Title: Seven Day Adventist
 1  2What is it?
- It is a religion closely related to the 
 Protestant denomination with a focus on the
 Sabbath day and Christs second coming.
3Early Life
William Miller was born in Pittsfield, 
Massachusetts in 1782. He was born to a veteran 
of the American Revolution. His family moved to 
Low Hampton, New York and it is there that he 
received his education. As a young boy, he loved 
to read and it ignited his interest in reading 
religious books. He considered himself a Baptist 
Christian. 
 4Relationships, Religion  Career
In 1803, He married Lucy Smith. They moved to 
Poultney, Vermont. He became well-liked and 
elected to several public offices while in 
Vermont. He became a Deputy Sheriff and 
eventually Justice of Peace. With many of his 
peer in Vermont being Deist, he became a Deist, 
and abandoned his previous Christian beliefs. His 
reading of Voltaire, Hume, Thomas Paine, Ethan 
Allen, and other Deist writers strengthened his 
beliefs in Deism. Soon after his marriage, the 
war of 1812 arose. Miller was enlisted as a 
lieutenant and rose to the ranks of captain. As 
war raged on, Miller realized he needed to set 
his priorities straight and began to read the 
Bible again. With new vigor of life and for the 
Bible, he began reading it intently and studying 
it.  
 5Preaching 
His interest in religion lead to his preaching 
career in August 1831. He started to fill in for 
pastors absences and doing the sermons at his 
church. As a preacher Miller was convinced that 
the Bible had secret codes that would reveal the 
future. While reading Daniel chapters 8 and 9, 
Miller came to the conclusion that the text was 
saying that after 2,300 years have passed that 
the Second Coming of Christ would happen. He also 
concluded from the writing of Ezra that the year 
was described as 1843. The exact verse is Ezra 
712, where Miller concluded that 1843 would be 
the year of Jesus return.  
 6Millerite Movement
Before he began preaching about his beliefs of 
Christs second coming, in 1832, he released 16 
articles to the Vermont Telegraph about his 
beliefs. He received many invitations from 
churches and responses to his views. He made a 64 
page tract about this views in 1834 called 
Evidence from Scripture and History of the Second 
Coming of Christ, about the year 1844 Exhibited 
in a Course of Lecture. This led to the 
Millerite movement. In 1840, his message was 
strong and ready to reach the masses. He led a 
national campaign and Joshua Vaughan Himes, a 
pastor, help spread Millers beliefs. He never 
set an exact date for the second coming of 
Christ, but it was around the spring of 1844. 
These believers of his message were known as the 
Millerites and the movement was known as the 
Millerite movement. There were about 50,000 
Millerites.  
 7Millerite Movement
When spring of 1844 passed, Miller was extremely 
embarrassed about his error. He publicly 
announced his error and did not try to create 
another date for Christs coming. However, 
Millers followers along with Samuel S. Snow 
believed that 1844 was the right date just the 
wrong month. They believed that October 22, 1844 
was the date that Jesus was going to come back.  
 8The Great Disappointment
After October 22, 1844 passed, Miller was 
dishearten he recorded in his memoirs that he 
regrets prophesizing. Not only Miller was 
disappointed, but so were the Millerities. They 
wept and were grieving over this false prophecy. 
The passing of the second date of the coming of 
Christ was known as the Great Disappointment. 
Other dates were set and the second coming still 
failed to happen. The Millerities dissolved into 
smaller groups and of course some turned away 
from the religion altogether. A majority of 
Millerities became Quakers. 
 9Death
Miller never prophesized again. He still believed 
that the second coming was near before he died. 
He died on December 20, 1849. He was buried in 
Low Hampton, New York and his home is now a 
National Historic landmark.  
 10Millerite divide
After the Great Disappointment, the Millerities 
who maintained the religion divided into three 
sections. The first division believed in 
shut-door theology which meant the door was 
shut to gaining salvation. It was popularized by 
Joseph Turner. The second division held the 
Albany conference to discuss three purposes to 
strengthen the faith of the Advent, how to carry 
one the congregation, and to convert others to 
the religion. This group was lead by Joshua 
Vaughan Himes. The third division also known as 
the Sabbatarian Group believed that October 22, 
1844 was the day that Daniel 8 was talking about 
the cleansing of the sanctuary of heaven. This 
was lead by Hiram Edison. The third division 
became what is now known as the Seventh Day 
Adventist.  
