Search for: Joseph

3081 The Position of “The Bible, and the Bible Only” and the Relationship of This to the Writings of Ellen White

… , Elder Joseph Bates, Father Pierce, Elder Edson, a man who was keen, noble, and true, and many others whose names I cannot now recall, were among those who, after the …

3082 Purpose and Objectives of Seventh-day Adventist Institutions, p. 2.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… was Joseph in Egypt, and as were Daniel and his fellows in Babylon. In the providence of God these men were taken captive, that they might carry to heathen nations …

3083 Purpose and Objectives of Seventh-day Adventist Institutions, p. 25.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… what Joseph was in Egypt and what Daniel and his fellows were in Babylon. As in the providence of God these chosen ones were taken captive, it was to carry to …

3084 Purpose and Objectives of Seventh-day Adventist Institutions

… Elder Joseph Bates in his pamphlet on ‘The Sealing Message,’ ‘assembled in meeting in Dorchester, near Boston, Mass.’ ‘Before the meeting commenced,’ he continues …

3085 Purpose and Objectives of Seventh-day Adventist Institutions, p. 74.4 (Ellen Gould White)

The move was to Berrien Springs, Michigan, to a farm of 272 acres on the banks of the Saint Joseph river. Arthur L. Spalding wrote of the significance of this move to the future of SDA education as follows:

3086 The Right To Vote—Shall I Exercise It?, p. 2.11 (Paul A. Gordon)

… . Waggoner, Joseph Bates, and I. D. Van Horn. James and Ellen White were there also, and both of them spoke to the assembled delegates. The report of this session states …

3087 The Right To Vote—Shall I Exercise It?, p. 3.3 (Paul A. Gordon)

Writing a few years later, Joseph Clarke, a layman residing in Ohio, and a frequent contributor to the Review, said:

3088 The Right To Vote—Shall I Exercise It?, p. 6.10 (Paul A. Gordon)

Joseph considered his position in Egypt’s government to be a direct result of God’s leading. As he tried to calm his brothers’ fears after their father’s …

3089 Seventh-day Adventism—The Spirit Behind the Church, p. 2.1 (White Estate & Biblical Researech Institute)

The Seventh-day Adventist church was founded by Joseph Bates, Ellen G. White, and James White (not Ellen G. White alone).

3090 The “Shut Door” Documents, p. 3.4 (Robert W. Olson)

At the time I had the vision of the midnight cry I had given it up in the past and thought it future, as also most of the band had.—Ellen G. White Letter 3, 1847, written July 13, 1847 to Joseph Bates.

3091 The “Shut Door” Documents, p. 8.1 (Robert W. Olson)

On January 24, 1845, Joseph Turner wrote in the Hope of Israel:

3092 The “Shut Door” Documents, p. 9.2 (Robert W. Olson)

… , to Joseph Bates, Ellen White recounts the circumstances surrounding not only her first vision (Dec., 1844), but also the vision of February, 1845. She stated: Brother …

3093 The “Shut Door” Documents

… found Joseph Turner. He merely inquired how I was and if I was in the way of my duty. I said nothing, for I knew I was not.

3094 The “Shut Door” Documents

… morning Joseph Turner called, said he was in haste going out of the city in a short time, and wanted I should tell him all that God had shown me in vision. It was …

3095 The “Shut Door” Documents

… . (To Joseph Bates, July 13, 1847)

3096 The “Shut Door” Documents

Joseph Bates Declared That Their Work for the World Was Done.

3097 The “Shut Door” Documents, p. 19.2 (Robert W. Olson)

… , 1844.—Joseph Bates, A Word to the Little Flock, 21 .

3098 The “Shut Door” Documents

Joseph Bates Maintained That the Gospel Message Ended in 1844.

3099 The “Shut Door” Documents, p. 19.6 (Robert W. Olson)

“Come, my people, enter thou into thy chambers, and shut thy doors about thee for a little moment, until the indignation be over past;” Isaiah 31:20 .—Joseph Bates, Second Advent Way Marks and High Heaps (1847), pp. 67-68.

3100 The “Shut Door” Documents, p. 22.1 (Robert W. Olson)

Joseph Bates recorded some of Ellen White’s utterances made while she was in vision at the home of Otis Nichols in Dorchester, Mass., in November, 1848. Bates published these Ellen G. White comments two months later. He quotes Ellen White as saying: