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Adventist
Pioneers
John Nevins Andrews 1829-1883
J. N. Andrews was an intellectual who
enjoyed "severe study" much more than physical activity. He was closely
associated with James & Ellen White in the leadership and evangelistic
work of the SDA Church. As a theologian, Andrews made great strides in the
development of church doctrines. He applied the two-horned beast of Rev.
13 to the United States of America. Further, he was influential in
creating the church’s bylaws and constitution. In 1855, after thorough
investigation, Andrews adopted sunset Friday evening as the beginning of
the Sabbath. This began a standard for the church. He also organized the
church as a legal business association, allowing the church to obtain
legal possession of property. During the Civil War, Andrews lobbied for
non-combatant designation for SDA draftees.In 1860, he was involved in the
organization of the denominational publishing house. The following year,
he published his extensive research, History of the Sabbath & the
First Day of the Week. This was a work reviewing the seventh-day Sabbath
in history. Between 1869-70, he was the editor of the Review and Herald.
In 1874, he became the first SDA missionary in Switzerland. He worked to
gather the scattered Sabbath-keeping companies and organize them with a
united message. While living in Basel, he contracted tuberculosis and died. He was 54. |
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Joseph Bates
1792-1872 At age 15,
Joseph Bates "shipped" on a commercial vessel. For the next twenty-one
years he lived the life of a sailor and ship captain. He returned to
civilian life in 1828 with a small fortune. During the Advent Awakening,
the retired sea captain became a respected evangelist and spiritual leader
among the Adventists. In early 1845, Bates was providentially led to an
understanding of the truth concerning the seventh-day Sabbath, and in 1846
he published a 48-page tract on the subject. The respected Captain
was the oldest member of our church pioneers, and he became the first
Seventh-day Adventist local conference president (Michigan, 1861). He
lived to the age of 80. One reason for his physical endurance, in spite of
many sacrifices, was his simple diet and temperate habits. He organized of
the first temperance societies in the United States. Bates was a spiritual
man with clear-cut views and the courage of a lion. He did not hesitate to
sacrifice when the need arose. Let us thank God for the venerable Captain
-- apostle of the Sabbath truth. |
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Sylvester
Bliss (1814-1863) Sylvester Bliss was the ablest of the
Millerite editors. He was first assistant editor, then editor, of the
Millerite journal The Signs of the Times. He was a Congregationalist from
Hartford, Conneticut, with a liberal education and was a member of the
Historical Society of Boston. He was also an editor of the Advent Shield
and later edited the Memoirs of Miller (1853). Among his works are
Commentary on the Revelation, The Time of the End, and Analysis of Sacred
Chronology. He remained until his death the editor of the Advent Herald (a
later name of The Signs of the Times), which remained the organ of the
group of ex-Millerites who did not accept the doctrine of conditional
immortality. |
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Daniel T. Bourdeau
(1835-1905) Daniel T.
Bourdeau was an evangelist and missionary, and brother of A. C. Bourdeau.
At 11 years of age he joined the Baptist Church and at 16, with his
brother, attended a Baptist French-language institution at Grand Ligne,
Lower Canada. In 1861 he married Marion E. Saxby.
Ordained to the SDA ministry in 1858,
he, with his brother, spent many years in evangelism in New England and
Canada. As far as is known, the two brothers were the first of French
descent to have accepted the SDA faith. In 1868, with J. N. Loughborough,
he responded to a call from an SDA group in California, headed by M. G.
Kellogg, to open SDA work in that State. When he returned to the
East in 1870 he resumed work among the French-speaking people and
organized churches in Wisconsin and Illinois (1873). In 1876 he went to
Europe to spend a year of evangelistic work in Switzerland, France, and
Italy, and associated with J. N. Andrews in editorial work. Again in 1882,
with his brother, he took up evangelistic work in Europe, working in
France, Switzerland, Corsica, Italy, and Alsace-Lorraine. Altogether he
spent seven years overseas. On returning to America (1888), he
continued as a minister and writer, working at first for French-speaking
people, and then largely for the English. |
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John Byington
(1798-1887)
John Byington was born in
Vermont, son
of a Methodist preacher who had served as a soldier in the Revolutionary
army. John was baptized into the Methodist church at age 17. He shortly
was given a license to preach as a lay preacher.
