Search for: James White

2981 Sister White, p. 44.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… when James and Ellen White were invited to Brother Belden’s place that she offered to give her furniture and to keep house for them. But because they did not …

2982 Sister White, p. 45.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… the Whites had set up their home in Rochester, Brother White planned a new thing. What about all the children in all the homes and churches? Were they being cared …

2983 Sister White, p. 60.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

When James and Ellen White began to teach this truth they did not know all truth. They did not know the laws of health and how to keep themselves in good condition …

2984 Sister White, p. 62.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… young James and Ellen White and most of the others. But for all that, he was stronger and more enduring than any of them. He was almost never sick, and if he did get …

2985 Sister White, p. 119.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… husband, James White, lived, they had sometimes gone together into the bosom of the mountains, and there they talked with God together, praying and listening …

2986 Sister White, p. 125.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

Soon God gave her a man to stand by her side through the hardest years, her husband, James White. And together, and with Joseph Bates, they went forth to carry the message of the Sabbath and the sanctuary and the coming of the Lord.

2987 Sister White, p. 127.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… husband, James White, and by the side of her two sons, Henry and Herbert, who had died long before. There she awaits the Life-giver. And when Jesus comes she will …

2988 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 10 (Ella May White Robinson)

… 8. “James, Have We Come to This?” 59 9. The Publishing Work in a Carpetbag 66 10. Battling the Enemy 73 11. A Home for the Publishing Work 80 12. John Changes His Mind 87 …

2989 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 13.4 (Ella May White Robinson)

… Grandpa James White in Oak Hill Cemetery, in Battle Creek, Michigan.

2990 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 35.1 (Ella May White Robinson)

Would you like to know how Ellen Harmon, my grandmother, met James White, her husband? Here is the story:

2991 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 35.2 (Ella May White Robinson)

… named James White. He’s having trouble with some fanatics. If you come with us, you might be able to help straighten them out.”

2992 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 35.5 (Ella May White Robinson)

… with James White, the young minister, to call on a family living near town. James would take them with the horse and sleigh they had returned to him. When they …

2993 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 36.4 (Ella May White Robinson)

James White then opened his Bible and read to them that God is a God of order, not of confusion; that the Holy Spirit speaks to hearts by a “still small voice.” He …

2994 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 37.2 (Ella May White Robinson)

… when James White and Ellen and her friends arrived. Someone inside saw them coming and quickly locked the door. “In the name of the Lord” Ellen opened that locked …

2995 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 38.3 (Ella May White Robinson)

… morning James White, Ellen, and the Jordans got into a rowboat with a friend of James’s and paddled down the river to Belfast. There Ellen and the Jordans boarded …

2996 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 39.6 (Ella May White Robinson)

… the White family is a small but precious document, the marriage certificate of James and Ellen White. No mention has ever been found of printed invitations …

2997 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 40.1 (Ella May White Robinson)

“I have been thinking that it’s time we visited our friends at Topsham,” James White said to his young bride one day.

2998 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 41.7 (Ella May White Robinson)

“Who is Lord William Rosse?” James White asked.

2999 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 42.3 (Ella May White Robinson)

… to James White. (The retired sea captain was often called “Elder Bates” because he spent so much time preaching and giving Bible studies.)

3000 Stories of My Grandmother, p. 43.1 (Ella May White Robinson)

… Mrs. White could not read it. It hurt her eyes and made her head ache. James would read a paragraph aloud, and then they would look up the texts; for although the …