Search for: guilt
201 The Great Controversy (1888 ed.), p. 604.1 (Ellen Gould White)
… her guilt, and destruction is about to fall upon her. But God still has a people in Babylon; and before the visitation of his judgments, these faithful ones must …
202 The Great Controversy (1888 ed.), p. 618.1 (Ellen Gould White)
… his guilt, in order to discourage him, and break his hold upon God. Jacob was driven almost to despair; but he knew that without help from Heaven he must perish …
203 The Great Controversy (1888 ed.), p. 620.3 (Ellen Gould White)
… its guilt. They feel no true contrition, no abhorrence of evil. They acknowledge their sin, through fear of punishment; but, like Pharaoh of old, they would return …
204 The Great Controversy (1888 ed.), p. 627.2 (Ellen Gould White)
… the guilt of their blood, as if it had been shed by their hands. In like manner Christ declared the Jews of his time guilty of all the blood of holy men which had …
205 The Great Controversy (1888 ed.), p. 628.2 (Ellen Gould White)
… his guilt; but in the final Judgment, wrath is poured out unmixed with mercy.
206 The Great Controversy (1888 ed.), p. 649.1 (Ellen Gould White)
… , its guilt, its woe; and they look upon it with abhorrence. A sense of the infinite sacrifice made for its cure, humbles them in their own sight, and fills their …
207 The Great Controversy (1888 ed.), p. 651.2 (Ellen Gould White)
… the guilt and shame of sin, and the hiding of his Father’s face, till the woes of a lost world broke his heart, and crushed out his life on Calvary’s cross. That …
208 The Great Controversy (1888 ed.), p. 667.2 (Ellen Gould White)
… their guilt. They vainly seek to hide from the divine majesty of His countenance, outshining the glory of the sun, while the redeemed cast their crowns at the …
209 The Great Controversy, p. 115.3 (Ellen Gould White)
… the guilt of murder. His doctrines now attracted greater attention than ever before. By the papal edicts the writings of Wycliffe had been condemned to the …
210 The Great Controversy, p. 129.1 (Ellen Gould White)
… its guilt or evade its punishment. Nothing but repentance toward God and faith in Christ can save the sinner. The grace of Christ cannot be purchased; it is …
211 The Great Controversy, p. 287.1 (Ellen Gould White)
… of guilt which had resulted from a rejection of the Sacred Oracles, and men recognized the necessity of faith in God and His word as the foundation of virtue …
212 The Great Controversy, p. 406.2 (Ellen Gould White)
… all guilt in their condemnation.” “Although I have been twice disappointed,” wrote this man of God, “I am not yet cast down or discouraged.... My hope in the coming of …
213 The Great Controversy, p. 418.1 (Ellen Gould White)
… , whose guilt the victim bore, was carried by the priest into the holy place and sprinkled before the veil, behind which was the ark containing the law that the …
214 The Great Controversy, p. 420.1 (Ellen Gould White)
… his guilt in transgression, and expressed his desire for pardon through faith in a Redeemer to come; but he was not yet entirely released from the condemnation …
215 The Great Controversy, p. 461.1 (Ellen Gould White)
… their guilt and uncleanness, before the Searcher of hearts. In anguish they cried out: “Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?” As the cross of Calvary …
216 The Great Controversy, p. 467.3 (Ellen Gould White)
… his guilt, the sinner must test his character by God’s great standard of righteousness. It is a mirror which shows the perfection of a righteous character …
217 The Great Controversy, p. 468.2 (Ellen Gould White)
… own guilt and uncleanness. They have no true conviction of sin and feel no need of repentance. Not seeing their lost condition as violators of God’s law, they …
218 The Great Controversy, p. 485.3 (Ellen Gould White)
… the guilt of all the sins which he has caused God’s people to commit, will be for a thousand years confined to the earth, which will then be desolate, without …
219 The Great Controversy, p. 502.1 (Ellen Gould White)
… the guilt of Satan stood forth without excuse. He had revealed his true character as a liar and a murderer. It was seen that the very same spirit with which he …
220 The Great Controversy, p. 536.1 (Ellen Gould White)
… of guilt. God’s glory is not enhanced by thus perpetuating continually increasing sin through ceaseless ages.