Search for: legalism
341 The Review and Herald May 1, 1894, paragraph 9
… be legalized in any of our towns or cities.
342 The Review and Herald May 1, 1894, paragraph 11
… and legalized by those who profess to be Christians. In thus doing, the churches make themselves responsible for all the results of this death-dealing traffic …
343 The Review and Herald May 8, 1894, paragraph 6
… who legalize sin, and those who are dealers in whisky, and those who are defiled by it, will be destroyed together. Let not the man who indulges in drink think …
344 The Review and Herald May 15, 1894, paragraph 7
… is legal for him to rob the widow of the food she requires to sustain life. It is legal for him to entail starvation upon the family of his victim, to send helpless …
345 The Review and Herald May 22, 1894, paragraph 8
… who legalize the liquor traffic? What is the influence of those who put the bottle to their neighbors’ lips? Contrast the work of the rumseller with the work …
346 The Review and Herald May 29, 1894, Art. A, paragraph 3
… who legalized the traffic are forced to deal with the results of their own work. They authorized by law the giving to this man a draft that would turn him from …
347 The Review and Herald May 29, 1894, Art. A, paragraph 4
… who legalize the liquor traffic.
348 The Review and Herald May 29, 1894, Art. A, paragraph 9
… . By legalizing the liquor traffic, the law gives its sanction to the downfall of the soul, and refuses to stop the traffic that floods the world with evil. Let …
349 The Review and Herald April 30, 1895, paragraph 1
… of legal or natural religion, and showed the need of moral renovation and the necessity of divine enlightenment. The Jewish nation had occupied the highest …
350 The Review and Herald April 17, 1900, paragraph 9
… which legalize the liquor traffic, a curse that is brutalizing the beings made in the image of God, by taking away their reason. Knowing full well the sure result …
351 The Review and Herald May 1, 1900, paragraph 10
… is legalized, and works untold ruin in the hands of those who love to tamper with that which ruins not only the poor victim, but his whole family.
352 The Review and Herald November 6, 1900, paragraph 3
… is legalized. By the use of liquor and tobacco men are debasing the life given them for high and holy purposes. Their practices are represented by wood, hay …
353 The Review and Herald May 26, 1903, paragraph 15
… zeal. Legal religion will not answer for this age. We may perform all the outward acts of service, and yet be as destitute of the quickening influence of the …
354 The Review and Herald October 15, 1903, paragraph 9
… certain legal tests should be able to secure at our union conference training schools all that is essential, without having to go to Battle Creek for their …
355 The Review and Herald October 15, 1903, paragraph 10
… are legal requirements making it necessary that medical students shall take a certain preparatory course of study, let our colleges teach the required …
356 The Review and Herald December 15, 1904, paragraph 2
… , is legalized by Christian governments.
357 The Review and Herald June 15, 1905, paragraph 15
… is legalized. Heaven sees it all. God keeps a record of the men robbed of their reason, and the homes made wretched, by the use of alcohol. In that great day when …
358 The Review and Herald October 25, 1906, paragraph 2
… by legal enactment.
359 The Review and Herald October 25, 1906, paragraph 5
… , by legalizing the sale of liquor. Those who have been placed in positions of official responsibility, and who in the recent past have become thoroughly familiar …
360 The Review and Herald October 25, 1906, paragraph 12
… to legalize and carry on the liquor traffic, the next stroke of the Infinite will be to destroy life. God has given men an opportunity to repent, to prepare to …