in Boston.
Charles Fitch pushed the “come out of her” movement to new levels albeit
against Miller’s
wishes. Yet, he failed to denounce it. The rhetoric between the
Adventists and the
denominational churches grew more heated. As the inside boundary of
March 14, 1843 came and
went, the movement reached a fever pitch. One scholar has estimated that
the Millerites
collaterally influenced up to one million American Christians to become
anxiously expectant.28
THE GREAT DISAPPOINTMENT
As days went by, the Millerites were unfazed but the newspapers and the
general public
began to jeer. Nonetheless, Miller’s prediction allowed for an entire
year of intense expectancy.
As 1844 came to pass Miller appealed to the Jewish calendar and
encouraged his followers,
“Shall we give up the ship? No, No…”29 In fact, some were expressing
doubts but they were
dissuaded by the faithful. As the deadline loomed, it seems even Miller
was having second
thoughts. An editorial in February 1844 edition of The Midnight Cry,
conceded, “If we are
27 Joe Rao, “The Greatest Comets of All Time,” Space,
http://www.space.com/3366-greatest-cometstime.html (accessed
08/16/2012).
28 Collins, “Millennialism,” 18.
29 Eva Shaw, Eve of Destruction: Prophecies, Theories, and Preparations
for the End of the World
(Chicago: Contemporary Books, 1995), 65.12
mistaken in the time, we feel the fullest confidence that the event we
have anticipated is the next
great event in the world’s history.”30 Even so, Miller’s followers did
not pick up on this subtle
moderation. It was too late to attenuate the fervor of the movement and
largely by default Miller
did great damage to local churches.
The February 1844 issue of The Midnight Cry featured a long article on
“Babylon.” The
author exhorted his readers “I ask your attention to the fact, that John
[the revelator] heard, as
distinctly, ‘a voice from heaven, saying, COME OUT OF HER, MY PEOPLE, as
he did that the
hour of His judgment is come.’”31 Accounts report pastors from
Presbyterian, Methodist,
Baptist, and Episcopal churches leaving their denominations to minister
in makeshift Millerite
tabernacles which were erected around the country, even Canada. The
majority were Baptist.32
While Miller was convinced that the Roman Catholic Church was within
Babylon, he expressed
doubt that it included Protestantism. Even so, he did little to stop the
exodus by making
indecisive statements like, “I am not certain but that God will confound
all of our sectarian
churches, and bring out His people from among them.”33 In response, many
of his followers had
not only left their churches but also quit their jobs. Certain or not,
Miller had declared war in the
minds of the denominational leadership.
In 1844, as the outward boundary of March 14 passed without the second
coming, some
of the most radical Millerites lost control. Various newspaper accounts
report Millerites jumping
from trees and roofs expecting to be raptured. The headline of a Boston
newspaper mocked,
30 Nichols, The Midnight, 63.
31 Nichol, The Midnight, 63.
32 Rowe, The Disappointed, 9.
33 Nichol, The Midnight, 63.13
“What? – not gone up yet?” and speaks of Miller and “the mischief he has
done the past year in
filling our lunatic asylums.”34 Miller had earlier written of his views,
‘‘If this chronology is not
correct, I shall despair of ever getting from the Bible and history a
true account of the age of the
world.’’35 In May 1844, Miller wrote to his followers, ‘‘I confess my
error and acknowledge my
disappointment. Yet, I still believe that the day of the Lord is near,
even at the door; and I exhort
you, my brethren, to be watchful, and not let that day come upon you
unawares.’’
36 Some were
disillusioned and left the movement. Even so, the multitude of
enthusiastic followers could not
all be turned away.
Resolved and unrepentant, the hard core Adventists began to make
adjustments to
Miller’s chronology. Samuel Snow claimed to have found the problem with
the initial
calculation. He made the necessary corrections based on a “tarrying
time” and predicted October
22, 1844, as the real date of return. Although he was reluctant at
first, Miller was persuaded of
the new date and rejoined the movement. He wrote, “I see a glory in the
seventh month which I
never saw before. Although the Lord had shown me the typical bearing of
the seventh month,
one year and a half ago, yet I did not realize the force of the types. …
Thank the Lord. I am
almost home, Glory! Glory! Glory!”37 Eventually Himes, Fitch and the
other leaders signed on
and expectant tensions reached new levels of hysteria.
