John Darby Quotes

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In Treasure Island, Savannah is the place where Captain John Flint, the murderous pirate with the blue face, has died of rum before the story begins. It is on his death bed in Savannah that Flint bellows his last command - "Fetch aft the rum, Darby!" - and hands Billy Bones a map of Treasure Island. "He gave it me at Savnnah," says Bones, "when he lay a-dying." The book has a drawing of Flint's map in it with an X marking the location of the buried treasure.
John Berendt (Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil)
Of the many, many thousands of serious students of the Bible throughout Christian history who pored over every word—from leading early Christian scholars such as Irenaeus in the second century; to Tertullian and Origen in the third; to Augustine in the fifth; to all the biblical scholars of the Middle Ages up to Aquinas; to the Reformation greats Luther, Melanchthon, and Calvin; on to, well, everyone who studied or simply read or even just heard passages from the Bible—this idea of the rapture occurred to no one until John Nelson Darby came up with the idea in the early 1800s (as we will discuss in chapter 3).
Bart D. Ehrman (Armageddon: What the Bible Really Says about the End)
So important did the sound effects become that Ken Darby immortalized the craft in a musical selection, The Sound Effects Man, which was heard periodically.
John Dunning (On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio)
One Darby Field, an Irishman, living about Pascataquack, being accompanied with two Indians, went to the top of the white hill.[49] He made his journey in 18 days.
John Winthrop (Winthrop's Journal, History of New England, 1630-1649: Volume 2)
No one in the church, in 1970, knew that the doctrine of pre-tribulation rapture had never been found in history before 1830, or that it was first promoted by an Irish minister named John Nelson Darby.
Ken Dahl (Field of Grasshoppers)
Most Christians are unaware that for the majority of Church history, most Christians did not believe that there were specific events in the Middle East that needed to take place before Christ would physically return to rapture his followers and judge the world. This teaching only became popularized in 1830—the same year that Joseph Smith introduced Mormonism—and was promoted by a man named John Nelson Darby in England as Dispensational Theology.
Keith Giles (Jesus Unexpected: Ending the End Times to Become the Second Coming)