 11Ellen Gould White
One of the people involved in the Millerite 
movement was Ellen Gould Hamon. She was born on 
November 26, 1827 she was one of eight children 
in Gotham, Maine. They eventually moved to 
Portland where she witnessed Millers speeches 
when he preached and felt deep convictions. She 
was hit in the face with a stone at a young age 
and had medical problems the rest of her life 
from the injury. The injury caused her to end her 
education. She became saved at age 12 and started 
to attend Adventist meetings and believed in the 
Advent that she heard Miller preach about.  
 12Visions
After the Great Disappointment, Ellen was seeking 
to know the truth and she experienced a vision. 
At seventeen years old, she believed God was 
prophesying to her. She said she saw Advent 
people traveling to New Jerusalem and eventually 
ended with Jesus coming back letting the 
Adventist to enter Jerusalem. In 1845, she 
experience a second vision known as the 
Bridegroom. Then she experienced a third vision 
about about God and the Adventists. Her visions 
seemed to support the Adventists faith with 
promising prophecies by White describing hope for 
the second coming of Christ. She reportedly had 
other visions where she was in the presence of 
Jesus or angels. Altogether she had 2,000 visions 
and dreams that lasted from less than a minute to 
four hours.  
 13Relationship  Career
When she was 23, she met James White, an 
Adventist preacher, and they married in 1846. 
They wrote a 46 page tract called Seventh-day 
Sabbath that was published by Joseph Bates. They 
were convinced that the Sabbath day was being 
neglected and was important to their faith. Six 
months after publishing her tract, she was 
another vision that there was a light halo around 
the fourth commandment and stirred up confidence 
in her tract and from Adventists. James continued 
to preach and worked in his spare time. They had 
a child together, but Ellen soon left to travel 
to send her message widely throughout the 
country. They both felt the need to publish works 
to inspire their faith. James published The 
Present Truth which was a paper and would contain 
Ellens prophetic views about the church and 
warning.  
 14Publishing
The Whites both felt the need to publish works to 
inspire their faith. James published The Present 
Truth which was a paper and would contain Ellens 
prophetic views about the church and warning. 
Ellen wrote a book called the Christian 
Experience and Views of Ellen G. White. Then she 
wrote a supplement, Review and Herald, Youths 
Instructor. They moved to Battle Creek and 
convinced the church there that her book, 
Testimonies for the Church, needed to be 
published. The Whites established the publishing 
work and church organization while in Battle 
Creek. Altogether Ellen wrote more than 5,000 
periodical articles and 40 books. She is the most 
translated author in literature and the most 
translated American author. He wrote about 
religion, education, social relationships, 
evangelism, prophecy, publishing, nutrition, and 
management. Her masterpiece Steps to Christ has 
been published into 150 different languages.  
 15Great Controversy Vision
While in a funeral service in Ohio, Ellen White 
received a vision in 1858. She had a vision about 
Christ and his angels. It was about a cosmic 
battle between Christ and Satan. She almost was 
killed according to her by Satan two days later. 
She published her vision in a book called 
Spiritual Gifts, volume 1, The Great Controversy 
Between Christ and His Angels and Satan and His 
Angels in 1858. The book was a hit and enjoyed by 
the Seventh Day Adventists as a view of the 
Earths History and purpose.  
 16Health Reform Vision
Ellen was given a vision of the need to diet 
according to God. Her vision showed the 
importance of taking care of your body, a diet, 
and natures remedies like exercise and fresh 
air. Because of Ellens vision in 1863, the 
church made a health reform and required a health 
education program. She published pamphlets 
called Health, or How to Live. The Seventh Day 
Adventist church eventually established a health 
institute in 1866. Many of Ellens visions were 
used to create the Seventh Day Adventists 
beliefs and view her as a prophet from God.  
