The European Union in Prophecy The EU in Prophecy I | Page 300
The European Union in Prophecy
About this time a marked change was apparent in most of the churches
throughout the United States. There had been for many years a gradual but steadily
increasing conformity to worldly practices and customs, and a corresponding decline
in real spiritual life; but in that year there were evidences of a sudden and marked
declension in nearly all the churches of the land. While none seemed able to suggest
the cause, the fact itself was widely noted and commented upon by both the press and
the pulpit. At a meeting of the presbytery of Philadelphia, Mr. Barnes, author of a
commentary widely used and pastor of one of the leading churches in that city, "stated
that he had been in the ministry for twenty years, and never, till the last Communion,
had he administered the ordinance without receiving more or less into the church.
But now there are no awakenings, no conversions, not much apparent growth in grace
in professors, and none come to his study to converse about the salvation of their souls.
With the increase of
business, and the brightening prospects of commerce and
manufacture, there is an increase of worldly-mindedness. Thus it is with all the
denominations." -- Congregational Journal, May 23, 1844.
In the month of February of the same year, Professor Finney of Oberlin College
said: "We have had the fact before our minds, that, in general, the Protestant churches
of our country, as such, were either apathetic or hostile to nearly all the moral reforms
of the age. There are partial exceptions, yet not enough to render the fact otherwise
than general. We have also another corroborated fact: the almost universal absence
of revival influence in the churches. The spiritual apathy is almost allpervading, and
is fearfully deep; so the religious press of the whole land testifies. . . . Very extensively,
church members are becoming devotees of fashion, --join hands with the ungodly in
parties of pleasure, in dancing, in festivities, etc. . . . But we need not expand this
painful subject. Suffice it that the evidence thickens and rolls heavily upon us, to show
that the churches generally are becoming sadly degenerate . They have gone very far
from the Lord, and He has withdrawn Himself from them."
And a writer in the Religious Telescope testified: "We have never witnessed such
a general declension of religion as at the present. Truly, the church should awake,
and search into the cause of this affliction; for as an affliction everyone that loves Zion
must view it. When we call to mind how 'few and far between' cases of true conversion
are, and the almost unparalleled impertinence and hardness of sinners, we almost
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