Chapter 4—The Advent Faith
      
      
        My father’s family still occasionally attended the Methodist church,
      
      
        and also the class meetings held in private houses.
      
      
        Experience In Class Meeting
      
      
        One evening my brother Robert and myself went to class meeting.
      
      
        The presiding elder was present. When it came my brother’s turn
      
      
        to bear testimony, he spoke with great humility, yet with clearness,
      
      
        of the necessity for a complete fitness to meet our Saviour when He
      
      
        should come in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory. While
      
      
        my brother was speaking, a heavenly light glowed upon his usually
      
      
        pale countenance. He seemed to be carried in spirit above present
      
      
        surroundings, and spoke as if in the presence of Jesus.
      
      
        When I was called upon to speak, I arose, free in spirit, with a heart
      
      
        full of love and peace. I told the story of my great suffering under the
      
      
        conviction of sin, how I had at length received the blessing so long
      
      
        sought,—an entire conformity to the will of God,—and expressed my
      
      
        joy in the tidings of the soon coming of my Redeemer to take His
      
      
        children home.
      
      
        When I had ceased speaking, the presiding elder asked me if it
      
      
        would not be more pleasant to live a long life of usefulness, doing
      
      
        others good, than to have Jesus come speedily and destroy poor sinners.
      
      
        I replied that I longed for the coming of Jesus. Then sin would have an
      
      
        end, and we would enjoy sanctification forever, with no devil to tempt
      
      
        and lead us astray.
      
      
        After the meeting closed, I was conscious of being treated with
      
      
        marked coldness by those who had formerly been kind and friendly to
      
      
        me. My brother and I returned home feeling sad that we should be so
      
      
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        misunderstood by our brethren, and that the subject of the near coming
      
      
        of Jesus should awaken such bitter opposition in their breasts.
      
      
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