 17Death
James White died on August 6, 1881. Ellen 
continued to do her work. She continued to 
publish again and visited Europe to promote her 
faith. She saw a need of Christian education in 
Australia. She wanted an institution for the 
young Seventh Day Adventists. She bought 
property for the Avondale School that identified 
what an Adventist education should look like. She 
cofounded the Avondale School. After that school 
was established she helped establish a medical 
work missionary program. After her missionary 
medical work, she began to outreach and educate 
Africans in 1891. Ellen fell one day and broke 
her hip. Her injury was devastating and she died 
on July 16, 1915 in her home in Elmshaven five 
months later her home is now considered a 
historical site. She was buried next to her 
husband in Oak Hill Cemetery, Battle Creek, 
Michigan.  
 18Seventh Day Adventist Beliefs
The Seventh Day Adventists believe a variety of 
different things. The religion as a whole agrees 
on the 28 fundamentals. These 28 fundamentals 
include the doctrine of God, the doctrine of 
Humankind, the doctrine of Salvation, the 
doctrine of Church, the doctrine of Christian 
life, the doctrine of the Last Things.  
 19Seventh Day Adventist Beliefs
The Seventh Day Adventists believe a variety of 
different things. The religion as a whole agrees 
on the 28 fundamentals. These 28 fundamentals 
include the doctrine of God, the doctrine of 
Humankind, the doctrine of Salvation, the 
doctrine of Church, the doctrine of Christian 
life, the doctrine of the Last Things.  
 2028 Fundamentals Summary
- The Doctrine of God 
- Holy Scriptures  are divine inspiration of the 
 word of God.
- Trinity or Godhead  there is one God in three 
 persons.
- Father  is the Creator, Source, Sustainer, and 
 Sovereign of all creation.
- Son  is God the eternal son Jesus through him 
 salvation exists.
- Holy Spirit  inspired the words of Scripture and 
 was active during reincarnation, incarnation, and
 redemption.
2128 Fundamentals Summary
The Doctrine of Humankind 6. Creation  God is 
the creator of all things  the Bible is 
creations history. 7. Nature of Man  Men and 
women are made in the image of God and have free 
will. They became subject to death after they 
sinned and their ancestors shared their fate.  
 2228 Fundamentals
The Doctrine of Salvation 8. Great Controversy  
All humanity is now involved with a great 
controversy between Christ and Satan regarding 
the character of God, his law, and His 
sovereignty over the universe. 9. Life, Death, 
and Resurrection  Christ was perfect and he have 
his life as the atonement for humans sin. 10. 
Experience of Salvation  Christ gave his life 
and Christians can experience salivation through 
his death. Jesus delivered them from sin. 11. 
Growing in Christ  Walk with Jesus and do not 
live in darkness, fear of evil powers, ignorance, 
and meaningless of our former life. Meditate on 
his word, sing praises, gather for worship, and 
participate in the Churchs mission.  
 2328 Fundamentals
The Doctrine of the Church 12. Church  The 
church is a community of believers who confess 
Jesus as Lord and Savior. 13. Remnant and Its 
Mission  The universal church is composed of all 
who truly believe in Christ, in the last days, a 
time of widespread apostasy, a remnant has been 
called out to keep the commandments of God and 
the faith of Jesus. 14. Unity in the Body of 
Christ  The church is one body with many members 
called from every nation, kindred, tongue, and 
people. 15. Baptism  By Baptism we confess our 
faith in the death and the resurrection of Jesus 
Christ, and testify of our death to sin and of 
our purpose to walk in the newness of life .  
 2428 Fundamentals
The Doctrine of the Church (continued) 16. Lords 
Supper  The Lords Supper is a participation in 
the emblems of the body and blood of Jesus as an 
expression of faith in Him, our Lord and Savior. 
 17. Spiritual Gifts and Ministries  God 
bestows upon all members of His church in every 
age spiritual gifts which each member is to 
employ in loving ministry for the common good of 
the church and of humanity. 18. The Gift of 
Prophecy  the Holy Spirit gives the gift of 
prophecy and was a key mark of the first church 
with Ellen Whites prophecies.  
