Search for: 154
5801 Waggoner on Romans, p. 154.2 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)
The case then stands thus: When God tells a man that he is a sinner, it is in order that the man may receive his pardon. If God says that a man is a sinner, then he is …
5802 Waggoner on Romans, p. 154 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)
Everlasting Love
5803 Waggoner on Romans, p. 154.3 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)
“The Lord hath appeared of old unto me, saying, Yea, I have loved thee with an everlasting love; therefore with loving-kindness have I drawn thee.” Jeremiah 31:3 …
5804 Waggoner on Romans, p. 154.4 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)
Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword, separate us from the love of Christ? Impossible, since it was in those …
5805 The Atonement, p. 154.1 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
This testimony of inspiration makes the Word that was with the Father from the beginning, a tangible being appreciable to the senses of those with whom he …
5806 The Atonement, p. 154.2 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
Again Paul speaks of him thus: “Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself took part of the same.” Hebrews 2:14. The angel also …
5807 From Eden to Eden, p. 154.1 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
Croly, who wrote some excellent things on this subject, fell into the mistake of beginning the 1260 years with the date of the letter of Justinian to Pope John …
5808 From Eden to Eden, p. 154.2 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
“A. D. 1793. The Bible had passed out of the hands of the people, in all the dominions of popery from the time of the supremacy. The doctrines had perished, and left …
5809 From Eden to Eden, p. 154.3 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
But not a sentence in the above, nor in the remarks following, in the comments of Mr. Croly, furnishes any justification of his view of the ending of that period …
5810 From Eden to Eden, p. 154.4 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
“The death of Christianity was local and limited; no nation of Europe joined in the desperate guilt of the French republic.” Ib., p. 427.
5811 From Eden to Eden, p. 154.5 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
Mark, it was the death of Christianity, not of the papacy, of which he speaks. Of course it affected the welfare of the papal church, for it was an onslaught against …
5812 From Eden to Eden, p. 263 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
… , 142, 154, 155. D’Aubigné, Merle, 201. Eck, 221. Faucher, E., 200. Gasparin, Count, 200, 201. Gaussen, Prof. L., 83, 115. Gibbon, 82, 91, 116, 119, 122, 123, 142, 144, 146. Gieseler, 139, 143, 146 …
5813 The Nature and Tendency of Modern Spiritualism, p. 154.1 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
“If it cannot be determined what will become of the children, that fact should not be held as an obstacle to freedom, if it be proved that freedom itself is right.”
5814 The Nature and Tendency of Modern Spiritualism, p. 154.2 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
“Relationship in the future will be based upon kindredness of spirit, rather than upon ties of blood; while family clanship, like all similar cliqueisms, the remnants of barbarism, will be forever banished from the earth.”
5815 The Nature and Tendency of Modern Spiritualism, p. 154.3 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
“They say I have come to break up the family. I say, Amen, to that with all my heart. I hope I may break up every family in the world that exists by virtue of sexual slavery.”
5816 The Nature and Tendency of Modern Spiritualism, p. 154.4 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
“Mrs. Loomis, of Battle Creek, wanted to read a poem on ‘progression.’ She did so, and at its close announced that copies could be had for 25 cents each. There was an immediate rush to get copies. The poem was rather blasphemous.”
5817 The Nature and Tendency of Modern Spiritualism, p. 154.5 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
“Mr. B. Tod, of Michigan, also was moved by the spirit. His address was devoted chiefly to proving that no law prevented the free use of his eyes, his hands, and his …
5818 The Nature and Tendency of Modern Spiritualism, p. 154.6 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
“Laura Cuppy Smith ascended the platform and delivered a thrilling address, in which she defied all the elements of society, religion, polities, etc.”
5819 The Nature and Tendency of Modern Spiritualism, p. 154.7 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
A delegate charged Mrs. Woodhull with resorting to prostitution to advance the cause she was advocating. To this she replied in terms which we do not wish …
5820 The Nature and Tendency of Modern Spiritualism, p. 154.8 (Joseph Harvey Waggoner)
This convention was largely attended from all parts of the country, and did not lack in intelligence. But Mrs. Woodhull was the leading spirit; the platform …