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The Preacher
Who Didn't Believe the Bible
Dear Friend,
Today, millions
of people who grew up as Christians are discarding their Bibles.
The Bible is more common and less read today than at any time since
Christian history began. Evolution is taught as a fact of life in
school, and the Bible is treated as some old fairy-tale. "Oh,"
they admit, "the Bible has some good moral principles in it,
but it is not to be taken as true!"
Even some preachers
have come to believe in evolution! In our story today we recount
the experience of how one would-be preacher, who didn't believe
the Bible, came to change his mind. In the Bible lesson that you
will want to study after reading this story, you will find out how
you can know whether the Bible really is the infallible, inspired
word of God or not. But first, let's hear the story:
William Miller
was an intellectual and read the great classics of the day. He was
also a Deist, which means he believed in a "supreme being"
but didn't believe that this supreme being had anything to do with
planet earth. He believed that at some time, millions of years ago,
the earth was created by this supreme being, but after that the
earth was left to evolve at will. He didn't believe in the Bible,
or in Jesus, or in eternal life.
To be polite,
Miller attended the local Baptist Church where he was raised. His
uncle was the pastor and was a good speaker but when he was gone
the deacons read the sermon. After church, he would go home and
mimic the way the poor deacons had read the sermon--gestures and
all. He knew just how to make it entertaining and everyone was soon
rolling with laughter. But after a while that got boring, so he
quit attending church altogether except when his uncle was preaching.
"We missed
you at service last Sunday," his mother said one day after
he had missed as usual.
"You can't
expect me there when Uncle's gone, Mother."
"Why not
my son?"
"It's the
way the deacon's read the sermon."
"They do
the best they can, I'm sure," she replied.
"When Uncle's
away, Mother, why don't they let me read it?
He didn't think
they would take him--who didn't even believe in the Bible--up on
this sarcastic suggestion. But they did! The deacons knew how Miller
had made fun of them, and now they were going to make sure that
he had his turn to read! Thus Miller unwittingly set a trap for
himself. The sermons they assigned him to read were from Alexander
Proudfit's Practical Discourses. Somehow Sunday after Sunday
as he read the sermons, they began to sober him. Moreover, he was
reminded of experiences from the war that he had just returned from.
William Miller
had been a captain in the American-British war of 1812. Convinced
that love of country rather than love for Christ was mankind's greatest
hope, Miller had volunteered for service in this second war for
American independence. Forty-seven others also volunteered, on condition
that they serve directly under his command!
The war of 1812
was a desultory, do-nothing affair most of the time. The Battle
of Plattsburg, fought on a shore of Lake Champlain not many miles
from Miller's boyhood home, was a brilliant exception.
During the first
two years of the war, Britain had been heavily involved in fighting
Napoleon Bonaparte, but after his abdication on April 4, 1814 the
British could give full attention to their American encounter.
The British
brought some of their best troops, seasoned from years of successful
fighting against Napoleon's army, and sailed them past Quebec on
the St. Lawrence River and on into New York and Vermont via the
mighty lake Champlain.
On the morning
of September 11, 1814, the British, with 15,000 seasoned soldiers,
supported by a well-equipped navy on the lake, met the Americans
near the city of Plattsburgh, New York. The Americans numbered only
5,500 recently recruited soldiers, most of whom had never seen a
battle. Without navy, numbers, or experience, many of the Americans
were certain of defeat, but determined to show the American spirit
and fight to the last. William Miller was a captain on the American
side.
The outcome
was a total surprise. Listen to the excited report of one of the
young, enthusiastic American officer's as he described the outcome
in a letter he transcribed after the battle, dated 2:20 p.m. that
very day.
"Sir: It
is over, it is done," the officer writes. "The British
fleet has struck to the American flag. Great slaughter on both sides--they
are in plain view, where I am now writing
..The sight was majestic,
it was noble, it was grand. This morning, at 10:00 a.m. the British
opened a very heavy and destructive fire upon us, both by water
and land. Their
rockets flew like hailstones
. You have
no idea of the battle
. You must conceive what we feel, for
I cannot describe it."
The officer
reviewed with pride the part that he had played. "I am satisfied
that I can fight. I know I am no coward
.Three of my men are
wounded by a shell which burst within two feet of me."
"Huzza!
Huzza!" he exclaimed in his excitement; and then, as 20 or
30 prisoners were led into the fort, he carefully signed his name:
Yours forever, William Miller."
