Chapter 5—The Disappointment
      
      
        With carefulness and trembling we approached the time when our
      
      
        Saviour was expected to appear. With solemn earnestness we sought,
      
      
        as a people, to purify our lives, that we might be ready to meet Him
      
      
        at His coming. Meetings were still held at private houses in different
      
      
        parts of the city, with the best results. Believers were encouraged to
      
      
        work for their friends and relatives, and conversions were multiplying
      
      
        day by day.
      
      
        Meetings In Beethoven Hall
      
      
        Notwithstanding the opposition of ministers and churches,
      
      
        Beethoven Hall, in the city of Portland, was nightly crowded; espe-
      
      
        cially was there a large congregation on Sundays. All classes flocked
      
      
        to these meetings. Rich and poor, high and low, ministers and laymen,
      
      
        were all, from various causes, anxious to hear for themselves the doc-
      
      
        trine of the second advent. Many came who, finding no room to stand,
      
      
        went away disappointed.
      
      
        The order of the meetings was simple. A short and pointed dis-
      
      
        course was usually given, then liberty was granted for general exhor-
      
      
        tation. There was, as a rule, the most perfect stillness possible for
      
      
        so large a crowd. The Lord held the spirit of opposition in check
      
      
        while His servants explained the reasons of their faith. Sometimes the
      
      
        instrument was feeble, but the Spirit of God gave weight and power to
      
      
        His truth. The presence of the holy angels was felt in the assembly,
      
      
        and numbers were daily added to the little band of believers.
      
      
        On one occasion, while Elder Stockman was preaching, Elder
      
      
        Brown, a Christian Baptist minister, was sitting in the desk listening
      
      
         [46]
      
      
        to the sermon with intense interest. He became deeply moved, and
      
      
        suddenly his face grew pale as the dead, he reeled in his chair, and
      
      
        Elder Stockman caught him in his arms just as he was falling to the
      
      
        floor, and laid him on the sofa back of the desk, where he lay powerless
      
      
        until the discourse was finished.
      
      
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