 2528 Fundamentals
The Doctrine of the Christian Life 19. Law of God 
 The 10 commandments are the laws of God and are 
shown in Christs life. 20. Sabbath  The 
beneficent Creator, after the six days of 
Creation, rested on the seventh day and 
instituted the Sabbath for all people as a 
memorial of Creation. The Sabbath must be upheld 
and requires the observance of this seventh-day 
Sabbath as the day of rest, worship, and ministry 
in harmony with the teaching and practice of 
Jesus, the Lord of the Sabbath. 21. Stewardship 
 We are all Gods stewards entrusted by him with 
time and opportunities, abilities and 
possessions, and the blessings of the earth and 
its resources.  
 2628 Fundamentals
The Doctrine of the Christian Life 
(continued) 22. Christian Behavior  We are 
called to be a godly people who think, feel, and 
act in harmony with the principles of heave. We 
must involve ourselves only with things that 
produce Christlike purity, health, and joy in our 
lives. 23. Marriage and the Family  Marriage 
was divinely established in Eden and affirmed by 
Jesus to be a lifelong union between a man and a 
woman in loving companionship. A Christian 
marriage is to God and our spouse and should only 
be shared between people of a common faith.  
 2728 Fundamentals
The Doctrine of Last Things 24. Christs Ministry 
in the Heavenly Sanctuary  There is a sanctuary 
in heaven, the true tabernacle which the Lord set 
up and not man. 25. Second Coming of Christ  
The second coming of Christ is the blessed hope 
of the church, the grand climax of the gospel. 
The time of the event has not been revealed, and 
we must be ready at all times. 26. Death and 
Resurrection  The wages of sing is death. Death 
is an unconscious state for all people and the 
righteous dead will be resurrected when Christ 
returns.  
 2828 Fundamentals
The Doctrine of Last Things (continued) 27. 
Millennium and the End of Sin  The millennium is 
the thousand-year reign of Christ with His saints 
in heaven between the first and second 
resurrections. The wicked will be judged during 
this time, and the world will be desolate. The 
righteous dead will be resurrected. Satan and 
his angels will be destroyed. 28. New Earth  
On the new earth, in which righteousness dwells, 
God will provide an eternal home for the redeemed 
and a perfect environment for everlasting life, 
love, joy, and learning in his presence. God will 
dwell among his people and death and suffering 
will not exist anymore.  
 29Beliefs 
- Seventh Day Adventist are closely related to the 
 Protestant religion with the exception of their
 not all of the 28 fundamentals and these three
 areas
- Seventh Day Adventists believe in that the second 
 coming of Christ is imminent and there will be a
 second coming followed by a false second coming
 where Satan pretends to be Jesus.
- Seventh Day Adventists believe in the prophecies 
 of Ellen White. They follow her idea of Spirit of
 Prophecy where the Holy Spirit prophecies to
 people and did to Ellen White.
- Seventh Day Adventists believe that the dead are 
 asleep and unconscious after they die. The
 righteous will be resurrected by Jesus and dwell
 on the new Earth. Seventh Day Adventists doe not
 believe in hell and that the evil will be
 destroyed in the end of time.
30Practices
- Seventh Day Adventist observe a 24 hour sunset to 
 sunset Sabbath commencing Friday evening.
- Their church services are evangelical formatted 
 sermons.
- They do adult baptisms and infants are dedicated 
 to God.
- They practice communion four times a year. 
- Their missionary outreach is to help both 
 unbelievers and believers.
-  They do not eat pork, unclean meat, or shellfish 
 as stated in Leviticus. The church recommends
 vegetarianism.
- They do not smoke or drink alcohol. 
31Ethical views
- Abortion is allowed in their religion if there is 
 a medical conditions like mother mortality,
 medical dilemmas, severe congenital defects to
 the fetus, or pregnancy from rape or incest.
- Against active euthanasia, but allow withdrawal 
 of medical support to allow death to occur.
- Birth control is only permissible when a married 
 couple uses it.
- They are against human cloning. 
- Homosexuality is forbidden. Marriage is between a 
 man and a women and that is all. Homosexuality
 is accepted as a good reason for a marriage to
 end in divorce.
32Today
- Seventh Day Adventist have 7,804 pre-schools, 
 primary and secondary schools, colleges,
 universities, medical schools in 145 countries.
 They employ about 66,000 teachers and have
 1,673,580 students.
