Though we did not officially organize as a church - a denomination
- until 1863, our roots go back at least to the early 1800s. As the new
century began, a great wave of interest in the Bible swept over America.
This interest focused especially on the Bible prophecies concerning the
second advent - the return to this world - of Jesus Christ.
Between 1831
and 1844, William Miller - a Baptist preacher and former army captian 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 came to be called "the great disappointment."
Most of the
thousands who had joined the "great second advent awakening" 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 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 - all in North America. By 1900
our membership had spread abroad and stood at 75,000. By mid-1960s it had
swelled to over 1.5 million. And today as we approach the year 2000, we
have become one of the world's fastest growing churches, with a membership
of approximately eight million and growing at nearly 1,500 a day.