Disappointment
      
      
         33
      
      
        hereafter. None who experienced this hope and trust can ever forget
      
      
        those precious hours of waiting.
      
      
        Worldly business was for the most part laid aside for a few weeks.
      
      
        We carefully examined every thought and emotion of our hearts, as
      
      
        if upon our deathbeds, and in a few hours to close our eyes forever
      
      
        upon earthly scenes. There was no making of “ascension robes” for
      
      
        the great event; we felt the need of internal evidence that we were
      
      
        prepared to meet Christ, and our white robes were purity of soul,
      
      
        character cleansed from sin by the atoning blood of our Saviour.
      
      
        Days Of Perplexity
      
      
        But the time of expectation passed. This was the first close test
      
      
        brought to bear upon those who believed and hoped that Jesus would
      
      
        come in the clouds of heaven. The disappointment of God’s waiting
      
      
         [48]
      
      
        [49]
      
      
         people was great. The scoffers were triumphant, and won the weak and
      
      
        cowardly to their ranks. Some who had appeared to possess true faith
      
      
        seemed to have been influenced only by fear; and now their courage
      
      
        returned with the passing of the time, and they boldly united with the
      
      
        scoffers, declaring that they had never been duped to really believe the
      
      
        doctrine of Miller, who was a mad fanatic. Others, naturally yielding
      
      
        or vacillating, quietly deserted the cause.
      
      
        We were perplexed and disappointed, yet did not renounce our
      
      
        faith. Many still clung to the hope that Jesus would not long delay His
      
      
        coming; the word of the Lord was sure, it could not fail. We felt that
      
      
        we had done our duty, we had lived up to our precious faith; we were
      
      
        disappointed, but not discouraged. The signs of the times denoted that
      
      
        the end of all things was at hand; we must watch and hold ourselves in
      
      
        readiness for the coming of the Master at any time. We must wait with
      
      
        hope and trust, not neglecting the assembling of ourselves together for
      
      
        instruction, encouragement, and comfort, that our light might shine
      
      
        forth into the darkness of the world.
      
      
        An Error In Reckoning
      
      
        Our calculation of the prophetic time was so simple and plain that
      
      
        even children could understand it. From the date of the decree of the
      
      
        king of Persia, found in
      
      
         Ezra 7
      
      
        , which was given in 457 before Christ,