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T. M. Preble

 
Wikipedia: T. M. Preble
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Adventism
William Miller
Background and History

Christianity · Protestantism
Anabaptists · Restorationism
Pietism · Millerites
Great Disappointment

Biographies

William Miller
Nelson H. Barbour · Joseph Bates
Sylvester Bliss · Jonathan Cummings
Joshua V. Himes · Charles F. Hudson
Josiah Litch · Rachel O. Preston
T. M. Preble · George Storrs
John T. Walsh · Jonas Wendell
Ellen G. White · James White

Theology

Annihilationism · Conditional immortality
Historicism · Intermediate state
Premillennialism · Sabbath

Adventist Denominations

Advent Christian Church
Seventh-day Adventist Church
Church of God (Seventh-Day)
Church of God General Conference
Church of the Blessed Hope
Seventh Day Adventist Reform Movement
Davidian SDA (Shepherd's Rod)
United Seventh-Day Brethren
Branch Davidian
Primitive Advent Christian Church

Thomas M. Preble (1810–1907) was a Free Will Baptist minister in New Hampshire and a Millerite preacher. After accepting the teachings of William Miller, Preble was excommunicated from his church. Preble appears to have accepted the seventh-day Sabbath in 1844, possibly from Frederick Wheeler or someone associated with the Washington, New Hampshire, church.

Preble was the first Millerite to advocate the Sabbath in print. In the Feb. 28, 1845, issue of the Hope of Israel, a Seventh-day Adventist periodical in Portland, Maine, was reprinted in tract form in March, 1845, with the title, Tract, Showing That the Seventh Day Should be Observed as the Sabbath. This tract led to the conversion of J. N. Andrews and other Adventist families in Paris, Maine, as well as to Joseph Bates.

Preble is known to have kept the seventh day Sabbath until mid-1847. He later repudiated the Sabbath and opposed the Seventh-day Adventists.

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