Search for: legalism
3881 The Signs of the Times, vol. 13 June 16, 1887, page 360 paragraph 3
… a legal existence. At this time there were in France seven hundred and sixty Huguenot churches, and under the edict they soon began to fill France with flourishing …
3882 The Signs of the Times, vol. 13 October 27, 1887, page 648 paragraph 2
… whole legal machinery of the State for years back must be broken up, that a gang of murderers may escape the penalty due their crimes. And this because they …
3883 The Signs of the Times, vol. 13 December 1, 1887, page 729 paragraph 8
… all legal establishment of religion, and of any interconnection whatever between religion and the civil law. What more unseemly confusion of ideas and …
3884 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 January 13, 1888, page 22 paragraph 2
… , her legal forms, and a vast number of her customs and usages. But Babylonia herself, so far as we know, drew her stores from no foreign country. Hers was apparently …
3885 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 January 20, 1888, page 40 paragraph 4
… a legal Sabbath day, it will persecute us? for it is just as binding a command of God that we labor six days of the week, as it is to rest one. Of Course, I have no given …
3886 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 February 10, 1888, page 87 paragraph 1
… a legal basis; and that thus the scripture will be fulfilled which says that “he had power to give life unto the image of the beast, that the image of the nbeast …
3887 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 March 23, 1888, page 184 paragraph 1
… one legal form of church government, but all other forms, Episcopalian and separatist, were to be ruthlessly put down. Never had the doctrine of persecution …
3888 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 April 6, 1888, page 216 paragraph 11
… of legal government” had left the realm a prey to every unlawful element;—no matter for all this and more, they refused to take the oath of allegiance to one of …
3889 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 June 1, 1888, page 327 paragraph 8
In Miss Willard’s suggestions for 1888, under the heading of “Legal,” is this:—
3890 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 August 10, 1888, page 489 paragraph 13
… undeniable legal basis in the fundamental law of the land.”
3891 The Signs of the Times, vol. 22 July 2, 1896, page 405 paragraph 16
… for legal recognition of his religious opinions, he proposes in that to be religious for himself and for the other man too, and when we have that, civil liberty …
3892 The Signs of the Times, vol. 25 January 5, 1899, page 14 paragraph 17
… undeniable legal basis in the fundamental law of the land.”
3893 The Signs of the Times, vol. 27 July 31, 1901, page 3 paragraph 7
… a legalized military tyranny abroad, could with difficulty find his way back to the common civic level which distinguished between those who commanded …
3894 The Signs of the Times, vol. 27 August 7, 1901, page 4 paragraph 6
… the legal judgment of his peers, or by the law of the land. To no man will we sell, to no man will we deny or delay, right or justice.” He was also required to agree that …
3895 The Signs of the Times, vol. 27 August 14, 1901, page 5 paragraph 17
… strictly legal by official acts and decisions of the legislative and judicial branches of the government itself.
3896 The Signs of the Times, vol. 27 August 21, 1901, page 4 paragraph 7
… ,” is legally recognized and declared to be the established religion of the United States, and that consequently “this is a Christian nation.” Also by that decision …
3897 The Signs of the Times, vol. 29 April 15, 1903, page 3 paragraph 5
… the legality of the papal contention? And since the Papacy has the highest possible legal basis for her claim that the Constitution does not apply in the …
3898 The Topeka Daily Capital, vol. 11 May 14, 1889, page 7 paragraph 13
… the legal establishment of Christianity: “Christianity may now be said to have ascended the imperial throne; with the single exception of Julian, from this …
3899 The Topeka Daily Capital, vol. 11 May 22, 1889, page 3 paragraph 25
… a legal standpoint. If the bill should pass, and become a law, the courts will be guided on its interpretation by certain well established rules, one of which …
3900 The Topeka Daily Capital, vol. 11 May 22, 1889, page 3 paragraph 55
… can legally collect pay for a day more than he works, he can demand pay for not working at all. If he is entitled to seven days’ pay for six day’s labor, then six days …