Seventh-day
Adventist Church History
In just a century and a half the Seventh-day Adventist Church has grown
from a handful of individuals, who diligently studied the Bible in search
for truth, to a world-wide community of over eight million members and
millions of others who regard the Adventist Church their spiritual home.
Doctrinally, Seventh-day Adventists are heirs of the interfaith Millerite
movement of the 1840s. Although the name "Seventh-day Adventist"
was chosen in 1860, the denomination was not officially organized until
Ma y 21, 1863, when the movement included some 125 churches and 3,500 member.
Between 1831 and 1844, William Miller---a Baptist preacher and former
army captain in the War of 1812---launched the "great second advent
awakening" which eventually spread throughout most of the Christian
world. Based on his study of the prophecy of Daniel 8:14, Miller calculated
that Jesus would return to earth on October 22, 1844. When Jesus did not
appear, Miller's followers experienced what became to be called "the
great Disappointment."
Most of the thousands who had joined the movement, left it, in deep
disillusionment. A few, however, went back to their Bibles to find why
they had been disappointed. Soon they concluded that the October 22 date
had indeed been correct, but that Miller had predicted the wrong event
for that day. They became convinced that the Bible prophecy predicted not
that Jesus would return to earth in 1844, but that He would begin at that
time a special ministry in heaven for His followers. They still looked
for Jesus to come soon, however, as do Seventh-day Adventists yet today.
From this small group who refused to give up after the "great
disappointment" arose several leaders who built the foundation of
what would become the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Standing out among
these leaders were a young couple---James and Ellen White---and a retired
sea captain named Joseph Bates.
This small nucleus of "adventists" began to grow---mainly
in the New England states of America, where Miller's movement had begun.
Ellen White, a mere teenager at the time of the "great Disappointment,"
grew into a gifted author, speaker and administrator, who would become
and remain the trusted spiritual counselor of the Adventist family for
more than seventy years until her death in 1915. Early Adventists came
to believe ---as have Adventists ever since---that she enjoyed God's special
guidance as she wrote her counsels to the growing body of believers.
In 1860, at Battle Creek Michigan, the loosely knit congregations of
Adventists chose the name Seventh-day Adventist and in 1863 formally organized
a church body with a membership of 3,500. At first, work was largely confined
to North America until 1874 when the Church's first missionary, J. N. Andrews,
was sent to Switzerland. Africa was penetrated briefly in 1879 when Dr.
H. P. Ribton, an early convert in Italy, moved to Egypt and opened a school,
but the project ended when riots broke out in the vicinity. The first non-Protestant
Christian country entered was Russia, where an Adventist minister went
in 1886. On October 20, 1890, the schooner Pitcairn was launched at San
Francisco and was soon engaged in carrying missionaries to the Pacific
Islands. Seventh-day Adventist workers first entered non-Christian countries
in 1894 --- Gold Coast (Ghana), West Africa, and Matabeleland, South Africa.
The same year saw missionaries entering South America, and in 1896 there
were representatives in Japan. The Church now has established work in 209
countries.
The publication and distribution of literature were major factors in
the growth of the Advent movement. The Advent Review and Sabbath Herald
(now the Adventist Review), general church paper, was launched in Paris,
Maine, in 1850; the Youth's Instructor in Rochester, New York, in 1852;
and the Signs of the Times in Oakland, California, in 1874. The first denominational
publishing house at Battle Creek, Michigan, began operating in 1855 and
was duly incorporated in 1861 under the name of Seventh-day Adventist Publishing
Association.
The Health Reform Institute, later known as the Battle Creek Sanitarium,
opened its doors in 1866, and missionary society work was organized on
a statewide basis in 1870. The first of the Church's worldwide network
of schools was established in 1872, and 1877 saw the formation of statewide
Sabbath school associations. In 1903, the denominational headquarters was
moved from Battle Creek, Michigan, to Washington, D.C., and in 1989 to
Silver Spring, Maryland, where it continues to form the nerve center of
ever-expanding work.
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