Search for: Choice
5381 The Present Truth, vol. 12 April 16, 1896, page 256 paragraph 5
… the choice of a successor to Leo XIII. The next Pope, whoever he is, will be chosen not for any religious qualifications, but for his political influence. The …
5382 The Present Truth, vol. 12 May 7, 1896, page 294 paragraph 16
3. In that choice the destiny determined for us was that we should be sons.
5383 The Present Truth, vol. 12 June 4, 1896, page 359 paragraph 1
… this choice devolves upon a humanity none the less now that in these last days man has found out for himself so many evil devices, and Satan, having developed …
5384 The Present Truth, vol. 12 July 16, 1896, page 457
“God’s Choice” The Present Truth, 12, 29.
5385 The Present Truth, vol. 12 July 23, 1896, page 467 paragraph 13
“I once was an outcast stranger on earth, A sinner by choice, and an alien by birth; But I've been adopted, my name’s written down- An heir to a mansion, robe, and a crown.
5386 The Present Truth, vol. 12 July 30, 1896, page 483
GOD’S CHOICE
5387 The Present Truth, vol. 12 July 30, 1896, page 483 paragraph 5
… the choice of Jacob before he was born than there is in the choice of all others. The choice is not arbitrary, but in Christ, and if none rejected and spurned Christ …
5388 The Present Truth, vol. 12 August 20, 1896, page 530 paragraph 8
… the choice had been made under compulsion. Thus was created the famous schism in the papal chair, which for a full half-century divided and scandalised the …
5389 The Present Truth, vol. 12 November 26, 1896, page 754 paragraph 1
… the choice of eating or not eating during a fast, for as soon as anything is eaten fast ceases.
5390 The Present Truth, vol. 12 November 26, 1896, page 754 paragraph 8
… of choice and gladness, for Jesus said that when we fast we should not be of a sad countenance, but should anoint the head, an act indicating rejoicing. Matthew …
5391 The Present Truth, vol. 13 January 7, 1897, page 2 paragraph 7
… making choices continually-taking practical, common-sense views of life, men call it-which shows that the darkened minds of men weigh the pleasures of life …
5392 The Present Truth, vol. 13 January 7, 1897, page 5 paragraph 6
… from choice or necessity, are to be classed as abstainers from animal food. While fully recognising the dangers of a too abundant meat diet, as well as the advantages …
5393 The Present Truth, vol. 13 January 21, 1897, page 38 paragraph 6
… the choice of the Cardinals. But according to the Standard's correspondent, the Papal Nuncios at Vienna, Paris, Madrid, and Lisbon have just been instructed …
5394 The Present Truth, vol. 13 February 11, 1897, page 82 paragraph 1
… the choice is on the side of life, the working out of that life is by the power of God.
5395 The Present Truth, vol. 13 March 25, 1897, page 177 paragraph 5
… their choice of evil, it did not cease to be evil, neither did they change the mind of God. Every man who followed the way that was “right in his own eyes” was destroyed …
5396 The Present Truth, vol. 13 June 10, 1897, page 354 paragraph 10
… the choice of Catholics appears to have fallen, a preference suggested by the time-honoured custom of representing her in sacred art in association with …
5397 The Present Truth, vol. 13 June 17, 1897, page 382 paragraph 5
… all choice as to what they eat nor where they step. They pass at one bound from an infectious carcass, a foul ulcer, or a mass of diseased sputum or reeking filth …
5398 The Present Truth, vol. 13 June 24, 1897, page 400 paragraph 14
… Board choice next November. The leader of the Anglican Catholics, Mr. Riley, urges electors to return a majority pledged to the introduction of the “Apostles …
5399 The Present Truth, vol. 13 July 8, 1897, page 422 paragraph 1
… .” His choice was not a blind one. He weighed both sides, and decided that the honour of being a Pharaoh was not to be compared with the glory of sharing the reproach …
5400 The Present Truth, vol. 13 September 23, 1897, page 608 paragraph 11
To Save Humanity .—Mr. Stead thus commends thse Catholics for outvoting the English delegates, who seem to have stood for that freedom of choice which even God will not take from men:—