The newly born Millerite movement could have just given up hope, succumbing to the desperate, hopeless misery that would surely befall them after such disappointment. They had been so sure that Jesus was coming to earth to take them back to heaven on October 22, 1844. While some did give up hope and leave the movement and even their hope in God, others knew that God was still with them, leading, guiding, and inspiring their walk of faith in Him.
William Miller’s study of the prophecies in Daniel was thorough and Spirit-led. He was hesitant to set an exact date for Jesus’s soon return, as he had often read in Mark 13:32, “
But of that day or that hour no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father.” RSV. But despite this, S. Snow, a prominent figure in the movement, declared that he had found a date that fit the description of the prophecy, “the tenth day of the seventh month” (this was calculated based on the day of atonement from a historic Jewish calendar).
However, October 22, 1844, came and went without the return of the Messiah. Devastated, those who remained faithful to their convictions and beliefs in the prophecies turned back to the Bible. What could they have gotten wrong? Although their faith had been severely tested, and they had endured intense disappointment and discouragement, they remained faithful to God. They chose to trust entirely in Him Who is faithful, always.