After moving to New York state, he
helped build a house of worship for the Methodist Church around 1837 in
Buck's Bridge. He became strongly involved in the antislavery movement,
which eventually led to a schism in the Methodist church. John joined the
new Wesleyan Methodist Church and helped to build its church building and
parsonage in Morley.
In 1844 he heard sermons on the soon
coming of Christ, and began studying the prophecies. In 1852 H. W.
Lawrence gave him a copy of the Review and Herald containing articles on
the seventh-day Sabbath. He accepted the Sabbath truth before the year was
out, and was baptized. He helped then to build the first Sabbath-keeping
Adventist church built for that purpose. James & Ellen White invited
the Byingtons to move to Battle Creek in 1858. John bought a farm nearby,
and from there would travel to minister to the scattered believers.
In 1863 at age 65 he accepted the
first presidency of the newly organized Seventh-day Adventist church. He
worked as a genuine shepherd and pastor during his term in office. Then he
returned to his farm, but continued his visitation of believers throughout
Michigan for the next 22 years. "I must feed the lambs of the flock," he
wrote. |
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Merritt E. Cornell
(1827-1893)
Born in New York state, and raised
from age 10 in Michigan, Merritt Cornell early believed the advent message, and dedicated his life to preaching
it. In 1852 he was shown and
believed the Sabbath truth, and immediately began sharing it with others,
J. P. Kellogg and Cornell's father-in-law, Henry Lyon, being among the
first persons he met. Both accepted the Bible evidence for the seventh day
sacredness.
With J. N. Loughborough during 1854 in
Battle Creek he held the first Sabbatarian Adventist tent meetings. He
continued to be active in evangelism, working at various times with Hiram
Case, James White, J. H. Waggoner, R. J. Lawrence, D. M. Canright, and J.
O. Corliss. His wife, Angeline, assisted him in evangelism. He traveled
from Maine to California and to several states in the South, defending
Seventh-day Adventist views of scripture in public debate, holding
evangelistic meetings, and writing articles and news items about his
experiences for the Review and Herald. Like Peter of old, he was
headstrong and had other serious character faults, with which the Lord
labored with him, sending messages through Ellen White.
For some 13 years, from 1876 to 1889
he was not connected with the organized work, but continued some
free-lance preaching for part of that time. In 1886 Ellen White wrote that
he was "a deeply repenting man, humbled in the dust." For the last three
years of his life, he was again in the ministry. |
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Owen Russell Loomis
Crosier 1820-1913
O. R. L. Crosier was a Millerite
preacher and editor, from Canandiagua, New York. He collaborated with
Hiram Edson and Dr. F. B. Hahn in publishing a small Millerite paper, the
Day-Dawn. He was with Edson on the morning after the great disappointment
on October 22, 1844. Edson received an inspiration from God which
explained that the Millerites’ error was not in the date, but in the
event; that Jesus had begun His work as High Priest in the most holy place
in Heaven.
Crosier, Edson, and Hahn joined
together to study the subject, and Crosier was selected to write out their
findings on the subject of the sanctuary and its cleansing. Joseph Bates
and James White were among those Millerites who were convinced by the
resulting article. When Ellen White read the second and expanded printing
of the article published in the Day-Star Extra, of February 7, 1846, she
immediately recommended it to the brethren as "true light."
When Elder Bates presented the Sabbath
message to a group at Edson’s, Crosier at first accepted the new light and
kept the Sabbath. But eventually, he abandoned Sabbath keeping, and also
his early sanctuary view. Even though Crosier made no contribution other
than the development of our early views of the sanctuary, this doctrine is
unique to the Seventh-day Adventist Church. The plan of salvation is
perfectly typified and beautifully explained by the services carried out
in the tabernacle Moses built. |
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Charles Fitch
(1805-1844)
After studying at Brown University in
Rhode Island, Charles Fitch began his ministry in the Congregational
Church at Abington, Connecticut. In March of 1838 Fitch wrote William
Miller stating that he had read Miller's Lectures and did not doubt the
correctness of his views.
For approximately three and a half
years, he held back from preaching the Millerite message. Eventually,
because he preached the doctrine of "holiness" and was exhorted not to do
so, Fitch felt it necessary to separate from the established church. This
separation caused him to be less influenced by the fear of man regarding
the Millerite understanding of the advent. Josiah Litch visited Fitch and
told him he needed the doctrine of the second advent to add to his
doctrine of holiness. Litch left him more literature to study and
requested he correspond as to the result of his study. This study led to
his accepting the advent doctrine.
