Search for: Joseph

2741 A Prophet Among You, p. 179.4 (T. Housel Jemison)

… name, “Joseph Wolff, missionary to all the nations.” Attesting to the quality of Wolff’s preaching, John Quincy Adams, former President of the United States …

2742 A Prophet Among You, p. 180.1 (T. Housel Jemison)

Despite the widespread influence of his ministry, the voice of Joseph Wolff was only one of the chorus proclaiming the soon advent of the Saviour.

2743 A Prophet Among You, p. 183.8 (T. Housel Jemison)

Latourette, Kenneth Scott, A History of the Expansion of Christianity, vol. vi, pp. 26, 39, 43, 57, 60, 61 (Joseph Wolff’s travels). New York, Harper and Brothers, 1944.

2744 A Prophet Among You, p. 192.3 (T. Housel Jemison)

… by—Joseph Bates, a retired sea captain. Bates heard a lecture on the second coming of Christ about the same time that Joshua Himes was becoming interested …

2745 A Prophet Among You, p. 195.2 (T. Housel Jemison)

… time, Joseph Bates said: “When that meeting closed, the granite hills of New Hampshire rang with the mighty cry, Behold the Bridegroom cometh, go ye out to meet …

2746 A Prophet Among You, p. 200.1 (T. Housel Jemison)

… 1845, Joseph Bates read an article by T. M. Preble, of Nashua, New Hampshire, published in The Hope of Israel, which led him to an acceptance of the claims of the fourth …

2747 A Prophet Among You, p. 202.9 (T. Housel Jemison)

------, The Early Life and Later Experience and Labors of Elder Joseph Bates. Battle Creek, S.D.A. Publishing Assn., 1878.

2748 A Prophet Among You, p. 207.1 (T. Housel Jemison)

… by Joseph Bates, whom she met while on a visit to New Bedford, Massachusetts. At first she did not sense the importance of the commandment, and felt that Bates …

2749 A Prophet Among You, p. 209.1 (T. Housel Jemison)

… , Elder Joseph Bates, Father Pierce, Elder Edson, and others who were keen, noble, and true, were among those who, after the passing of the time in 1844, searched for …

2750 A Prophet Among You, p. 212.1 (T. Housel Jemison)

… . Even Joseph Bates discouraged him from continuing the work, so White decided to give up the project. In a letter written January 10, 1850, he told how his plans …

2751 A Prophet Among You, p. 233.2 (T. Housel Jemison)

… , 1868, Joseph Clark wrote: “Brother White has regained his mental and physical powers, though he appears much older than before his sickness; and we were surprised …

2753 A Prophet Among You, p. 381.1 (T. Housel Jemison)

… it. Joseph Bates heard that the seventh day was the Sabbath. He tested the claim by the Bible and found it true. Suppose he had rejected the Sabbath in favor of …

2754 Believe His Prophets, p. 64.4 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… one. Joseph Bates entered upon his seafaring adventures at a very early age, beginning as cabin boy and advancing through various steps in responsibility …

2755 Believe His Prophets, p. 65.2 (Denton Edward Rebok)

Imagine Joseph Bates’s surprise one evening during that conference not only to see Ellen G. White in vision but to hear her description of what she was seeing …

2756 Believe His Prophets, p. 66.1 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… Rosse?” Joseph Bates told of this English astronomer and his description of the “opening” in the heavens (J. N. Loughborough, The Great Second Advent Movement …

2757 Believe His Prophets, p. 66.2 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… for Joseph Bates. He was satisfied that the visions came from a power outside Ellen G. White’s knowledge and control. No wonder he concluded, “I believe the work …

2758 Believe His Prophets, p. 72.1 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… , “That Joseph Bates, J. H. Waggoner, and M. E. Cornell be appointed to address the saints in behalf of the Conference, on the gifts of the church.” The report which the …

2759 Believe His Prophets, p. 76.3 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… article, Joseph Bates, an eager searcher for truth, was convinced that he should observe the Bible Sabbath, and he became an apostle of the Sabbath truth.

2760 Believe His Prophets, p. 76.4 (Denton Edward Rebok)

Early in 1846 Ellen Harmon and her sister and James White visited Joseph Bates at New Bedford. The thing that was on his heart was the Sabbath. He urged them to accept the Bible Sabbath, and they urged upon him the thing nearest to their hearts.