34 Nichol, The Midnight, 127.
35 Abanes, End Time, 224.
36 Nichol, The Midnight, 66.
37 Nichol, The Midnight, 87.14
On October 22, the Adventists gathered to wait on the Lord. Of course,
it was a colossal
failure, even worse than before. The collateral damage to the people’s
faith was horrific. A
fragment of a manuscript by a Millerite, Hiram Edson, is preserved in an
Adventist history:
If this had proved a failure, what was the rest of my Christian
experience worth? Has the
Bible proved a failure? Is there no God, no heaven, no golden home city,
no paradise? Is
all this but a cunningly devised fable? Is there no reality to our
fondest hope and
expectation of these things? And thus we had something to grieve and
weep over, if all
our fond hopes were lost. And as I said, we wept till the day dawn.38
The Great Disappointment, as the Adventists termed the non-event of
October 22, 1844, left the
crusade in turmoil. This time, there was no speedy recovery. After
Miller publicly acknowledged
his mistake, he dissociated himself from the movement.39 Most of the
others followed suit.
Miller never set another date and died a humbled man five years later.40
All the same, a core of
the group remained incorrigible. Perhaps, they were driven by resentment
of their former
churches and the years of contention. In the end, all resentment is
pride.
Reaching for straws, Hiram Edson speculated that Miller’s assumption
that the sanctuary
represented the earth was the problem and that it actually represented
the sanctuary in heaven.
Now the cleansing conveniently became an invisible judgment.
Accordingly, the October 22,
1844 date was modified to denote when Christ entered the Holy of Holies
in the heavenly
sanctuary, not the Second Coming. This remnant group became the
Seventh-day Adventist
Church of today and this modification is called the doctrine of the
pre-Advent Divine
38 Nichol, The Midnight, 94.
39 M.E. Dieter, “Adventism” in Evangelical Dictionary of Theology:
Second Edition ed. Walter A. Elwell,
(Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2001), 28.
40 Alnor, Soothsayers, 59.15
Investigative Judgment.41 Frankly, it seems like a lame excuse. Miller
was simply mistaken. The
lesson to be learned here is that it is perfectly fine and even
commendable to be fascinated by
prophecy and to study various interpretations, but to never set dates
and, no matter how
compelling, to follow Paul’s teaching in 2 Thessalonians. The purpose of
that letter leads many
interpreters to infer that some of the Thessalonians were so sure that
the day of the Lord was
upon them that they had quit their jobs. Paul had rebuked them and
providentially anticipated the
error of the Millerites (as well as Harold Camping and countless
others).
A LEGACY OF HETERODOXY
The mainline denominations were vindicated but not all were so caustic
as to belittle the
wounded Christians. Many Millerites went back to their home churches. To
make matters worse,
as discussed above, several other historicist dates, like 1866, came and
went. This was also the
time of German higher criticism, anti-supernaturalism and the rise of
liberalism. Of course,
William Miller now looked foolish and the liberals made sport of him
incessantly. Accordingly,
the spectacle fueled theological liberalism and many began to frown on
the study of Bible
prophecy. Additionally, it helped to promote the futurist interpretation
based on the historical
grammatical hermeneutic advocated by John Nelson Darby and popularized
in the Scofield
Reference Bible. This view is still dominant today.
As well as the rationalist reaction, the Adventist movement spawned a
number of new
heresies. In addition to Edson, the infamous inventor of the invisible
investigative judgment was
Joseph Bates who was responsible for insisting the Saturday Sabbath was a
set ordinance. The
third and most influential figure was Ellen G. White. She was reared in
the movement as Ellen
41 Roy Adams, “The Pre-Advent Judgment” Adventist World,
http://www.adventistworld.org/article.php?id=136. (accessed
8/16/2012).16
Gould Harmon. Her father, Robert, was expelled from the Methodist church
for Millerism, as
discussed above. She married James White, one of the leaders of the
Millerite movement, and
became an important leader herself. Adventists believe that Ellen White
had a gift of prophecy
and most of the doctrines identified with Seventh-Day Adventism today
are a direct result of her
so called “revelations.” A few examples are discussed by way of example.
