(Disclaimer: This transcript is auto-generated and may contain mistakes.) When the Seventh-day Adventists started as a religion, there was a guy by the name of William Miller, who was their leader. Now, William Miller became popular because he predicted the end of the world in 1833. So 1833 comes, and guess what? The end of the world doesn't happen. And so all of a sudden he said, well, you know, I guess it's October 22nd, 1834. Let's just move it back a year. And you know, it's funny because I saw a documentary on this recently, and it's really funny because they have all these Seventh-day Adventists, and they're out at night with their wives, and they're looking up, the sun's setting, it's getting darker. They're just waiting for the return of Jesus, and then it doesn't happen. It is so fitting that we should all be here together in these last hours. We did our best, sir. Did we? We did. And the next day they're on their knees just like crying. Oh, he didn't come back. You know, we were wrong. We were wrong. God's message was never meant to be about a single date. All is not lost. Look at the movement you have begun. You have won thousands. And to what, Brother Himes, have I won them? Disappointment, despair? To the truth of God's word. Setting a date has now made that appear untrustworthy. Why was I so weak to endorse one? That should have been the end of the religion. You falsely predicted the end of the world twice. Go from the presence of a foolish man when thou perceiveth not in him the lips of knowledge. And when that religion started, their whole religion was based on predicting the end of the world. That was the entire religion. They said, it doesn't matter what denomination you are, it's all about the end of the world. Extremely ecumenical in predicting the end of the world. So the only thing they were known for, they were complete and utter failure about. They were wrong about it. That should have been the end of the religion. Instead, they kind of changed the religion. Now they're like, well, let's get obsessed with the Sabbath day. And not only that, they started off being really ecumenical, and now they're really against ecumenicalism. It's a completely different religion. It came from William Miller, and then they had Ellen White who had all these Pentecostal prophecies where she just gets knocked out and God gives her all these false visions, things that did not take place. And she makes all these false prophecies, and yet we still have the Seventh-day Adventists today. They falsely predicted the end of the world, and very few people left their religion. They just said, well, it turns out Jesus did return. It just kind of happened up in heaven. He didn't return to earth. So we were close. It's just all this took place in heaven, so we didn't see it. I mean, that's just utter foolishness. You ought to go from the presence of a foolish man when you perceive in them not the lips of knowledge.