Search for: alcohol

322 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 133.3 (Gary Land)

… wretched alcoholic at the age of 25.

323 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 133.6 (Gary Land)

… with alcohol, and signed the pledge. He had an awful struggle but continued attending the Monday night meetings.

324 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 135.4 (Gary Land)

… of alcohol from all sources had fallen to two gallons—half the level of 1830—a level that would change little to our own day.

325 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 139.1 (Gary Land)

… of alcoholic beverages within their boundaries.

326 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 140.2 (Gary Land)

… of alcohol from the United States Navy, saloons continued to multiply. In 1913, therefore, the league changed tactics, calling for national prohibition. Soon …

327 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 140.3 (Gary Land)

… ” of alcoholic beverages within the United States and its territories.

328 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 149.1 (Gary Land)

… profession. Alcohol became one of the most widely used medications in the middle of the nineteenth century, as physicians experimented with a general therapy …

329 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 180.2 (Gary Land)

Actors and actresses suffered under the stigma of their profession. They were thought to be an emotional, highly charged group of individuals. A life of pretending to be someone else was said to breed instability and a tendency for alcohol.

330 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 185.1 (Gary Land)

… and alcohol, and a reduction of student rowdyism, which they attributed to the athletic interest.

331 What Ellen White has Meant to Me, p. 9.5 (Herbert E. Douglass)

… and alcohol-prevention clinics, are pacesetters on most continents. And the list goes on.

332 What Ellen White has Meant to Me, p. 147.7 (Herbert E. Douglass)

… of alcoholic beverages, and more healthful living. He had much influence during the first half of the nineteenth century but left no permanent group of followers …

333 Understanding Ellen White, p. 158.2 (Dr. Merlin Burt)

… (and alcohol) using the same phraseology—including one whose article had been reprinted in the Review several weeks before Ellen White’s work was published …

334 Understanding Ellen White, p. 183.3 (Dr. Merlin Burt)

… , and alcohol,” which were to be “discarded” as “sinful indulgences,” and the less objectionable “meat, eggs, butter, [and] cheese,” which were not to be entirely prohibited …

335 Understanding Ellen White, p. 247.2 (Dr. Merlin Burt)

… of alcohol use. See Counsels for the Church (Nampa, ID: Pacific Press®, 1991), 101-103. For an overview of Ellen White’s stance on slavery and race relations, see Ronald …

336 Understanding Ellen White, p. 247.3 (Dr. Merlin Burt)

… that alcohol addiction destroyed the person and deprived them of their freedom of choice.Ellen White made no concessions regarding slavery: “The whole …

337 The Gift of Prophecy, p. 361.3 (Dr. Alberto Timm & Dwain Esmond)

… using alcohol or tobacco, was instruction about not eating flesh foods. At the time, Ellen—by her own admission—was a “great meat eater.” Later she recalled her …

338 Basic Rules of Interpretation-Internal and External, p. 13.9 (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 …

339 A Critique of the Book Prophetess of Health, p. 22.12 (Ellen G. White Estate)

… and alcohol. Only in the last fifteen or twenty years have the Ellen G. White statements concerning birth defects become of particular significance, and …

340 A Critique of the Book Prophetess of Health, p. 23.1 (Ellen G. White Estate)

… of alcohol as responsible for the “thousands of children born deaf, blind, diseased and idiotic” ( Patriarchs and Prophets, 561 ). Did she gain this from Coles, or …