White promoted many strange ideas including the belief in
extraterrestrials. In her book
Patriarchs and Prophets she wrote of Christ traveling from planet to
planet attending to the
spiritual needs of alien races:
It was the marvel of all the universe that Christ should humble Himself
to save fallen
man. That He who had passed from star to star, from world to world,
superintending all,
by His providence supplying the needs of every order of being in His
vast creation--that
He should consent to leave His glory and take upon Himself human nature,
was a
mystery which the sinless intelligences of other worlds desired to
understand.42
Exo-theology aside, most modern Adventists revere her books. Though some
Seventh-Day
Adventists go so far as to posit White’s writings equal with Scripture,
it is not the official
position of the church, which ostensibly claims the Bible as its only
source of authority.
However, it seems that theory often differs from practice and most
Adventists still accept her
writings as authoritative.
In the more recent material, Seventh-Day Adventists argue for orthodox
biblical positions
regarding the deity of Christ, the Trinity, the Bible and the way of
salvation.43 However, their
most distinctive doctrine is the necessity of Saturday Sabbath keeping.
This seems problematic in
light of the New Testament (Acts 20:6-7; 1 Cor 16:2; Col 2:16-17). Still
predicting the imminent
42 Ellen Gould White, Patriarchs and Prophets (Nampa, ID: Pacific Press
Publishing Association, 1890),
69.
43 Larry A. Nichols, George A. Mather and Alvin J. Schmidt, Encyclopedic
Dictionary of Cults, Sects, and
World Religions, 268 (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2006).17
eschaton, Seventh-Day Adventists claim that blasphemous Sunday worship
will soon be forced
on everyone because Ellen White wrote, “Those who yield the truth of
heavenly origin, and
accept the Sunday Sabbath, will receive the mark of the beast.”44
Unfortunately, this sort of
rhetoric is ubiquitous in their literature. They also identify Jesus as
Michael the archangel,
45 a
view which is problematic given that Michael lacked the authority to
rebuke Satan in Jude 9 and
angels are created beings. Even though he would not have approved of
these teachings, Miller’s
legacy is a spirit of confusion.
CONCLUSION
This paper offered a summary of the life of Baptist preacher William
Miller and an
analysis of the Millerite movement. After offering a brief summary, the
paper sought to show
that Miller’s exegesis was by no means uncommon for his day. In fact,
his conclusions were
right in line with the standard works of the period like Horae
Apocalypticae. Answered prayer
and celestial events also seemed to authenticate Miller’s ideas. It is
easy to empathize with his
sincere belief. Because Christians live in the tension of the
already/not yet paradigm, it is
expected and even appropriate that they believe his arrival is imminent.
But views on
eschatology are necessarily speculative and should be held loosely and
with charity. Of course, a
great tragedy could have been prevented had Miller been more humble and
tentative with his
speculations. His inability to consider proper criticism caused great
harm. He should have
spoken against the “come out of her” movement which emptied and divided
local churches. It
was this battle which led to resentment fueled sectarianism by the
Seventh-Day Adventist
44 Ellen Gould White, Maranatha, The Lord Is Coming, (Washington D.C.:
Review and Herald Publishing
Association, 1976) 164.
45 e.g.“It thus seems clear that Michael is none other than the Lord
Jesus Himself.” Francis D. Nichol, The
Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary, Volume 4 (Review and Herald
Publishing Association, 1978), 860.18
Church. It seems that Miller’s greatest downfall was his pride, alarmism
and special pleading
once his interpretation failed. It is to his credit that he accepted the
failure even when his
followers persisted. Unfortunately, the fruit of his error is still
ripening on the vine as the
Seventh-Day Adventist movement is alive and well. The relationship
between these points was
shown. In the end, it seems that these points support the idea that a
prideful preacher leaves a
legacy of heterodoxy.
19
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