Thereafter, Fitch traveled
tirelessly,
throwing himself unreservedly into proclaiming the need of preparation for
the Second Coming of Christ. He moved his family to Cleveland, Ohio and
held meetings and baptisms all over Ohio.
In 1842, feeling the need of an
accurate chart, Fitch and Apollos Hale prepared the famous chart
illustrating the fulfillment of the last-time prophecies of Daniel. This
was used extensively by the Millerites. Fitch himself used this chart and
also other visual aids including a replica of the Daniel 2 statue that
could be separated into its various parts. Charles Fitch became seriously
ill, probably with pneumonia, in the month of October, 1844. He had
chilled while baptizing converts. He died on Monday, October 14th, in full
faith that he should awake in a few days in the likeness of his Redeemer. |
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Stephen N. Haskell
(1833-1922)
Stephen Haskell was an evangelist and
administrator. He began preaching for the non-Sabbatarian Adventists in
New England in 1853, and later the same year began to observe the Sabbath.
After self-supporting work in New England, in 1870 he was ordained and
became president of the New England Conference (1870-1876, 1877-1887).
In 1870 he organized the first
conference Tract and Missionary Society and subsequently organized similar
societies in various parts of the Eastern United States. He was three
times president of the California Conference (1879-1887, 1891-1894,
1908-1911) and also of the Maine Conference (1884-1886).
In 1885 he was in charge of a group
that was sent to open denominational work in Australia and New Zealand. In
1887, with three Bible instructors he began SDA work in London, England.
He made a world tour on behalf of
missionary work in 1889-1890, visiting Western Europe, Southern Africa,
India, China, Japan, and Australia. Another of Haskell's "firsts" was the
organization of the first SDA church of African Americans in New York City
(1902). He led in temperance work in Maine (1911), began printing books
for the blind (1912), and assisted in the development of the White
Memorial Hospital (1916).
His written works include The Story of
Daniel the Prophet, The Story of the Seer of Patmos, and The Cross and Its
Shadow. |
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John Norton Loughborough
1832-1924
J. N. Loughborough became a
Sabbath-keeping Adventist through the labors of J. N. Andrews. He began
preaching immediately and was ordained in 1854. He, along with D. T.
Bordeau, were our first missionaries, sent to California in 1868. In 1878,
he was sent to Europe.
He was at one time president of the
Illinois Conference. He was the denomination’s first historian, and wrote
the books, The Rise and Progress of Seventh-day Adventists and The Great
Second Advent Movement. Like most of the early Advent leaders,
Loughborough took a real interest in the literature work. He and James
White discussed ways and means of advancing the work of the gospel. It was
suggested that if books were offered to the public in connection with
preaching services, the people would be willing to pay a small price for
them.
Thus, the way would be prepared for
more literature to be produced. Young Loughborough tried this method, and
it was a success. Loughborough was truly a great pioneer, lending his many
talents to the development of the work wherever there was a need.
Elder Loughborough was obedient to the
heavenly vision, and God used him in a mighty way to build up the interest
of His cause. Loughborough spent his last years in the St. Helena
Sanitarium, where he passed away peacefully on April 7, 1924, at the ripe
old age of ninety-two. |
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William Miller 1782-1849
William Miller had a strong religious
background, but he became attached to the wrong "crowd". His friends set
aside the Bible and had vague ideas about God and His personality. When
Miller was thirty-four years of age he became dissatisfied with his views.
The Holy Spirit impressed his
heart,
and he turned to the study of the Word of God. He found in Christ the
answer to all his needs. His study led him to the great prophecies that
pointed to the first and to the second advent of our Lord. The time
prophecies interested him, particularly the prophecies of Daniel and The
Revelation.
In the year 1818, as a result of his
study of the prophecies of Daniel 8 and 9, he came to the conclusion that
Christ would come some time in the year 1843 or 1844. He hesitated until
1831 before he began to announce his findings. From his first public
service we may mark the beginnings of the Advent movement in North
America.
In the months and years that followed,
roughly 100,000 persons came to believe in the imminence of Christ’s
second coming. Following the great disappointment of 1844, Miller lived
for several years. He fell asleep in Christ in 1849.
