Search for: James White
4401 Heralds of New Light, p. 5.3 (Roger W. Coon)
… Mrs. White, her husband, James (an ex-Millerite preacher), and Joseph Bates (a retired sea captain). Sixteen years later, in 1860, they numbered some 3,500 baptized …
4402 Heralds of New Light
… to James Edson White, December 22, 1894, in Robert W. Olson’s, “How the Desire of Ages Was Written,” unpublished monograph (Washington, D.C.: Ellen G. White Estate, Inc …
4403 Hermeneutics Interpreting a 19th-Century Prophet in the Space Age, p. 11.7 (Roger W. Coon)
James White, in responding to an inquiry from “a brother at Monroe, Wis.,” concerning problems faced by his wife in attempting to counsel and guide the church …
4404 Hermeneutics Interpreting a 19th-Century Prophet in the Space Age, p. 12.5 (Roger W. Coon)
Mrs. White next quoted the counsel found in James 3:2-18, and then addressed Sister X directly:
4405 Highlights of the Beginning of the Tithing System, p. 1.4 (Arthur Lacey White)
As churches began to respond to the plan adopted at Battle Creek, a question arose as to the use of the money thus raised. James White, in the Review of March 3, 1859, answers the question:
4406 Highlights of the Beginning of the Tithing System
“Next comes the personal donations. Let the young men who have no taxable property come up nobly here, also the young women.”—James White, The Review and Herald, April 9, 1861, p. 164.
4407 Highlights of the Beginning of the Tithing System, p. 2.5 (Arthur Lacey White)
James White, in 1853 in his first appeal to the Sabbathkeeping Adventists for financial support for the ministry, presents it under the title Gospel Order …
4408 Highlights of the Beginning of the Tithing System, p. 3.3 (Arthur Lacey White)
James White restated the plan in November 1864, and in so doing tied it very closely with the tithe:
4409 Highlights of the Beginning of the Tithing System
… follows: James White, D. M. Canright, S. N. Haskell, J. N. Andrews, Uriah Smith. Systematic Benevolence; or the Bible Plan of Supporting the Ministry.
4410 Highlights of the Beginning of the Tithing System, p. 6.5 (Arthur Lacey White)
James White in the Review of November 29, 1864, argues strongly for all of the systematic benevolence funds to be placed in the local or General Conference treasuries “to support the proclamation of the third angel’s message.”
4411 Highlights of the Beginning of the Tithing System, p. 9.2 (Arthur Lacey White)
By 1880 it was the general understanding that such as funds came from the tithe should be devoted exclusively, or nearly so, to the support of the gospel ministry. Note this from James White:
4412 The History and Use of the Tithe, p. 1.4 (Arthur Lacey White)
As churches began to respond to the plan adopted at Battle Creek, a question arose as to the use of the money thus raised. James White, in the Review of March 3, 1859, answers the question:
4413 The History and Use of the Tithe
“Next comes the personal donations. Let the young men who have no taxable property come up nobly here, also the young women.”—James White, The Review and Herald, April 9, 1861, p. 164.
4414 The History and Use of the Tithe, p. 2.6 (Arthur Lacey White)
James White, in 1853 in his first appeal to the Sabbathkeeping Adventists for financial support for the ministry, presents it under the title Gospel Order …
4415 The History and Use of the Tithe, p. 3.3 (Arthur Lacey White)
James White restated the plan in November 1864, and in so doing tied it very closely with the tithe:
4416 The History and Use of the Tithe
… follows: James White, D. M. Canright, S. N. Haskell, J. N. Andrews, Uriah Smith. Systematic Benevolence; or the Bible Plan of Supporting the Ministry.
4417 The History and Use of the Tithe, p. 6.5 (Arthur Lacey White)
James White in the Review of November 29, 1864, argues strongly for all of the systematic benevolence funds to be placed in the local or General Conference treasuries “to support the proclamation of the third angel’s message.”
4418 The History and Use of the Tithe, p. 9.2 (Arthur Lacey White)
By 1880 it was the general understanding that such as funds came from the tithe should be devoted exclusively, or nearly so, to the support of the gospel ministry. Note this from James White:
4419 The History and Use of the Tithe, p. 26.1 (Arthur Lacey White)
… possess.”—James White in Good Samaritan, January, 1861.
4420 The History and Use of the Tithe, p. 29.1 (Arthur Lacey White)
… when James White, while serving as president of the General Conference, was stricken with paralysis and she had to pull up the carpets from the floor, the rag …