Search for: Haskell

4041 Messenger of the Lord, p. 360.2 (Herbert E. Douglass)

… . N. Haskell, cited in Robinson, Our Health Message, p. 368.

4042 Messenger of the Lord, p. 388.1 (Herbert E. Douglass)

… . N. Haskell, a stalwart pioneer who leaned dangerously toward a verbal-inspiration viewpoint at that time: “Regarding Mother’s writings, she has never wished …

4043 Messenger of the Lord, p. 388.2 (Herbert E. Douglass)

… , Brother Haskell, that there is danger of our injuring Mother’s work by claiming for it more than she claims for it, more than Father ever claimed for it, more …

4044 Messenger of the Lord, p. 439.2 (Herbert E. Douglass)

… . Stephen Haskell’s unsureness regarding W. C. White’s role as the chief editor of his mother’s writings was reflected in letters to both him and his mother …

4045 Messenger of the Lord, p. 458.5 (Herbert E. Douglass)

… Stephen Haskell that he was inappropriate in making an issue over the use of pork. After her vision in 1863 she made clear that pork was indeed a prohibited …

4046 The Ellen G. White Writings, p. 45.3 (Arthur Lacey White)

… Brother Haskell would place any particular significance in those words. But she might go on and say, “Brother Haskell, in your work in Chicago,” so and so, and so …

4047 The Great Visions of Ellen G. White, p. 96.1 (Roger W. Coon)

… N. Haskells (“Brother and Sister A”) for making the eating of pork a test of church membership. Now she was shown that from ingesting swine’s flesh the human body …

4048 The Testimony of Jesus, p. 85.8 (Francis McLellan Wilcox)

… . N. Haskell, Geo. I. Butler.”

4049 The Testimony of Jesus, p. 124.3 (Francis McLellan Wilcox)

“I invest in the work of God all the means that I can possibly spare. I sent one thousand dollars to Elder Haskell to help in beginning the work in New York City....

4050 Understanding Ellen White, p. 67.4 (Dr. Merlin Burt)

… . N. Haskell argued that to make any changes in the established position would undermine Ellen White’s authority. He was quite explicit on his view of the relation …

4051 Understanding Ellen White, p. 67.5 (Dr. Merlin Burt)

… Elders Haskell, Loughborough, Smith, and others of our leading brethren, that they make no reference to my writings to sustain their views of ‘the daily’.. .. I cannot …

4052 Understanding Ellen White, p. 89.3 (Dr. Merlin Burt)

… , the Haskells, rebuking them for insisting that eating pork was a violation of Leviticus 11:7: “I saw that your views concerning swine’s flesh would prove no …

4053 Understanding Ellen White, p. 89.4 (Dr. Merlin Burt)

… , validating Haskell’s Bible study. In 1864, in her first published presentation of that vision, a fifty-page chapter entitled “Health,” in Spiritual Gifts, volume …

4054 Understanding Ellen White, p. 200.3 (Dr. Merlin Burt)

… the Haskell family for agitating the question of abstinence from eating pork among Sabbatarian believers in the late 1850s. She wrote:

4055 Understanding Ellen White, p. 200.5 (Dr. Merlin Burt)

… , against Haskell’s belief to make abstinence from pork a test of church fellowship based on the testimony of “two or three.” Another who must be included among …

4056 Understanding Ellen White, p. 214.1 (Dr. Merlin Burt)

… . N. Haskell as a “perpetual trust” for the uses detailed in her will.Seventh-day Adventist Encyclopedia, 1996 ed., s.v. “Druillard, Nellie Helen (Rankin)”; Ellen G. White …

4057 101 Questions - About Ellen White and Her Writings, p. 89.1 (William A. Fagal)

… . N. Haskell report to E. G. White, September 25, 1900.. . .

4058 101 Questions - About Ellen White and Her Writings, p. 164.2 (William A. Fagal)

… , Elder Haskell had a bit of paper that was handed in, quoting certain texts prohibiting women speaking in public. He took up the matter in a brief manner and …

4059 The Gift of Prophecy, p. 266.4 (Dr. Alberto Timm & Dwain Esmond)

… . N. Haskell, “The General Conference Business Proceedings,” Review and Herald, Dec. 13, 1881, 376.

4060 The Gift of Prophecy, p. 341.2 (Dr. Alberto Timm & Dwain Esmond)

… Stephen Haskell wrote in the Review and Herald: “It once required a great stretch of faith to believe this work would find its way to every nation, kindred, tongue …