Search for: Choice

2121 The Ellen G. White Writings, p. 23.4 (Arthur Lacey White)

… the choice of the time and place and content of presentation. He exercises great care that his message shall not be influenced in its basic concepts by his …

2122 The Ellen G. White Writings, p. 39.3 (Arthur Lacey White)

… God’s choice it has been more clearly and powerfully unfolded, and is thereby producing an effect which we could not have looked for from any other means …

2123 The Ellen G. White Writings, p. 115.3 (Arthur Lacey White)

… the choice of subjects for publication in her books, sound judgment should be shown in selecting what was best suited to the needs of those who would read …

2125 The Ellen G. White Writings, p. 141.2 (Arthur Lacey White)

… the choice of words and forms of expression that would adequately and accurately convey her thoughts to the hearer or reader. She at times studied diligently …

2126 The Ellen G. White Writings, p. 166.2 (Arthur Lacey White)

… making choices, and these choices should be guided by principles. The application of these principles may change as circumstances change, but principle …

2127 The Ellen G. White Writings, p. 169.1 (Arthur Lacey White)

… his choice of what to play and what not to play and the extent of involvement in this type of recreation acceptable in itself.

2128 The Great Visions of Ellen G. White, p. 17.4 (Roger W. Coon)

choice for the office of prophet in the first half of the decade of the 1840s!God’s first choice was William Ellis Foy in 1842, and His second choice was …

2129 The Great Visions of Ellen G. White, p. 33.4 (Roger W. Coon)

… first choice for the prophetic office, received two visions in Boston in 1842. The first, on January 18, lasted two and a half hours; but the second, on February …

2130 The Great Visions of Ellen G. White, p. 65.3 (Roger W. Coon)

… his choice [in making you his wife].” Letter 1, 1858 .

2131 The Great Visions of Ellen G. White, p. 100.3 (Roger W. Coon)

… God’s choice it has been more clearly and powerfully unfolded, and is thereby producing an effect which we could not have looked for from any other means …

2133 The Spirit of Prophecy in the Advent Movement, p. 52.3 (William Ambrose Spicer)

… and choice language. Professor M. E. Cady, one of our veteran educational leaders, once commented on this as follows:

2134 The Testimony of Jesus, p. 38.2 (Francis McLellan Wilcox)

… the choice blessings of God by acknowledging the force of the promises of His Spirit....

2135 The Voice of The Spirit, p. 11.2 (Juan Carlos Viera)

The choice of the Holy Spirit as the person of the Divinity in charge of communicating the message to humanity is also an act of divine sovereignty. In the …

2136 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 73.3 (Gary Land)

Perhaps it was the crossing of Dale Creek that inspired Rev. Murray’s sermon “To Die Is Gain,” and the choir’s choice of the hymn “Nearer, My God, to Thee.”

2137 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 195.1 (Gary Land)

… their choices of subject matter and resource materials. As Emerson noted in his “The American Scholar” (1837): “The first in time and the first in importance of …

2138 What Ellen White has Meant to Me, p. 38.1 (Herbert E. Douglass)

… , my choices would be the Bible, The Desire of Ages, and The Great Controversy. These books all exalt Christ as the means and proof of salvation. They all exalt …

2139 What Ellen White has Meant to Me, p. 75.2 (Herbert E. Douglass)

… White’s choice of words that causes her Christian character to come through in her writings, her books breathe the atmosphere of heaven.

2140 What Ellen White has Meant to Me, p. 134.1 (Herbert E. Douglass)

… vocational choice, I would use Proverbs 3:6 as a base, and a statement in Education as a plumb line: “To do our best in the work that lies nearest, to commit our ways …