Search for: Christmas

181 The Review and Herald December 15, 1885, paragraph 1

… celebrate Christmas, there are few who show honor to Christ. The day is devoted to selfish indulgence, and the Redeemer's great love and sacrifice awaken …

182 The Review and Herald December 15, 1885, paragraph 2

… on Christmas gifts. The means is lost to the cause of God. Not only so, but it gratifies vanity, encourages pride, and often occasions dissatisfaction and complaints …

183 The Review and Herald December 15, 1885, paragraph 4

… regard Christmas as a day of rejoicing, and we should find it a difficult matter to pass over this holiday without some attention. It may be made to serve a good …

184 The Review and Herald December 15, 1885, paragraph 5

On Christmas let the members of every church assemble, with offerings from willing hands and hearts,—the fruits of love and gratitude to God. Let all exert …

185 The Review and Herald December 15, 1885, paragraph 6

… this Christmas cannot show thousands, yes, tens of thousands, of dollars flowing into the treasury.

186 The Review and Herald December 7, 1886, paragraph 14

… evergreen Christmas trees yield a rich harvest for God.

187 The Review and Herald December 7, 1886, paragraph 16

… coming Christmas and New Year's not only make an offering to him of our means, but give ourselves to him in willing service. To each of us, from the oldest to the …

188 The Review and Herald December 6, 1887, paragraph 12

… coming Christmas, how better express our gratitude to God for the gift of his dear Son, than by offerings to send to all the world the tidings of his soon coming …

189 The Review and Herald December 11, 1888, Art. A, paragraph 1

… year. Christmas and New Year's will soon be here. Let us candidly and carefully review our life during the year that is about to pass, with its burden of history …

190 The Review and Herald December 11, 1888, Art. A, paragraph 18

… coming Christmas and New Year's. How unworthy we are of all the priceless gifts and the continued mercies with which the Lord blesses us! How marvelous has …

191 The Review and Herald December 11, 1888, Art. A, paragraph 19

… upon Christmas. Christmas is celebrated to commemorate Christ's birth. If we celebrate it only in seeking to give pleasure to our children and one another …

192 The Review and Herald December 11, 1888, Art. A, paragraph 20

… dishonored. Christmas has been made a day of feasting of gluttony, of selfish indulgence. Now let every family consider this matter in all its bearings. Let …

193 The Review and Herald December 18, 1888, paragraph 16

… this Christmas and New Year's. Has not the Lord made you channels of light to the world? Our missionary efforts must not be limited by lack of means. The calls …

194 The Review and Herald December 18, 1888, paragraph 19

… this Christmas-time and the entering in of a new year testify to the zeal of God's people. There has been a withholding from God of tithes and offerings. The …

195 The Review and Herald February 19, 1889, paragraph 2

… a Christmas donation of $125. Another brother gave a note for $1,000, expecting to meet it in a few weeks; and another gave a note for $300.

196 The Review and Herald February 19, 1889, paragraph 3

… the Christmas offerings, was thus raised for the foreign mission work. The sympathies of God's people should be aroused in every church throughout our land …

197 The Review and Herald December 17, 1889

Christmas Address to the Young

198 The Review and Herald December 17, 1889, paragraph 7

… coming Christmas, will you not count up the many things for which you are to be grateful, and will you not present a gratitude offering to Christ, and so reveal …

200 The Review and Herald December 9, 1890, Art. A, paragraph 4

… . Even Christmas, the day observed professedly in honor of the birthday of Christ, has been made a most effective means of turning the mind away from Christ …