Search for: 1905

2961 Another Look At Israel Damman, p. 7.3 (James R. Nix)

… Advent, 1905, 207. Vision of June 12, 1868, “Camp Meeting Talks,” Nellie Sisley Boyd, quoted in Arthur L. White, Ellen G. White, the Progressive Years, 1862-1876, 1986, 233 …

2963 Counsel Regarding the Question of the 144,000, p. 1.4 (Clarence C. Crisler)

“Let us strive with all the power that God has given us to be among the hundred and forty-four thousand. And let us do all that we can to help others to gain heaven.”— The Review and Herald, March 9, 1905 .

2964 A Critique of the Book Prophetess of Health, p. 23.2 (Ellen G. White Estate)

… in 1905 in Ministry of Healing is attested to today by the best authorities in the field. It was in 1954 that the breakthrough came. In the twenty years since …

2965 A Critique of the Book Prophetess of Health, p. 23.3 (Ellen G. White Estate)

… in 1905 in which she mentions cancerous germs. For a time the statement was not challenged because no careful study was being made into the causes of cancer …

2966 A Critique of the Book Prophetess of Health, p. 49.4 (Ellen G. White Estate)

… , March, 1905, 14:82. Quoted in Richard W. Schwarz’ dissertation John Harvey Kellogg, p. 10.)

2967 A Critique of the Book Prophetess of Health, p. 75.18 (Ellen G. White Estate)

Her 1905 Ministry of Healing statement reads:

2968 A Critique of the Book Prophetess of Health, p. 82.6 (Ellen G. White Estate)

… in 1905 when she published Ministry of Healing.

2969 A Critique of the Book Prophetess of Health, p. 83.7 (Ellen G. White Estate)

In 1905: “Butter is less harmful when eaten on cold bread than when used in cooking; but, as a rule, it is better to dispense with it altogether.”— The Ministry of Healing, 302 .

2970 A Critique of the Book Prophetess of Health, p. 83.23 (Ellen G. White Estate)

In 1905: In families where the animal passions are strong and where children “are given to sensual habits, eggs should not be used.”— The Ministry of Healing, 320 .

2971 A Critique of the Book Prophetess of Health, p. 83.28 (Ellen G. White Estate)

In 1905: “Cheese... is wholly unfit for food.”— Counsels on Diet and Foods, 368 .

2972 A Critique of the Book Prophetess of Health, p. 88.13 (Ellen G. White Estate)

… in 1905 (Stewart says 1904), when the testimony had not been previously given to Dr. Kellogg. The compilation of materials for these special testimonies was …

2973 A Critique of the Book Prophetess of Health, p. 119.6 (Ellen G. White Estate)

… 55, 1905 (quoted in Selected Messages 1:36 ).

2974 The Development of Adventist Thinking on Clean and Unclean Meats, p. 3.5 (Ronald D. Graybill)

In 1905 she again expounded favorably on the distinction as given to the Jews, this time mentioning, in addition to pork, “other animals and birds whose flesh …

2975 The E. G. White Counsel on Versions of the Bible, p. 6.5 (Arthur Lacey White)

In the publication of The Ministry of Healing (1905) Mrs. White employed eight texts from the English Revised Version, 55 from the American Revised Version, two from Leeser, and four from Noyes, in addition to seven marginal renderings.

2976 Ellen G. White: A Brief Biography, p. 9.3 (Arthur Lacey White)

… in 1905 The Ministry of Healing, a book dealing with the healing of body, mind, and soul, came from the press. Education had been published in 1903, and two volumes …

2977 Ellen G. White and Church Race Relations, p. 49.1 (Ronald D. Graybill)

… June, 1905, to launch the “Niagara Movement.” They drew up a platform calling for, among other things, “abolition of all distinctions based on race.” Franklin, op …

2978 Ellen G. White and Church Race Relations, p. 99.1 (Ronald D. Graybill)

She had been disappointed that more had not earlier been done along these lines. In a stirring letter to the white church in Nashville she had written in 1905:

2979 Ellen G. White and Church Race Relations

… 119, 1905 (to “Members of the Nashville Church,” April 14,1905)

2980 Ellen G. White and the Tithe, p. 30.1 (Arthur Lacey White)

… 22, 1905, Mrs. White wrote a letter to the president of a local conference in which she sounded certain cautions and referred to the experience just recounted …