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William Miller (preacher) - Wikipedia William Miller (February 15, 1782 – December 20, 1849) was an American clergyman who is credited with beginning the mid-19th-century North American religious movement known as Millerism
William Miller | Millerite, Adventist, Preacher | Britannica William Miller (born Feb 15, 1782, Pittsfield, Mass , U S —died Dec 20, 1849, Low Hampton, N Y ) was an American religious enthusiast, leader of a movement called Millerism that sought to revive belief that the bodily arrival (“advent”) of Christ was imminent
What Should You Know about Minister William Miller? One of the most prominent prediction makers was Baptist preacher William Miller Miller gained a large following, predicting that Christ would return on this day, October 22, 1844
William Miller | Encyclopedia. com William Miller provided the impetus behind one of the most intense periods of millennial expectation in American history Born in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, on 15 February 1782 and raised on the Vermont frontier, he grew up in the formative years of the new nation
Who was William Miller? | WilliamMiller1844. com That day, William Miller went into that maple grove a farmer, and came out of it a preacher You see, this was God who wanted William Miller to preach, not Miller himself
ESDA | Miller, William (1782–1849) The most significant source of information about Miller’s life, Memoirs of William Miller (1853), was initially compiled by Apollos Hale and then edited with significant additions by Sylvester Bliss
William Miller – Adventist Pioneer Library A small chapel stands near his home in Low Hampton, New York, built by Miller before he died In spite of his misunderstanding of the event that was to transpire in 1844, God used him to awaken the world to the nearness of the end and to prepare sinners for the time of judgment
William Miller: Jesus to return in 1843 - Study The Church In 1816 Miller left his previous belief in Deism (God created the world and then left it to run on its own) and became a Christian Having come from skeptical Deism, which challenged many Christian beliefs, Miller set out to defend his new-found faith