Search for: canright

441 Believe His Prophets, p. 137.2 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright or any other man who has much to say against Ellen G. White. I would not go to her avowed opponents to get my first and most intimate appraisal of Ellen …

442 Believe His Prophets, p. 142.1 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… at Canright’s attitude toward Mrs. White from three angles: first, as a Seventh-day Adventist; second, as an opposer of the messages; finally as an old man, too …

443 Believe His Prophets, p. 142.2 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright, and show how he came to disagree with the Spirit of prophecy and with the Advent Movement. D. M. Canright was a very capable man. He had remarkable talents …

444 Believe His Prophets, p. 142.3 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright’s failure was due to the fact that he thought himself too big and too good for such a little denomination. And when the brethren did not accept him …

445 Believe His Prophets, p. 142.4 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright was an interested friend of the movement, and read a few words from his pen. In 1885, just two years before he left the Seventh-day Adventist Church …

446 Believe His Prophets, p. 144.3 (Denton Edward Rebok)

It is strange how quickly the mental machinery of some people can go into reverse. We believe D. M. Canright to have been an honest man and to have meant what he said, at least when he was saying it.

447 Believe His Prophets, p. 145.1 (Denton Edward Rebok)

Either he told the truth or he told lies. Now read some words written some time later by the same man and judge for yourself which Canright was telling the truth:

448 Believe His Prophets, p. 145.4 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright, “No. 4, Mrs. White and Her Visions,” in Adventism Refuted in a Nutshell (1889), pp. 2-7.

449 Believe His Prophets, p. 146.1 (Denton Edward Rebok)

Many years went by, and D. M. Canright became the pastor emeritus of the Berean Baptist church in Grand Rapids, Michigan. In 1919 he published a book, Life of Mrs. E. G. White, in which he took one full page to make clear his “present standing“:

450 Believe His Prophets, p. 146.4 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright ever show any signs of regret for his own course of action? Did he ever indicate that he was sorry for the active and open warfare he conducted against …

451 Believe His Prophets, p. 147.1 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright’s own thinking during the years after he left the church.

452 Believe His Prophets, p. 147.2 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright’s home, and at whose home D. M. Canright used to visit, was able to give firsthand information, which is passed on to you because of the interest it has …

453 Believe His Prophets, p. 147.3 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright’s home and said, “I have a debate coming up with a Seventh-day Adventist minister on the question of the Sabbath. I thought you would certainly be …

454 Believe His Prophets, p. 148.1 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright, we are informed, frequently expressed the thought that Adventists were right in their general doctrines and teachings of the church. He disagreed …

455 Believe His Prophets, p. 150.4 (Denton Edward Rebok)

D. M. Canright speaks of Ellen G. White as a sickly person, rather weak and frail; but if she had a voice that could be heard distinctly at the distance of a mile, without a public-address system, she had something that very few speakers have today.

456 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 95.1 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright or a man by the name of Jones who used to be around these parts here in Southern Asia and who now has much to say against Ellen G. White. I would not go …

457 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 97.3 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright himself. The reason I choose D. M. Canright as an example is because everywhere I go around the world, I find that ministers and missionaries of other …

458 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 97.4 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright, and show how he came to disagree with the Spirit of prophecy and with the Advent Movement. D. M. Canright was a very capable man. He had remarkable talents …

459 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 98.1 (Denton Edward Rebok)

… . M. Canright’s failure was due to the fact that he thought himself too big and too good for such a little denomination. And when the brethren did not accept him …

460 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 98.2 (Denton Edward Rebok)

Now, let us go back to the time when D. M. Canright was an interested friend of the Movement, and read a few words from his pen. This is taken from the The Review and Herald, January 6, 1885 :