Beginning to Publish
      
      
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        were present, also brethren and sisters from Topsham. The power of
      
      
        God descended something as it did on the day of Pentecost, and five
      
      
        or six who had been deceived and led into error and fanaticism, fell
      
      
        prostrate to the floor. Parents confessed to their children, and children
      
      
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        to their parents and to one another. Brother J. N. Andrews with deep
      
      
        feeling exclaimed, “I would exchange a thousand errors for one truth.”
      
      
        Such a scene of confession and pleading with God for forgiveness
      
      
        we have seldom witnessed. That meeting, the beginning of better
      
      
        days for the children of God in Paris, was to them a green spot in the
      
      
        desert. The Lord was bringing out Brother Andrews to fit him for
      
      
        future usefulness, and was giving him an experience that would be of
      
      
        great value to him in his future labors.
      
      
        Advancing By Faith
      
      
        At a meeting held at Topsham, some of the brethren present ex-
      
      
        pressed their desire to have us visit New York State again; but feeble
      
      
        health weighed down my spirits. I told them that I dared not venture,
      
      
        unless the Lord should strengthen me for the task. They prayed for
      
      
        me, and the clouds were scattered, yet I did not obtain that strength I
      
      
        so much desired. I resolved to walk out by faith, and go, clinging to
      
      
        the promise, “My grace is sufficient for you.”
      
      
        On the journey to New York, our faith was tried, but we obtained
      
      
        the victory. My strength increased, and I could rejoice in God. Many
      
      
        had embraced the truth since our first visit, but there was much to be
      
      
        done for them, and all our strength was needed in the work as it opened
      
      
        up before us.
      
      
        Labors In Oswego
      
      
        During the months of October and November, while we were
      
      
        traveling, the paper had been suspended; but my husband still felt a
      
      
        burden upon him to write and publish. We rented a house in Oswego,
      
      
        borrowed furniture from our brethren, and began housekeeping. There
      
      
        my husband wrote, published, and preached.
      
      
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