At first, William
Miller was too excited at the unexpected victory to think about
the impossibility of a shell bursting two feet from him without
killing or even injuring him! But later, upon reflection, he began
to wonder how that could be. Furthermore, if there was no personal
God, and everything happened without intervention, how could 5,500
ill-equipped and inexperienced Americans defeat a much larger regiment
of seasoned British troops, complete with Naval support!
Back at his
home, as he milked his cows and plowed his farm, his mind continued
to probe into the mystery of it all. The patriots, by and large,
were Christians who believed in God. By the law of cause and effect,
he reasoned the victory of Plattsburg ought to have gone to the
British--could God indeed have honored the Patriots' faith? A modern
historian has called Plattsburg the "decisive action"
of the war, and the American commodore in his report to the war
officer at the time, gave the glory to God, stating that
"The Almighty
has been pleased to grant us a signal victory." Was it possible,
perhaps, that God had taken a personal interest in America?
Thus it was
that when William Miller, a man who did not believe in a personal
God, was caught in a trap and forced to read the Sunday sermons
at his Baptist church, he was sobered. He was moved by the messages
that he had once scoffed at, and he was reminded of the "impossibilities"
that had happened during the war.
September 11,
1815, rolled around, the one-year anniversary of the victory of
Plattsburg. A public dance was scheduled; a sermon, too, on the
night before. The visiting evangelist sent the people home bathed
in tears. A revival was on and the dance was off. Next Sunday it
was Miller's turn to read again, this time it was a homily of Proudfit
called, The Duty of Parents to Their Children. Overcome
by emotion in the middle his message, he could not make it to the
end. The Holy Spirit, believed or unrelieved, was touching his heart!
In despair over
his sins, Miller imagined how good it would be to throw himself
into the arms of a Saviour and trust completely in His grace.
He needed a
Saviour. The world needed a Saviour. But did such a wonderful being
exist?
Back to the
Bible he went; and in its covers he found the Saviour whom he sought.
"I was constrained to admit that the Scriptures must be a revelation
from God," he wrote later. "They became my delight, and
in Jesus I found a friend."
Immediately
he began regular family worship. But his worldly friends taunted
him now, as before he had often taunted other Christians. "How
do you know the Bible is the Word of God?" they teased. Him
now, as before he had taunted the Christians. "What about its
contradictions?"
"If the
Bible is the Word of God," Miller responded staunchly, "then
everything it contains can be understood, and all its parts made
to harmonize. Give me time, and I'll harmonize its apparent contradictions
or I'll be a deist still."
Laying aside
every book except the Bible itself and Crude's Concordance, he began
with the first verse of Genesis 1 and advanced no more quickly than
he could handle the problems that arose. Using the margin and the
concordance, he let the Bible explain itself. One by one, most of
its seemingly insoluble inconsistencies faded away.
Not only did
he find a change of life, but he found that the prophecies of the
Bible, one after another, had all been fulfilled to the letter.
He became convinced that God indeed can foresee the future and can
control the events of history, such as He did at Plattsburgh. As
he continued to study he found that, just as God had predicted the
past, so He has predicted the future. Some of the prophecies that
especially moved William Miller were the prophecies about a coming
"judgment," in which ' We must all appear before the judgment
seat of Christ; that every one may receive the things done in his
body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad"
(2 Cor. 5:10).
Another text
that struck home to his conscience was from the book of Revelation:
"And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having
the everlasting gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the earth,
and to every nation, and kindred , and tongue, and people, saying
with a loud voice, Fear God and give glory to Him; for the hour
of His judgment is come and worship Him that made heaven, and earth,
and the sea, and the fountains of water" (14:6, 7). He thought
that this event must occur when "The Son of Man shall come
in His glory: and before Him shall be gathered all nations."
(Matthew 25:31, 32).
As he realized
that most people were not ready to face this judgment, nor even
knew that such an event was to take place, he became convicted that
he must tell others about what he had learned, and of how Jesus
could save them from their sins and prepare them for this climactic
event.
But though convicted,
this he could not do! Not he! He may be able to read a sermon on
Sunday, but to warn the world about a coming judgment was unthinkable.
And yet the call persisted. For thirteen years Miller brushed the
call aside, but during those years he was glued to his Bible. Whole
nights he spent in study. But with every passing day the impression
that he must share with others what he had learned persisted to
grow stronger and more persistent. The call became almost unbearable.
