Search for: canright
461 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 98.3 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… . M. Canright. In the same issue he writes:Note: Reference is here made to the volumes depicting the “Conflict of the Ages” story which preceeded the present five …
462 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 99.5 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… . M. Canright. I do not think he ever pushed in the clutch. It appears that he just switched from high to reverse without making any preparation at all. Automobile …
463 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 100.3 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… hypocrites.” Canright, D. M., “No. 4, Mrs. White and Her Visions,” pp. 2, 3, 7, in “Adventism Refuted in a Nutshell” (1889).
464 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 101.6 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… . M. Canright’s own thinking during the years after he left the church.
465 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 102.1 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… . M. Canright’s home. D. M. Canright used to visit this man’s home, and therefore he gave me first hand information which I can pass on to you, just because of the interest …
466 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 102.2 (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 …
467 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 102.3 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… . M. Canright frequently expressed the thought that Adventists were right in their general doctrines and teachings of the church. He disagreed on the question …
468 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 104.3 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… . M. Canright speaks of Ellen G. White as a rather sickly individual, rather weak, rather frail; but, if she had a voice that could be heard distinctly at the distance …
469 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 16.3 (Francis D. Nichol)
… . M. Canright is often cited. This is because he first and most fully set forth in print the major accusations against Mrs. White. Others have largely copied from …
470 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 26.4 (Francis D. Nichol)
… . M. Canright shortly after he left the Adventist ministry. Through the years he amplified the charge, and from him almost all other critics of Mrs. White have …
471 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 43.6 (Francis D. Nichol)
Mrs. White’s increasing public labors never seemed to take her away from the realm of matter-of-fact home duties. In a letter she wrote to D. M. Canright and his wife, November 12, 1873, she said:
472 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 70.2 (Francis D. Nichol)
… . M. Canright, who first set it forth; in fact this whole chapter must focus directly on arguments presented by him: “I do not know that she [Mrs. White] ever had a vision …
473 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 75.3 (Francis D. Nichol)
Canright quotes the following letter which he declares was written to him by a Dr. W. J. Fairfield, who “was for years a physician in their [the Seventh-day Adventists’] Sanitarium at Battle Creek.”
474 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 76.4 (Francis D. Nichol)
Canright, who presents Dr. Fairfield and also Dr. Kellogg as witnesses against Mrs. White, describes Dr. Kellogg as having “a world-wide reputation as a physician and a scientist.” According to that, what kind of person must Dr. Fairfield have been!
475 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 76.5 (Francis D. Nichol)
… to Canright, does not claim that he had ever examined Mrs. White while she was in vision. How could he have done so, as a physician, when he did not graduate from …
476 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 79.1 (Francis D. Nichol)
… Russell, Canright quotes from some pamphlet against Mrs. White, which is now unavailable, citing what she is supposed to have said in comment on what Dr. Jackson …
477 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 81.1 (Francis D. Nichol)
… critic, Canright, from whom we have been quoting, is himself perhaps the outstanding exhibit. He could not speak as a medical man, but he could describe her as …
478 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 81.4 (Francis D. Nichol)
Canright did not have to write that glowing tribute to Mrs. White in 1877. The only compulsion was that of his own troubled heart. Not long before he wrote this …
479 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 83.1 (Francis D. Nichol)
… later Canright left the Adventist ministry for the last time, permanently severed relationships with the church, and began to collect testimony from doctors …
480 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 83.3 (Francis D. Nichol)
… fact Canright himself thus spoke of her once in a condescendingly indulgent moment.