“Right Soon”

A Presbyterian pastor recounts ministerial discouragement during an epidemic, a dying girl’s calm faith, and a young man’s struggle toward belief — urging urgent evangelism and conversion.

Silas Milton Andrews, D.D. (March 11, 1805 – March 7, 1881) was an American Presbyterian minister born in Rowan County, North Carolina, who graduated from the University of North Carolina in 1826, taught for several years, then completed his theological studies at Princeton Theological Seminary in 1831. He was ordained and installed as pastor of the Presbyterian Church in Doylestown, Pennsylvania that same year, where he faithfully served the congregation for nearly fifty years while also leading the congregation at Deep Run and occasionally operating a private classical academy early in his ministry. Known for his careful scholarship and solid preaching, Andrews served as Stated Clerk of the Synod of Philadelphia from 1848 until the reunion of the divided Presbyterian Church in 1870 and published works including The Sabbath at Home (1836).

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