MILLIONS NOW
LIVING WILL NEVER DIEHere is a
little of what has been written about this
famous and highly sought after booklet:
*** yb75 p. 127 United States of America
(Part Two) ***
THE “MILLIONS CAMPAIGN”
Contributing to disciple-making work in those
days was a new preaching activity—the “Millions
Campaign.” It featured distribution of the
128-page book Millions Now Living Will Never
Die, placed with the people on a
contribution of 25c a copy. The book was used in
conjunction with a public-speaking program that
began on September 25, 1920, and that centered
around a lecture (originally entitled “The World
Has Ended—Millions Now Living May Never Die”)
given by J. F. Rutherford in Los Angeles on
February 24, 1918, and published in the new book
in 1920.
In retrospect, Lester L. Roper says: “Then
came my time for a public talk on the subject
‘Lift Up a Standard for the People, Millions Now
Living That Will Never Die.’ I was accustomed to
dealing with the public, but that was different.
I felt the floor would come up and hit me in the
face any time. And I guess it did take
intestinal fortitude, as then we had only a very
small number in the truth in all the world—and
to tell them ‘Millions now living would never
die’!”
Millions Now Living Will Never Die
eventually was translated and published in
various languages. Unlike the “pastoral work,”
which had consisted of lending books to the
people, copies of the “Millions” book were
placed with them on a contribution, and
interested persons could later obtain volumes of
Studies in the Scriptures. The “Millions
Campaign” lasted for some time, and a great
witness was given by this means. Newspaper
notices and billboards with the words “Millions
Now Living Will Never Die” were used to bring it
to public attention. So extensive was the
campaign that the slogan has been remembered
through the years.
Recalling the effect of the “Millions
Campaign,” Rufus Chappell writes: “We had
offered the publication Millions Now Living
Will Never Die in and around Zion [Illinois]
and the results were of interest. I remember a
large, flashing electric sign over the Waukegan
Dry Cleaners building on North Sheridan Road
about five miles from Zion, which said, ‘We
Dye for the Millions Now Living Who Will Never
Die.’ This was a very popular subject at
that time, and many people had questioned the
phrase and learned the truth from this
publication.”