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Picture 1: FROM HEAD OF GOLD TO FEET OF IRON AND CLAY
The Course of History Traced by Colonial American Writers Against the Luminous Background of Prophecy. Interpreting Was the Common Order of the Day Among Civic as Well as Religions
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The PROPHETIC FAITH OF OUR FATHERS
The Historical Development of Prophetic Interpretation
by LEROY EDWIN FROOM
VOLUME III
PART I Colonial and Early National American Exposition
PART II Old World Nineteenth Century Advent Awakening
REVIEW AND HERALD
WASHINGTON, D.C.
TO ALL Students of Prophecy Who Seek a Clearer Understanding of the Past That They May Better Discern the Significance of the Present, and More Readily Recognize the Full Meaning of the Impending Future, This Volume Is Sincerely Dedicated
Copyright 1946, Review and Herald Publishing Association
[Copyright transferred from Review and Herald Publishing Association to Fenton Froom.
CD-ROM release: Used by permission, LeRoy Edwin Froom heirs]
WASHINGTON 12, D.C.
[CD-ROM Editor’s Note: The original “Table of Contents” is located on pages 5-6]
1. Introduction to Volume III | 9 |
Part I - Colonial American and Aarly National Writers on Prophecy | 17 |
2.CHAPTER ONE: Prophecy’s Key Place in Colonial American Thought | 19 |
3. CHAPTER TWO: Earliest Colonial Writings Include Prophecy | 33 |
4. CHAPTER THREE: First Two Systematic Commentaries Appear | 60 |
5. CHAPTER FOUR: Physicians, Legislators, and Historians Contribute | 78 |
6. CHAPTER FIVE: LAYMEN, GOVERNORS, AND EDUCATORS EXPOYND | 98 |
7. CHAPTER SIX: Prophetic Terms Permeate Secular Literature | 115 |
8. CHAPTER SEVEN: High-Water Mark in Colonial Exposition | 124 |
9.CHAPTER EIGHT: Seventeenth-Century Positions and Transitions | 138 |
10.CHAPTER NINE: Theologians, Schoolmasters, and Poets Join | 145 |
11. CHAPTER TEN: Harvard Lectures on Romanism Inaugurated | 168 |
12.CHAPTER ELEVEN: LISBON EARTHQUAKE AND THE CELESTIAL SIGNS | 187 |
13. CHAPTER TWELVE: Emphasis Upon Turkish Woe Trumpet | 207 |
14.CHAPTER THIRTEEN: Daystar of Premillennial Hope Reappears | 227 |
Part II - Nineteenth Century Old World Advent Awakening | 261 |
15.CHAPTER FOURTEEN: Summing Up the Witness for North America | 250 |
16.CHAPTER FIFTEEN: Nineteenth Century Revival of Prophetic Study | 263 |
17.CHAPTER SIXTEEN: Panoramic Preview of Developing Interpretations | 283 |
18.CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: Catholic Witness Stirs Two Continents | 303 |
19.CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: Protestant Interpretation Gathers Momentum | 327 |
20. CHAPTER NINETEEN: Growing Emphasis on the Last Times | 347 |
21.CHAPTER TWENTY: Twenty-three Hundred Years Focal Point of Discussion | 364 |
22.CHAPTER TWENTY ONE: American Witness Injected Into Discussion | 391 |
23.CHAPTER TWENTY TWO: Jewish Society and Journal “Launched | 415 |
24.CHAPTER TWENTY THREE: Continental Society and Albury Conference | 435 |
25.CHAPTER TWENTY FOUR: Wolff: Ambassador of the Coming Kingdom | 461 |
26.CHAPTER TWENTY FIVE: Medley of Voices in Swelling Chorus | 482 |
27.CHAPTER TWENTY SIX: Prophetic Society and the Morning Watch | 498 |
28.CHAPTER TWENTY SEVEN: Irving’s Contribution Marred by “Utterances” | 514 |
29.CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT: Futurist Interpretation Enters the Picture | 533 |
30.CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE: Sabbatarian Note Sounded in Prophetic Circles | 555 |
31. CHAPTER THIRTY: Irish Heralds Launch Prophetic Journal | 579 |
32.CHAPTER THIRTY ONE: Prophetic Investigator and Dictionary of Writers | 599 |
33.CHAPTER THIRTY TWO: Bishop Wilson Ends 2300 Years in 1847 | 617 |
34.CHAPTER THIRTY THREE: A Feminine Touch on the Prophecies | 640 |
35.CHAPTER THIRTY FOUR: The Futurist Foundation of the Oxford Movement | 655 |
36.CHAPTER THIRTY FIVE: Child Preachers of Sweden Warn of Judgment | 671 |
37.CHAPTER THIRTY SIX: Effctive Expositors in Switzerland,France,and Germany | 687 |
38.CHAPTER THIRTY SEVEN: Passing Over the Time of Expectation | 704 |
39.CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT: Old World Advent Awakening Collapses | 724 |
40. CHAPTER THIRTY NINE: A Summary of the Evidence | 738 |
Acknowledgments | 753 |
Bibliography | 757 |