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61221 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 September 7, 1888, page 550 paragraph 12

… days, more than any other, it will be the most natural thing in the world to do wrong, and extremely difficult, and out of the ordinary course of things, for one …

61222 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 September 7, 1888, page 550 paragraph 19

… better than men can, what will be for the best. For our part, we cannot see what could be more discouraging to evangelistic effort than the attempt to convert …

61223 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 September 7, 1888, page 551 paragraph 6

… Plato more frequently or more strenuously insists than this,-that soul is not only superior to body, but prior to it in matter of time, and that not merely as …

61224 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 September 7, 1888, page 560 paragraph 1

… . More definite plans have been laid for this meeting than for any camp-meeting ever held in this State, and there ought to be a larger attendance than ever before …

61225 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 September 14, 1888, page 566 paragraph 6

… be more highly favored than any other. If it be true that in order for the gospel not to be a failure, all the people in the world must be converted, then it is equally …

61226 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 September 14, 1888, page 568 paragraph 2

… any more astonishing that a member of Dr. Talmage’s church should be a Spiritualist medium, than that Dr. Talmage himself should preach Spiritualist sermons …

61227 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 September 14, 1888, page 576 paragraph 3

… a more lively, healthful moral influence than at Healdsburg College would be hard to find.

61228 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 September 14, 1888, page 576 paragraph 11

… have more in common with the circus or the minstrel show than with Christianity. We are not prepared to admit that they do any good. Their preaching is all emotional …

61229 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 September 21, 1888, page 592 paragraph 4

… earlier than Irenaeus and Tertullian, by the end of the second century mention is made of the baptism of children, and in the third, of infants. But even in the …

61230 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 September 21, 1888, page 593 paragraph 1

… no more than could be expected that those who believed on him through their word would also exhibit human imperfections before they were perfectly sanctified …

61231 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 September 21, 1888, page 592 paragraph 4

… is more than counterbalanced by the good that has been done in a sanitary direction. The air has been purified, accumulated filth has been washed away, and …

61232 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 October 5, 1888, page 596 paragraph 1

… Lord more by dying than by living. Had he died at that time he would have avoided at least one sin; but the point is that he could no more have uttered praise to …

61233 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 October 5, 1888, page 598 paragraph 10

… no more right to reject the doctrines and practices of these men, than we have to reject any doctrine or practice of “the church.” To be sure there were many, at …

61234 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 October 5, 1888, page 598 paragraph 12

… poorer than the other. With each successive line he looks less at the copy, and more at his own work, until by the time he is half way down the page he is following …

61235 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 October 5, 1888, page 608 paragraph 8

… many more hearers than if she spoke in crowded halls.”

61236 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 October 5, 1888, page 608 paragraph 20

… does more injury to the workingmen than do a hundred Chinese. We do not believe in unlimited Chinese immigration any more than we believe in the political …

61237 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 October 12, 1888, page 614 paragraph 16

… be more applicable than to any other men, but to certain men who lived in the first few centuries of the Christian era, and who exerted a great influence on the …

61238 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 October 12, 1888, page 615 paragraph 6

… were more intent on throwing obscurity over the sacred writings by the fictions of their own imaginations, than on searching out their true meaning.”- Ecclesiastical …

61239 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 October 12, 1888, page 615 paragraph 11

These quotations from Farrar have more than ordinary weight in this matter, for, besides the Catholic Church, there is no other church that depends so much upon the Fathers as does the Church of England, or Episcopal Church.

61240 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 October 12, 1888, page 615 paragraph 13

“But,” says one, “there is this element in their favor, and against the idea that they were influenced more by paganism than by Christianity, and combated paganism; they studied the works of the apostles, and so took on their character.”