A small chapel stands near his home in
Low Hampton, New York, built by Miller before he died. In spite of his
misunderstanding of the event that was to transpire in 1844, God used him
to awaken the world to the nearness of the end and to prepare sinners for
the time of judgment. |
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Thomas M. Preble
(1810-1907)
T. M. Preble was a Freewill Baptist
minister of New Hampshire, and Millerite preacher. He accepted the Sabbath
in the middle of 1844 (perhaps from Mrs. Rachel Oakes or someone else in
Washington, New Hampshire).
He was the first Adventist to advocate
the Sabbath in print. His article in the Hope of Israel (an Adventist
periodical of Portland, Maine) of February 28, 1845, was reprinted in
tract form in March under the title Tract, Showing That the Seventh Day
Should Be Observed As the Sabbath. This introduced the seventh-day Sabbath
to Joseph Bates, who later wrote his own tract on the Sabbath.
But Preble observed the seventh day
only until the middle of 1847. In later years he wrote against the Sabbath
in the World's Crisis (an Advent Christian paper) and in his book
First-Day Sabbath. |
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Uriah Smith 1832-1903
In December 1852, Uriah Smith accepted
the message taught by the Sabbath-keeping Adventist and soon was
associated with the publishing interests of the believers in Rochester,
New York.
For about a half century he was the
editor or on the editorial staff of the church paper, the Review and
Herald. Smith was the first Secretary of the General Conference starting
in 1863.
He is best known for his book, The
Prophecies of Daniel and the Revelation. He was the first Bible teacher at
Battle Creek College. Elder Smith was often seen limping down the streets
of Battle Creek with his cane and artificial limb, for he had suffered an
amputation as a teenage boy.
W. A. Spicer gives us his impression
of Uriah Smith: "As a boy I always passed Elder Smith’s editorial room in
the old Battle Creek Review and Herald office with somewhat of awe: for
there was a notice on the door in dark purple-colored ink and in large
letters: ‘Editor’s Room. Busy? Yes, always. If you have any business,
Attend to your business, And let us attend to our business.’" Smith was a
man who was on the march. Though he was busy with the Lord’s business and
he wanted others to be about theirs, he was a gracious and tender-hearted
man. |
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George Storrs (1796-1879)
Born in New Hampshire, George Storrs
was converted and joined the Congregational Church at the age of 19. He
felt called to preach, and joined the Methodist ministry in 1825 through
the influence of a godly Methodist minister.
He preached much about slavery, even
being arrested in 1835 while praying for the slaves during an antislavery
society meeting. He was set free after a trial.
In 1837 he studied what the Bible had
to say about the state of the dead after reading a tract on the subject.
His conclusions led him to leave the Methodist church.
In 1842 he published six sermons he
had given on the topic. The same year he heard the Advent message, and
began preaching the soon coming of Christ, distributing copies of his "Six
Sermons" as he preached.
Charles Fitch wrote him January 25,
1844: "As you have long been fighting the Lord's battles alone, on the
subject of the state of the dead, and of the final doom of the wicked, I
write this to say, that I am at last, after much thought and prayer, and a
full conviction of duty to God, prepared to take my stand by your
side."
Storrs published a paper called "The
Bible Examiner" from 1843 until he died in 1879. He did not accept the
sanctuary message which explained the disappointment, nor the seventh-day
Sabbath truth, but continued to believe the Bible teaching about the state
of the dead. |
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Joseph Harvey Waggoner
1820-1889
Though a man with little formal
education, J. H. Waggoner was a giant in literary accomplishments, a
master of Greek and Hebrew, a knowledgeable theologian, an accomplished
editor, a pioneer in health reform and religious liberty, and a tower of
strength as a pioneer in the closing message of truth.
When Waggoner first learned of the
Adventist message in December, 1851, he was editor and publisher of a
political newspaper. Evidently Waggoner doubted that he could be saved
because he had not been in ‘the 1844 movement’. Ellen White encouraged him
to hope in God and to give his heart fully to Jesus, which he did then
early in 1852. He threw his tobacco wad into the stove on the day he
accepted the Sabbath, and he stood with Joseph Bates as a strong advocate
of temperate living.
