Search for: alcohol
301 Messenger of the Lord, p. 330.5 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… . Fetal alcohol syndrome rises with the risk of alcohol from less than one ounce in any one day with little risk to 1-2 ounces—10%, five ounces—50%, more than five …
302 Messenger of the Lord, p. 334.5 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… drink alcohol, do so in moderation. This report served as a ringing wakeup call to health workers as it was to the general population. But if this report had …
303 Messenger of the Lord, p. 334.8 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… , and alcohol. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press, 1982.
304 Messenger of the Lord, p. 336.9 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… of alcoholic beverages, if you drink at all. CA/1996, pp. 326, 327.
305 Messenger of the Lord, p. 365.10 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… anti-alcohol campaigns in the nineteenth century, see Jerome L. Clark, “The Crusade Against Alcohol,” in Land, World of E. G. White, pp. 131-140.
306 Messenger of the Lord, p. 365.11 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… of alcoholic beverages. She wrote: “Intemperance is increasing everywhere, notwithstanding the earnest efforts made during the past year to stay its progress …
307 Messenger of the Lord, p. 399.9 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… as alcohol, tobacco, and drugs; (3) Use judiciously that which is healthful—use self-control; (4) Do not mark out any precise line in diet that everyone must follow …
308 The Ellen G. White Writings, p. 70.3 (Arthur Lacey White)
… , and alcohol and drugs as potent factors in giving rise to birth defects.
309 The Great Visions of Ellen G. White, p. 15.1 (Roger W. Coon)
… , and Alcohol” (unpublished monograph, May 30, 1990).
310 The Great Visions of Ellen G. White, p. 94.2 (Roger W. Coon)
3. She attacked intemperance on many fronts. Ellen White lived in an age when the Women’s Christian Temperance Union and other similar organizations were most active in publicly attacking intemperance—usually of the alcoholic variety.
311 The Great Visions of Ellen G. White, p. 94.4 (Roger W. Coon)
… expected, alcohol came in for attack as a “stimulating drink,” an intoxicant that “confused the brain and brought down man to the level of the brute creation …
312 The Spirit of Prophecy in the Advent Movement, p. 89.4 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… membership alcoholic drink, tobacco, the unclean swine’s flesh and the flesh of all animals pronounced unclean by the Lord. (See Leviticus 11 .) It is a clean …
313 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 19.3 (Gary Land)
… , an alcoholic institute, a jail, a hospital, a ward for the dying, a juvenile hall, a trade school, and a source of apprentices for the local labor market.
314 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 22.2 (Gary Land)
… , tea, alcohol, tobacco, or drugs; moderation in eating; a simple diet free of spices; frequent bathing; exercise; fresh air; sunshine; dress reform; sex hygiene; and …
315 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 27.5 (Gary Land)
… , and alcohol. The impact of his lectures was dramatically demonstrated when two local bakeries began advertising “Graham bread” for sale while the series …
316 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 123.6 (Gary Land)
… of alcoholic beverages. To temperance-minded Sundaykeepers, the Sunday saloon was doubly sinful: it sold the devil’s drink on the Lord’s day. The Sunday theater …
317 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 131 (Gary Land)
Chapter 8—The Crusade Against Alcohol
318 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 131.3 (Gary Land)
… of alcohol from all sources had increased from three gallons in 1800 to nearly four gallons in 1830. One observer wrote that Americans were “certainly not …
319 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 131.4 (Gary Land)
This alcohol consumption cut across social class, age, sex, and race. Although there were other nations that consumed as much alcohol, the United States was, in the words of historian W. H. Rorabaugh, an “alcoholic republic.”
320 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 132.3 (Gary Land)
… all alcoholic beverages. Local societies followed its lead and by 1839 had convinced 350,000 people to sign total abstinence pledges.