Hi, DavidMark,
Truly incredible.
In my opinion there are at least four major errors with your presentation that I found. The list is certainly invited to join in on this.
1.) The Son of Man has said His Second Coming will be known to all - He is not coming back in disguise or in hiding.
For then there will be great distress, unequaled from the beginning of the world until now—and never to be equaled again. Immediately after the distress of those days the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light; the stars will fall from the sky, and the heavenly bodies will be shaken. At that time the sign of the Son of Man will appear in the sky, and all the nations of the earth will mourn. They will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of the sky, with power and great glory. Even so, when you see all these things, you know that it is near, right at the door. Matthew 24:1-34, Mark 13:1-30, Luke 21:5-32
2.) Christ said He did not know when the end would be - and, it is plain foolishness (but, that fact has yet to stop anyone) trying to figure out when it is to be. Mark 13:32
3.) Why do you think the Millerites call this prediction failure of the Second Coming the Great Disappointment? My understanding is that these people had truly believed Miller the first time he predicted the end - and were prepared by having sold their property and made preparations for their departure…which did not happen. The second failed prediction lead to even more disillusionment with Miller (who at this point decides to stop issuing predictions).
I think at least one correct answer as to why this time is called the Great Disappointment is that while these individuals were disappointed that Christ did not come as they expected, they were also disappointed in themselves for being so foolish. Now, foolishness did not end in 1844 - apparently, specific dates about the end are no longer in vogue - and this may represent the biggest change.
Thank you for responding. I will try to be clear. Miler did not stub his toe. It’s just that the Advent of Christ was not celestial, that is, down from the sky, and it was not in New England. But the times were right. No one knew the Hour. But the year could be determined. That was what he succeeded in drwing attention to. And 1844 equalled 1260 AH, in which different prophecies from a Muslim dtradtion pointed to the same year.
No sound mind can discount this. It is crucial to resolving the disputes that make jihad.
Code:
“Creation” in 6 “days” = 6,000 years, Ps. 90:4, 2 Peter 3:8,
Gen. 2:2 The LORD “rested” 7th “day” = 1000 years (Bahá’í Dispensation)
12 months x 30days = 360 day Biblical “year”
7“times” or “years” x 360 = 2520 “days”/actual years
Lev. 26:28, Dan. 4:23
**2520 ÷ 2 = 1260 actual years **
Rev. 11:2, 3, 9 & 11, 12:6 & 14, 13:5
3½ “times” = 42 “months” **
Dan. 9:24, Matt. 18:21 **
70 x 7 = 490
7 X 70 = 490
457 B.C. + 490 = 33 A.D./C.E. The Crucifixion
456 B.C.E. + 2300 = 1844 C.E.
260 A.H. + 1000 lunar years = 1260 A.H Qur’án 32:4
1260 A.H. = 1844C.E.
Bábí Dispensation begins 1844C.E. = 1 Bahá’í Era
If you have questions about any part of this, let’s discuss.
It is important because Christ has returned at a time you didn’t expect…
well, the SDA church DID expect it, but then gave up on it.
4.) The ability to present an exact date is simply wishful thinking. We can do a lot with math - build pyramids, buildings, aquducts and roads - we can also delude ourselves and wind up in a solid state of denial.
You know, the ancient Egyptians, Greeks and Romans were famous for their calculations. The evidence for the validity of their work is seen in the structures they left behind. Somewhere along the line, each of them had to come up with a definition of what is straight, how to measure angles and where to place the building once built so it would continue to stand. As I appreciate the situation, there have been many difficulties with actually confirming exact dates in the Old Testament. We can get a range for dates (e.g., “…early in the reign of Zedekiah king of Judah, the prophet Hananiah …”) - but getting an exact date with our calandar is simply not possible. This carries on today with most of us not knowing the exact year Christ was born. Our calander is based on Christ being born in 1AD - but, maybe 6BC or 4AD have some possible validity. If you do not have the right basis for computing a formula, you will get the wrong number.
So, as I see it, here is Miller with two failed predictions to his credit - but, a stubborn streak that won’t allow him to throw up his hands saying, “There are some things we are not to know!” Nope, he plods along with the same flawed set of ideas that he passes off ot E.G.White. Now, White is not nearly as foolish as Miller - and has seen what happens when exact dates are given out…and obviously proven false. So, this is something that can and will be avoided. Making the Second Coming a historic event (or would that be ‘Caming’ as in the past tense of come) that happened away from New England only requires one element to be believed: proof.
Yes, that is the only thing that stands in the way of a critical view of your ideas and math and joyous acceptance of the idea that Christ has come and is hiding out in the Middle East. Now, the proof would have to be that Christ was lying when He said He did not know the date and that we (like D. Brown ) can crack the code!
Personally, I am looking forward to seeing your proof.
God bless