By 1853, Waggoner had unreservedly
dedicated his life to the propagation of the message. Having learned the
publishing trade as a youth in Pennsylvania and Illinois, Waggoner’s
talents were employed many times in editorial capacities. He followed
James White as editor of the western Signs of the Times, and he was the
first editor of both the Pacific Health Journal and the American Sentinel
(a Religious Liberty journal). |
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Ellen G. White
(1827-1915)
Ellen Harmon was born in Gorham,
Maine. Ellen and her family first heard William Miller preach in 1840. She
was converted at a Methodist camp meeting that same year, and was baptized
two years later.
In December of 1844, Ellen received
her first vision, regarding the travels of the advent people to the city
of God. The Lord called her to a life-long ministry as His messenger. She
met James White in February 1845, marrying him in August of 1846.
The early years of their marriage were
marked with poverty, hard work, and poor health. In 1849 in response to a
message from God through Ellen, James began a publishing work, beginning
with the Present Truth.
In addition to personal messages given
her for specific people, Mrs. White received visions and dreams outlining
the Bible truths for our time. She wrote extensively on topics as varied
as the great controversy between Christ and Satan, healthful living,
proper methods of education, and godly family relations.
Out of these messages, the believers
were led to begin schools, sanitariums, and publishing houses. She did the
bulk of her writing during the last three decades of her life. During
these years she labored particularly with others to bring the message of
righteousness by faith in an end-time setting to the church, and then
endeavored to contain the damage that ensued when this truth was rejected.
Mrs. White's last years were spent living in California.
Through times of apostasies and fires
of judgment, the Lord continued to speak through her until the end,
guiding, reproving, instructing the remnant church, ever pointing the
sinner to Jesus and the cross, and sounding a clarion call to prepare to
meet the Lord. |
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James Springer White
1821-1881
In his youth James White was a school
teacher. He later became a Christian minister in Maine. He accepted
William Miller’s views on the second advent and was successful in
preaching the doctrine of the soon coming of the Savior.
He was a talented and capable
executive, missionary leader, and powerful public evangelist. Not only did
he participate with William Miller, Joseph Bates, and scores of other
preachers in announcing the advent of our Lord near in the 1840’s, but he
outlived the Millerite movement to become the first great apostle of the
Seventh-day Adventist cause.
White was the publisher of the first
periodical issued by Seventh-day Adventists, Present Truth (1849); the
first editor of the Review and Herald (1850), the Youth’s Instructor
(1852), also the Signs of the Times (1874). He was president of the
General Conference between 1865-1967, 1869-1871, and 1874-1880.
If there was a founder of the Review
and Herald Publishing Association, it was James White along with his wife,
Ellen. He was the sponsor and promoter of the Pacific Press Publishing
Association. He died August 6, 1881, when he was only sixty. He literally
worked himself to death. The brethren leaned on him so heavily that his
towering figure fell.
His sixty years of life were spent
unselfishly and sacrificially. No other Seventh-day Adventist minister did
more than he to build high principle and efficiency into the life of our
churches and institutions. |
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W. W. Prescott was in the 1890's
said to be one of "the Lord's chosen messengers, beloved of God" who had
"co-operated with God in the work for this time" (1888 Materials, p. 1241). God
gave him "a special message for the people" which he gave "in demonstration of
the Spirit and power of God." (RH01/07/1896)
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William Warren Prescott
(1855-1944)
W. W. Prescott was an educator and
administrator. His parents were Millerites in New England. He graduated
from Dartmouth College in 1877. He served as principal of high schools in
Vermont, and published and edited newspapers in Maine and Vermont prior to
accepting the presidency of Battle Creek College (1885 to 1894).
While still president of Battle Creek
College he helped found Union College and became its first president in
1891. Then late in 1892 he assumed the presidency of the newly founded
Walla Walla College. Because of his reputation as a Biblical scholar he
was called upon to make a world tour (1894-1895) to hold Bible institutes
and to strengthen developing educational interests.
Back in America in 1901, he became
vice-president of the General Conference, chairman of the Review and
Herald Publishing Association board, and editor of the Review and Herald.
On relinquishing this editorship in 1909, he edited the Protestant
Magazine for seven years.
He was a field secretary of the
General Conference from 1915 until his retirement in 1937, serving during
this time as principal of the Australasian Missionary College (1922), and
as head of the Bible department at Union College (1924-1928). He spent the
year 1930 visiting the churches and institutions in Europe. On his return
he wrote The Spade and the Bible, and then became head of the Bible
department of Emmanuel Missionary College, a post he held until 1934.
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