Search for: alcohol

201 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 19 (1904), Lt 343, 1904, par. 9

… and alcohol. Explain your methods of giving treatment. Let the talks given be such as will enlighten your hearers. God has mercy on the unrighteous. This service …

202 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 19 (1904), Ms 102, 1904, par. 36

… , or alcoholic liquors, or any other injurious substance; for we must strive to keep our minds clear for the work of saving souls. The Lord is pleased with those …

203 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 19 (1904), Ms 156, 1904, par. 29

… , like alcohol-drinking, all these are not food for the system, it is death for the system. You are taking away the underpinning of your house in indulging the …

204 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 19 (1904), Ms 156, 1904, par. 48

… in alcohol, it would educate, it would make families comfortable. Why not give up these things? It is God’s money. You cannot afford to give an account of that …

205 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 20 (1905), Lt 243a, 1905, par. 6

… and alcohol enfeebles the intellect. Millions of dollars are spent for stimulants and narcotics. All this money rightfully belongs to God, and those who …

206 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 20 (1905), Ms 36, 1905, par. 15

… of alcohol and tobacco in every form. Our physicians are to go to the root of the matter, showing that sickness and suffering do not come from God, but are the …

207 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 20 (1905), Ms 38a, 1905, par. 11

… of alcoholic liquor. Let us never touch it. And those who sell the liquor will be held accountable to God for the agony and the suffering that are caused by its …

208 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 20 (1905), Ms 54, 1905, par. 14

… or alcoholic drink. Alcohol robs men of their reasoning powers. Watch that man entering the saloon. His eye is bright and his step steady. Watch him as he comes …

209 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 20 (1905), Ms 54, 1905, par. 15

… of alcohol. In that great day when every man will be judged according to the deeds done in the body, what will those who have legalized the liquor traffic say …

210 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 21 (1906), Lt 268, 1906, par. 14

… the alcoholic drinks are protected by law. The liquors are adulterated with substances, often more poisonous even than the alcohol, and those who drink them …

211 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 21 (1906), Ms 27, 1906, par. 16

… or alcohol. None of us have any too much mind, and we should do our utmost to improve that which we have. We cannot afford to allow the mind to be dominated by evil …

212 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 21 (1906), Ms 131, 1906, par. 9

… rub alcohol into his limbs. ([My father] was a hatter and he had to use alcohol in his business.) Father went to leave him a bottle of alcohol, and every single member …

213 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 23 (1908), Lt 90, 1908, par. 16

… used. Alcohol or tobacco in any form must not be recommended, lest some soul be led to imbibe a taste for these evil things. There will be no excuse for the liquor …

214 Letters and Manuscripts — Volume 25 (1910 - 1915), Ms 23, 1912, par. 2

… discarding alcoholic liquor and tobacco in every form. The use of tobacco is a needless, harmful indulgence. Our physicians are to go to the root of the matter …

215 Ellen G. White: The Progressive Years: 1862-1876 (vol. 2), p. 12.6 (Arthur Lacey White)

… drugs, alcohol, and blisters and bleeding. Across from the page in the Review that carried the reprint from Illinois, an item was published that the editors …

216 Ellen G. White: The Progressive Years: 1862-1876 (vol. 2), p. 21.4 (Arthur Lacey White)

… of alcohol, tobacco, tea, and coffee. She emphasized the importance of cleanliness of person and of the home and its premises, the importance of physical exercise …

217 Ellen White: Woman of Vision, p. 101.6 (Arthur Lacey White)

5. Use of tea, coffee, alcohol, tobacco, and cider. These were just as habit-forming then as now. In lives with little recreation or change, they offered a solace of sorts!

218 Ellen White: Woman of Vision, p. 104.3 (Arthur Lacey White)

… of alcohol, tobacco, tea, and coffee. She emphasized the importance of cleanliness of person and of the home and its premises; the importance of physical exercise …

219 Ellen White: Woman of Vision, p. 104.4 (Arthur Lacey White)

… ; also alcohol, blisters, and bleeding.

220 A Call to Stand Apart, p. 75.3 (Ellen Gould White)

… of alcohol. Don’t fall for the proposals of a man who has no realization of his responsibility to God. The pure truth which sets you apart for a holy purpose …