Search for: James White

3261 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 403.3 (Francis D. Nichol)

… ,’ Elder White’s ‘Life of Wm. Miller,’ itself a copied book, and other works.” On the title page of the book, and in the Introduction, James White states explicitly the …

3262 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 413.3 (Francis D. Nichol)

… , and James White’s Life of Wm. Miller. The problem before us is not whether she borrowed, but how much she borrowed and whether she borrowed in such a way as to …

3263 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 414.4 (Francis D. Nichol)

… , and James White’s Life of Wm. Miller? These three Seventh-day Adventist books were certainly in most ministerial libraries and in the libraries of a great …

3264 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 497.6 (Francis D. Nichol)

“This work will be ready in a few days. Address Eld. James White, Battle Creek, Mich....

3266 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 497.10 (Francis D. Nichol)

Note the fact that James White’s name is signed to this announcement.

3267 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 498.3 (Francis D. Nichol)

… institution. James White, who had been a leading spirit, and who has been described, even by the critics of Adventism, as an astute businessman, had seen in that …

3268 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 502 (Francis D. Nichol)

James White’s Relation to the Matter

3269 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 502.3 (Francis D. Nichol)

… by James White, but also by J. N. Loughborough, who is specifically named by the critic as the one who led out in securing Mrs. White’s support for a health statement …

3270 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 503.1 (Francis D. Nichol)

The critic pictures James White as suddenly appearing on the scene in high dudgeon, tearing down the partially constructed building, and turning around to erect it on another plan, with great loss to the cause.

3271 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 503.2 (Francis D. Nichol)

… considering James White’s acts, or attempting to defend them, in this book, were it not for the fact that his acts are merged with Mrs. White’s acts and words …

3272 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 503.3 (Francis D. Nichol)

… not James White’s overextended sense of pride and importance. The echo of all this is found in a resolution passed at the second annual meeting of the Health …

3273 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 508.3 (Francis D. Nichol)

… Mrs. James White. He writes in part concerning this trip: “The Review bears evidence to the industry of Brother W. in writing for its columns. But very few of its …

3274 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 510.4 (Francis D. Nichol)

… time James White was recuperating from a “stroke.” Financial embarrassment confronted the White home. They had sold certain of their furniture to secure …

3275 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 516.3 (Francis D. Nichol)

… when James White had a “stroke” in 1865, they were compelled to sell some of their household belongings to provide necessary cash for living. The story is found …

3276 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 532.2 (Francis D. Nichol)

… to James, for example, and declare that the Bible teaches salvation by works. Then they may point to another kind of Scriptural passage and contend that it …

3277 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 558.1 (Francis D. Nichol)

[Under the above title there appeared the following from the pen of James White in the The Signs of the Times, August 29, 1878, page 260.]

3278 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 560.1 (Francis D. Nichol)

… , 1847, James White published a twenty-four-page tract entitled A Word to the “Little Flock.” This contained three contributions from Mrs. White, which occupy …

3279 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 560.4 (Francis D. Nichol)

… publisher, James White, and the parenthetical number “(666)” in the “Dear Brother Bates” letter is probably by Bates. For comment on this see chapter 18 .