- The church runs a youth department for 10  16 
 year olds called the Pathfinders they are
 similar to the boy scouts.
- Adventist Health system is the largest 
 not-for-profit, Protestant, multi-institutional
 healthcare system in the United States. It
 provides compassionate care in 17 hospitals in
 130 countries.
- There is a Adventist Development and Relief 
 Agency International(ADRA) they are involved in
 118 countries throughout the world.
33Today
- There are 68,225 Adventist churches. 
- There are 16,307,880 church memberships 
 worldwide.
- There are 213,267 active employees. 
- Number of languages used in Adventist 
 Publications and work 901.
- There are 167 Adventist hospitals and 
 sanitariums.
- There are 132 Adventist retirement homes. 
-  There are 351 Adventist clinics and 
 dispensaries.
- There are 42 Adventist orphanages and children's 
 homes.
34Today
In the world of health, Adventists live the 
longest as a whole of any religious population. 
The average Adventist lives until they are 88 
years old. This may be due to their vegetarian 
encouraged diet, and the fact that they refrain 
from smoking and drinking.  
 35Quiz
1. Who unofficially founded what eventually 
became known as the Seventh Day Adventist? A. 
James White B. Ellen White C. William Miller- D. 
Lucy Miller  
 36Quiz
2. What theology did Miller believe in before the 
War of 1812 and becoming a preacher? A. 
Deontology B. Catholicism C. Atheism D. Deism-  
 37Quiz
3. What book(s) of the Bible did Miller 
prophesize the second coming of Christ? A. 
Daniel- B. Leviticus C. Micah D. Ezra-  
 38Quiz
4. What year did Miller prophesize that the 
second coming would happen? A. 1843 B. 1844- C. 
1846 D. 1915  
 39Quiz
5. What did the church call the event when the 
second coming did not take place on the second 
prophesized date? A. The Great Awakening B. The 
Great Gatsby C. The Great Disappointment- D. The 
Great Vision  
 40Quiz
6. How many divisions did the Millerites split 
into?A. 2 B. 3 - C. 4 D. 5  
 41Quiz
7. If the Millerities did not split into the 
three division, which religion did a majority of 
Millerities become?A. Quakers- B. Catholics C. 
Protestants D. Jehovahs Witnesses  
 42Quiz
- 8. What was the name of the woman who had visions 
 of prophecy?
- Ellen Gould White or Ellen Hamon 
43Quiz
9. True or False Ellen Whites visions important 
to the foundation of the Seventh Day Adventist 
church. A. True- B. False  
 44Quiz
10. What was not one of Ellen Whites visionsA. 
The fourth commandment halo B. Great 
Controversy C. Health reform D. Bridgeroom E. All 
of the Above - F. None of the Above  
 45Quiz
- 11. How many visions did Elle White have? 
- -2000 
46Quiz
12. There are _____ fundamental Adventist 
beliefs. A. 21 B. 28- C. 38 D. 10  
 47Quiz
13. Which one is not one of the fundamental 
belief doctrines?A. Doctrine of Humankind B. 
Doctrine of Salvation C. Doctrine of Last 
Things D. Doctrine of Satan  Sin - E. All of 
the Above F. None of the Above  
 48Quiz
14. What demonization is closely related to the 
Seventh Day Adventist?A. Catholic B. Baptist C. 
Protestant - D. Buddhist  
 49Quiz
- 15. True or False. Seventh Day Adventists believe 
 in hell.
- True 
- False - 
50Quiz
- 16. True or False. Seventh Day Adventists believe 
 in hell.
- True 
- False - 
51Quiz
- 17. What do the Adventists not eat? 
- Shellfish 
- Pork 
- Bacon 
- Unclean meat 
- All of the Above - 
- None of the Above 
52Quiz
- 18. True or False. Adventists abstain from 
 smoking and drinking soda.
- True 
- False - 
53Quiz
- 19. Adventists are prominent in their mission 
 work on education and medical work.
- True - 
- False 
54Quiz
- 20. How long does the average Adventist live? 
- 26 
- 38 
- 75 
- 88- 
55By The Institute For Biblical  Scientific 
Studies 
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