Search for: nature

58561 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 3, 1866, page 141 paragraph 7

… peevish nature even; And opens in each heart a little Heaven.”

58562 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 3, 1866, page 142 paragraph 3

… of nature and witness the roaring sea. The rich will cast their silver and their gold to the moles and bats, and fly from the face of Him who cometh to judge the …

58563 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 3, 1866, page 144 paragraph 14

All this would be laudable, if kept within proper bounds; but often it is not so and covetousness hurries on the property-seeker to work on more hours, and sleep less, than nature, if she could speak, would allow.

58564 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 3, 1866, page 144 paragraph 18

… taxes nature, as continued privation of sleep. Many suffer from this cause, and are not aware of the injury they sustain in consequence; as it weakens the judgment …

58565 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 10, 1866, page 148 paragraph 10

… to nature. God never gave any human being a natural taste for tobacco. On its first introduction into the system, nature rallies with all its powers to expel …

58566 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 10, 1866, page 150 paragraph 19

Every one has something wrong, So have you: Something you have harbored long, It is so. Deeply search within your heart, You will find it hidden there, Of your nature ‘tis a part, Of its name, though unaware, Pause and think, Pause and think.

58567 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 10, 1866, page 150 paragraph 26

… , now naturally arises in our mind the question, Is this to be our end? Will we never arise from that final resting place? or shall “the dead arise,” as it is said.

58568 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 10, 1866, page 150 paragraph 31

… very natural with a heavenly smile upon his countenance. Sabbath we attended his funeral and sought consolation from the text, “The last enemy that shall …

58569 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 10, 1866, page 151 paragraph 12

… aggravating nature too, that you don’t really know as the Lord wants you to bear them in silence?

58570 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 17, 1866, page 154 paragraph 7

… erring; nature and human-like to love those only who love and treat us kindly; but truly Satan-like to abuse those who have never had ill toward us. When we receive …

58571 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 17, 1866, page 154 paragraph 8

… . The naturally strong, will be greatly benefited. The naturally weak and sickly must reap some benefit. I have found the latter true in my case, the three years …

58572 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 17, 1866, page 154 paragraph 25

A. Not so. Humors of all kinds naturally tend to the surface, and cold applications increase such determination, whenever there is preternatural heat. When repelled from the surface, it is always by depleting processes or poisonous drugs.

58573 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 17, 1866, page 154 paragraph 33

A. And so they should be. A reformed drunkard can remain sober no longer than he lets intoxicating drinks alone. Our system does not propose to avoid the penalties of disobedience to nature’s laws. It is predicated on obedience to them.

58575 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 17, 1866, page 157 paragraph 10

… the nature and circumstances of the things to which they are applied. The Greek authors employ these terms in a sense which excludes the idea of endless. Plato …

58576 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 24, 1866, page 167 paragraph 6

… of natural laws. To illustrate: Suppose you had seen a ghost possessed with spirits, say tea, coffee, and tobacco; then you have my case. I found more room for reform …

58577 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 April 24, 1866, page 167 paragraph 7

… let nature fall back to her own resources-cold water for drink, and a vegetable, grain, and fruit diet. Nature, through the observance of the laws of health, and …

58579 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 May 1, 1866, page 169 paragraph 10

… the nature of man, I did not expect to return to that theme again. Nor even now do I propose to offer an added argument, but only to reply briefly to your criticism …

58580 Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 27 May 1, 1866, page 169 paragraph 16

… the nature of death, or on the existence of human spirits in a disembodied and conscious state. There seems to be a perfect agreement between them as to man’s …