JOHN ANDREWS: THE EARLY YEARS
When Edward Andrews married Sarah Nevins it was a happy day for their grandfathers, David Andrews and John Nevins who had served together in George Washington’s army and had been close friends ever since. Edward and Sarah Andrews chose to settle down in Poland, Maine and before long they had their first child, a son, whom they named John Nevins Andrews after Sarah’s grandfather. John had three other siblings only one of whom survived.
As a young boy, John suffered bouts of ill health and was forced to drop out of school as a result. However, he didn’t let his lack of schooling deter him from learning and from the moment he dropped out of school he began to teach himself. He had a voracious appetite for reading and developed the habit of carrying a book with him wherever he went.
When he was 13 years old he was converted and accepted Jesus as his savior. He had cultivated a love for the Bible early in life and he taught himself to read the Bible in Hebrew, Latin, and Greek. For a few years during his teens, he lived with his Uncle Charles and his wife Persis in Dixfield, Maine. Charles Andrews was a congressman and saw great potential in John and sent him to school. He had high hopes that John would go to college, become a lawyer and eventually become a congressman like himself but God had other plans for John Andrews.
As the Millerite movement began to swirl across the Eastern Seaboard of the United States, the Edward Andrews family was swept up into its current. They attended some lectures and would retreat to their home after each one to carefully pore over the Bible, verifying the arguments they had heard. They were convinced and soon joined the Millerite movement embracing the prejudice and scorn that came along with being part of it.
In the aftermath of the great disappointment of 1844, the Andrews family sheltered the Stowells who had sold everything they had in order to spread the message of Christ’s soon return. While the Stowells were living with the Andrews, their daughter Marian came across a tract written by T.M. Preble detailing the Biblical basis for the Seventh-Day Sabbath. Marian read the tract and believed every word of it, she then showed it to her brother Oswald Stowell who in turn showed it to John Andrews. Eventually, all three teenagers were convinced that Saturday was the true biblical Sabbath and chose to start keeping it. They went on to share what they had learned with their parents and soon the Andrews and Stowell families were all keeping the Sabbath. Before long they had shared what they learned with seven other families in Paris Hill, Maine who also started keeping the Sabbath with them.
Immediately after the disappointment fanaticism in its various shapes and forms swept through the ranks of Millerite Adventists. Fanaticism was especially rife among the little community of believers in Paris Hill and the Edward Andrews family was not untouched by it. Some reports state that Edward Andrews chose not to work or send his children to school because he believed that Christ would return at any moment after the great disappointment. James and Ellen White visited Pari Hill in 1849 and held a series of revival meetings there to help the believers. During these meetings, John Andrews was so inspired and revived that he exclaimed: “I would exchange a thousand errors for one truth!”