Search for: comfort
21661 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 28, 1913, page 167 paragraph 13
… words comfort you.
21662 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 28, 1913, page 172 paragraph 1
… , provided comfortable homes in more healthful location, and necessary facilities with which to work. They have given us prestige among the people even more …
21663 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 May 29, 1913, page 179 paragraph 10
… of comfort, their eager willingness to help in anything that loving hands could do, and their beautiful floral tributes. We wish to assure all the friends …
21664 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 1, 1913, page 218 paragraph 24
… a comforting statement! and how truly have we seen this exemplified in our individual experience, in our experiences as families, in our work as a church, as …
21665 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 1, 1913, page 219 paragraph 15
… , such comfort and hope and joy, that his praises were upon our lips.
21666 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 2, 1913, page 237 paragraph 3
… felt comforted. I thought, There is that young man out on the deck looking after the lights and keeping things in shape, associated with others who are there …
21667 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 3, 1913, page 243 paragraph 2
… be comforted. Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth.” The foundation is the most important part of the building; we must have that in order to …
21668 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 3, 1913, page 248 paragraph 3
… most comfortable. We make our own brick, and do our own building, with the help of our black boys. We have been able also to purchase more farming tools, so that …
21669 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 4, 1913, page 257 paragraph 3
This is a most comforting promise, assuring us that before the Lord finishes his work, he will have a perfectly united people. The watchmen will see eye to eye; the people also will be united fully. That blessed day is coming soon.
21670 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 4, 1913, page 258 paragraph 4
… to comfort him, and yet had not said a word to him for seven days, had failed to do their duty. There is where Job missed his way. If he had continued to look to God …
21671 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 4, 1913, page 258 paragraph 6
… very comforting message to a man in such deep trouble. “You are reaping what you have sown, Job.” But it was the best that these men could do. They were trying to do …
21672 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 4, 1913, page 258 paragraph 9
… shall comfort me, my couch shall ease my complaint.” Were the trials recorded in the first two chapters as severe as were those that came later? [Voice: Yes.] Why …
21673 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 4, 1913, page 258 paragraph 13
… : miserable comforters are ye all.” That is the kind of conversation they were carrying on. Some of us know what it is to hear such conversation. We know how a man …
21674 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 4, 1913, page 258 paragraph 17
… his comforters cease not to harass him. They draw a contrast between his former experience, and what he is passing through now. Until his recent affliction …
21675 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 4, 1913, page 267 paragraph 7
… greatest comfort that he could have enjoyed.
21676 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 5, 1913, page 276 paragraph 19
(2) That we extend our hearty sympathy to all members of the bereaved family, commending them to the God of all comfort, who has provided a balm for wounded hearts in the blessed hope of a soon-coming Saviour; further,—
21677 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 6, 1913, page 291 paragraph 5
… and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope.” God never put a useless word into the Bible. How many times we read over these records of God’s providential …
21678 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 6, 1913, page 299 paragraph 3
… to comfort this dear lonely brother.
21679 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 8, 1913, page 308 paragraph 3
The scripture found in Psalm 103 has brought comfort to my heart many times ( verses 13, 14 ): “Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear him. For he knoweth our frame; he remembereth that we are dust.”
21680 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7 June 8, 1913, page 311 paragraph 17
… a comfort to his people, and his saving grace has kept us in time of trial.