"I told the Lord," he later said, "I was diffident
and had not the necessary qualifications."
He tried everything
he could do to satisfy his burdened soul-everything, that is, except
to preach those truths to others. But nothing could satisfy the
persistent inner call to preach. The call kept ringing in his ears;
"Go tell it to the world."
One day, as
he was reading his Bible, it was as though he heard a voice saying,
"I have appointed you a watchman. Tell it to the world!"
He looked up
from the Bible he was reading, deeply troubled by the call of God.
Or was it a call of God? He must know beyond a doubt.
He pounded his
fist on his desk. Stood up. Knelt down. And prayed, "No, God.
No! Thou knowest that I cannot preach. I cannot preach.
"But perhaps
it is Thy will for me to go," he argued with himself and with
God.
"O Lord,
I will enter into a covenant with You. If You will open the way;
I mean, if You will send an invitation for me to preach, why, then,
O God, I will go."
He settled into
his chair at ease. "Now," he mused, "I shall have
peace, for if I receive an invitation, I know that God will attend
me. But it isn't likely," and he smiled contentedly, "that
anyone will ask a 55 year old farmer like myself to preach on the
judgment at the end of time." William Miller had first felt
the call to the ministry at age 42, but had stifled the conviction
until now--surely no one would ask him to preach now. But within
thirty minutes there was a loud knocking at the door.
"Who can
that be, so excited on a Saturday morning?" he asked himself
absent-mindedly.
The knock came
again. "I had better go and see," he said to himself.
"Good morning
to you, Uncle William," the boy at the door cried cheerily.
"Nephew
Irving!" exclaimed Miller, "And what might you be doing
sixteen miles from home so early in the morning?"
"Uncle
William, I left before breakfast to tell you that our Baptist
minister in Dresden is unable to speak at services tomorrow. Father
sent me to request of you. He wants you to come and talk to us
about the things you've been studying in the Bible. Will you come?"
Miller turned
on his heel without a word, stormed out through the kitchen door,
stumbled into a maple grove that stood nearby, and wrestled with
the Lord. He was angry with himself, angry with God, and very much
afraid.
For a solid
hour he pleaded to be released from his pledge. "O my God,
send someone else, I pray!"
Even as a Deist
he had kept his word. As a Christian could he do any less? After
anguished tears, he gave in to God at last.
Then what feeling
overcame him! Thirteen years of reluctance overcome! The joy of
surrender! "Glory to His name!" he exclaimed, as a flood
of peace and joy flooded his soul.
Immediately
after lunch Miller was on his way with his nephew to Dresden, several
hours away. So inspiring was his discourse the next Sunday morning
that the townspeople asked him to stay and preach every night that
week. By the end of the week, over a dozen entire families had accepted
Jesus as their Saviour.
Over the next
several years William Miller spoke to over a half-million people.
As he himself had been converted from Deism, he was able to reach
many other Deists and Atheists. It is estimated that over 3,000
Atheists accepted Christ as their Saviour as the result of William
Miller preaching on the prophecies of the last days!
Prophecy is
one of the proofs that the Bible gives that it is inspired. God
says: "Remember
I am God, and there is no other; I am
God, and there is none like Me, declaring the end from the beginning,
and from ancient times things that are not yet done" (Isaiah
46:9, 10).
There were several
things that lead William Miller to accept the Bible as the inspired
Word of God:
- He felt the
presence of the Holy Spirit working upon his heart.
- He witnessed
and recognized the providential acts of God.
- He saw that
Jesus was the answer to man's needs.
- He found
that the prophecies in the Bible were all true, showing that God
can foretell the future.
In our lesson
today we are going to learn how you can find out whether the Bible
is inspired or not. May the Lord bless you as you study this important
lesson.
With Love,
From your friends at Steps to Life.
Written by Marshall
J. Grosboll
Founder and first Director of Steps to Life.
THE ANVIL OF
GOD'S WORD
Last Eve
I paused beside a blacksmith's door
And heard the anvil ring the vesper chime;
Then looking in, I saw upon the floor,
Old hammers worn with beating years of time.
"How many anvils have you had," said I,
"To wear and batter all these hammers so?"
"Just one," said he, and then with a twinkling eye,
"The anvil wears the hammers out, you know."
"And so," I thought, "The Anvil of God's Word,
For ages skeptic blows have beat upon,
Yet though the noise of falling blows was heard,
The anvil is unchanged, the hammers gone."
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