Search for: Joseph
2781 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 192.2 (Francis D. Nichol)
From the very sketchy record we have of those earliest post-1844 years we see Joseph Bates, James White, and his wife, Ellen White, and a few others moving about from one Adventist company to another seeking to bring comfort and renewed confidence.
2782 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 195.3 (Francis D. Nichol)
… as Joseph Bates and James White felt that they represented not only ideas but companies of people who held those ideas. Furthermore, they felt that these …
2783 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 198.5 (Francis D. Nichol)
… of Joseph Bates, James and Ellen White, and a few others who were described as “the travelling brethren” because of their constant journeying to meet with different …
2784 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 240.1 (Francis D. Nichol)
… chapter Joseph Bates was quoted as declaring, in 1849, which was more than four years after this vision of Mrs. White’s, that he even then did not know where all …
2785 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 253.1 (Francis D. Nichol)
… by Joseph Bates to believe that the time of Christ’s work in the most holy place in heaven would be seven years (from the autumn of 1844 to the autumn of 1851 …
2786 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 253.4 (Francis D. Nichol)
1. That Joseph Bates, in an 1850 pamphlet, predicted that Christ would come again in 1851.
2787 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 255.2 (Francis D. Nichol)
… Elder Joseph Bates, edited by James White, p. 311. See J. N. Loughborough, The Great Second Advent Movement, pp. 251, 252.
2788 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 291.4 (Francis D. Nichol)
… chapter, Joseph Bates was the first publisher of this vision, which he brought out on a single sheet of paper, called a broadside. In this original printing …
2789 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 292.2 (Francis D. Nichol)
… that Joseph Bates inserted it to clarify the passage in terms of his own interpretation of her words. This is a practice often followed by good men when they …
2790 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 351.2 (Francis D. Nichol)
… 1845 Joseph Bates accepted the seventh-day Sabbath, though he did not become fully established on it until 1846. In the autumn of that year he brought this …
2791 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 352.6 (Francis D. Nichol)
… . Eld. Joseph Bates was chosen Chairman.”
2792 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 354.3 (Francis D. Nichol)
The contention that Mrs. White was beholden to Joseph Bates is an unfounded assumption that we have already dealt with in the chapter entitled “Time Setting—The Seven-Year Theory.”
2793 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 556.2 (Francis D. Nichol)
… :14, Joseph Priestley remarks concerning Huldah: “It pleased God to distinguish several women with the spirit of prophecy, as well as other great attainments …
2794 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 570.1 (Francis D. Nichol)
… of Joseph a flame, and the house of Esau for stubble, and they shall kindle in them, and devour them, and there shall not be any remaining of the house of Esau; for …
2795 Ellen G. White and Her Critics
JOSEPH BATES. Fairhaven, Mass.
2796 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 598.3 (Francis D. Nichol)
… and Joseph Bates, after 1844. In the interests of brevity we then gave certain quotations from James White—a statement in the early 1850’s and his historical …
2797 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 599.1 (Francis D. Nichol)
… as Joseph Bates and James White felt that they represented not only ideas but companies of people who held those ideas. Furthermore, they felt that these …
2798 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 603.2 (Francis D. Nichol)
Joseph Bates, who, as we have seen in chapter 13, wrote in 1849 that a portion of the 144,000 will be constituted of sincere persons over the whole earth who were …
2799 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 603.5 (Francis D. Nichol)
… 3), Joseph Bates declares that the main Adventist body are in rebellion against God because of their repudiation of certain prophetic beliefs that had distinguished …
2800 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 621.1 (Francis D. Nichol)
… to Joseph Bates, written from Gorham, Maine, July 13, 1847.