The Prophetic Faith of Our Fathers, vol. 4
III. National Fast Day Evokes Sermons on Prophecy
The special day of “Fasting, Humiliation, and Prayer,” appointed by Presidential proclamation for May 9, 1798, witnessed an impressive number of sermons on the prophecies by various clergymen. 9 (See facsimile above.) February 15 of that year had marked the dethroning of Pope Pius VI, in Rome, followed by his exile, and later his death in France. Word of his arrest had reached this country, and many keen students of prophecy told their Protestant congregations of the prophetic significance of the event and of the widespread conviction that mankind had evidently entered “the time of the end”—the latter—day epoch that would finally see the overthrow of the papal Antichrist. One of these sermons, based on prophecy, was delivered by Jeremy Belknap, Congregationalist PFF4 61.1
Interestingly enough, in the Roman Catholic Church of Boston, on the same appointed Fast Day of May 9, Father John Thayer attempted to neutralize the common Protestant charge that the Papacy is the prophesied Antichrist, through ridiculing the scholarly acumen and logic of such an interpretation and by seeking to thrust Antichrist’s appearance into the future—the standard Catholic position. 10 So prophecy became the vortex of eddying currents of discussion evoked by President Adams’ proclamation in the year 1798. We will first note M’Corkle in North Carolina and Belknap in Boston, and then turn to Thayer. Catholics, be it remembered, were distinctly in the minority in Massachusetts at this time. PFF4 62.1