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  1. John Norton Loughborough (January 26, 1832 – April 7, 1924) was an early Seventh-day Adventist minister. Born in Victor, New York, Loughborough began preaching about the Second Coming of Christ at seventeen years of age, renting a church to deliver his lectures. [1] .

  2. Sep 23, 2020 · John Norton Loughborough’s seventy-two years of ministry as a pioneering evangelist, missionary, author, organizer, and administrator had a major impact on the shaping Seventh-day Adventism. 1. Loughborough’s ancestors, John and Hannah Loofbourrow, emigrated from England to America in 1684 and settled in New Jersey.

  3. John Norton Loughborough became a Sabbath-keeping Adventist through the labors of J. N. Andrews. He began preaching immediately and was ordained in 1854. He became our first missionary (to California, that is!) in the year 1868.

  4. May 9, 2024 · Then on September 26, 1852, he attended an Adventist meeting and heard J. N. Andrews explain every text on his list in the order he had written them. This and other miraculous events led John to join the Sabbatarian Adventists.

  5. Search, read, listen to, and download Ellen G. White's Writings in multiple languages! Publications are available in epub, mobi, Kindle, MP3 and PDF …

  6. John Norton Loughborough 1832-1924. J. N. Loughborough became a Sabbath-keeping Adventist through the labors of J. N. Andrews. He began preaching immediately and was ordained in 1854. He, along with D. T. Bordeau, were our first missionaries, sent to California in 1868. In 1878, he was sent to Europe.

  7. Search, read, listen to, and download Ellen G. White's Writings in multiple languages! Publications are available in epub, mobi, Kindle, MP3 and PDF …

  8. Little Man, Long Shadow: The Legacy of J. N. Loughborough In the late-1840s John Norton Loughborough was nicknamed “the boy preacher”; later in the 1850s he was called “the little preacher.” Loughborough never grew taller than 5’4” and never weighed more than 125 pounds. In truth, he was a little man, but one who cast a long shadow.

  9. At the close of the discourse, among the scores who went forward for prayers was John Loughborough. Since he was only eleven years of age, not much encouragement was given him by the Christian workers, and not until some years later did he become an active Christian.

  10. From the age of 17, Loughborough was a lay preacher for the First-day Adventists. A month after he was introduced to the Sabbath by J. N. Andrews, he began preaching for the movement that later would become known as the Seventh-day Adventist Church.