Quote:
Originally Posted by Trouvere
My husband and I have been locating some of his Ca family.
His Aunt was big into the Seventh Day Adventists Faith.We have had
very limited exposure to this religon.I understand that there is even some
Seventh Day Adventist Colleges.One of the things I noticed is they don't believe in hell until the great white throne judgement.Anyone have experience with this religon?
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The church was started by a false prophet in the 1800's. He told folks that Jesus was to come back to earth in the 1940's.
They all met from around the country on his farm.
It did not happen so he amended his dates.
Then they changed the church name as well.
The Seventh-day Adventist church is the largest of several "Adventist" groups which arose from the Millerite movement of the 1840s. The Millerite movement was part of the wave of revivalism in the United States known as the Second Great Awakening, and originated with William Miller, a Baptist preacher from Low Hampton, New York. Miller predicted on the basis of
Daniel 8:14 and the "day-year principle" that Jesus Christ would return to earth on October 22, 1844. When this failed to occur, most of his followers disbanded and returned to their original churches.
Following this "Great Disappointment" (as it came to be known) a small number of Millerites came to believe that Miller's calculations were correct, but that his interpretation of
Daniel 8:14 was flawed. Beginning with a vision experienced by Hiram Edson on October 23, these Adventists arrived at the conviction that
Daniel 8:14 foretold Christ's entrance into the "Most Holy Place" of the heavenly sanctuary rather than his second coming. Over the next decade this understanding developed into the doctrine of the investigative judgment: an eschatological process commencing in 1844 in which Christians will be judged to verify their eligibility for salvation. The Adventists continued to believe that Christ's second coming would be imminent, although they refrained from setting further dates for the event.