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28221 The Bible, the Spirit of Prophecy, and the Church, p. 65 (Walter Edwin Read)

… 119:42 Love Psalm 119:140 Understand Psalm 119:27 Meditate on Psalm 119:15

28222 The Bible, the Spirit of Prophecy, and the Church, p. 71.18 (Walter Edwin Read)

“As soon as he [Jesus] had spoken, immediately the leprosy departed.” Mark 1:42 .

28223 The Bible, the Spirit of Prophecy, and the Church, p. 94.5 (Walter Edwin Read)

6. Elisabeth. The story of Elisabeth is told quite briefly in Luke 1:41, 42. Although she is not designated as a prophetess, she “was filled with the Holy Ghost,” and broke forth in prophetic utterance. A good note on this experience is as follows:

28224 The Bible, the Spirit of Prophecy, and the Church, p. 121.7 (Walter Edwin Read)

… .” ( Isaiah 42:21 .) Beholding the truth of the Old Testament through Christ Jesus the Lord, we are able to see so many of its beauties, which without Him we should never …

28225 The Bible, the Spirit of Prophecy, and the Church, p. 139.21 (Walter Edwin Read)

“Nothing else in this world is so dear to God as His church. Nothing is guarded by Him with such jealous care. Nothing so offends God as an act that injures the influence of those who are doing His service.” Testimonies for the Church 6:42 .

28226 The Bible, the Spirit of Prophecy, and the Church, p. 176.9 (Walter Edwin Read)

… 10:42 ). The word “rule” in the Scriptures involves much more than directing; it means to act as guide ( Hebrews 13:7, margin); it means also to “feed” ( Psalm 28:9; see margin …

28228 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 42.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

But “in my schoolboy days,” he says, “my most ardent desire was to become a sailor.” Accordingly, in 1807, Joseph Bates, in his fifteenth year, sailed on his maiden voyage …

28229 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 42.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

From hence, also, after his return in full manhood, he sailed as second mate, first mate, master of ships, first to Europe, then in successful adventurous voyages …

28230 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 42.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

It was 1828 when Joseph Bates, home from a voyage to South America, left the sea, twenty-one years from the time when he first sailed as cabin boy. Six weeks before …

28231 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 42.1 (William Ambrose Spicer)

The message to the Laodicean church comes to us at this time with special meaning. Read it, and ask God to show you its import. Thank God that he is sending us messages …

28232 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 42.2 (William Ambrose Spicer)

The tempter is working to gather together at Battle Creek as large a number as possible, hoping that they will receive false ideas of God and his work, and thus …

28233 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 42.3 (William Ambrose Spicer)

The heavenly messenger turned to those professing to be medical missionaries, and said, “How could you allow yourselves to be led blindfold? How could you …

28234 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 42.4 (William Ambrose Spicer)

The enemy of souls has sought to bring in the supposition that a great reformation was to take place among Seventh-day Adventists, and that this reformation …

28235 The Story of our Health Message, p. 42.1 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

By the middle of the century the initial activity and success of the temperance movement had greatly abated. Most of the temperance journals had only an …

28237 The Story of our Health Message, p. 42.2 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

Other movements were on foot looking to reforms in diet. In 1809 there appeared in England a book by William Lambe, M.D., bearing the quaint title of Reports …

28238 The Story of our Health Message, p. 42.3 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

“My opinion is,” he wrote, “that no case which is curable can resist the effect of this regimen, if persevered in steadily for three complete years; at the same time that one year or a year and a half will commonly afford much relief.”—P. 178.

28239 The Story of our Health Message, p. 42.4 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

A layman named John Frank Newton, who had from childhood suffered from a chronic disease, read the book and made a personal application of the experiment …