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61861 Sunday: The Origin of its Observance in the Christian Church, p. 79.1 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… Christianity more than half way, but it changed only its form and not in any respect its character. It adopted one supreme deity in place of its hundreds of …

61862 Sunday: The Origin of its Observance in the Christian Church, p. 80.3 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… Christianity more evident and remarkable than in its influence on heathenism itself.... There had been an unperceived and amicable approximation between …

61863 Sunday: The Origin of its Observance in the Christian Church, p. 81.1 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… were more than met by paganism. The heathen religion, which prevailed at least among the more enlightened pagans during this period, and which, differently …

61864 Sunday: The Origin of its Observance in the Christian Church, p. 83.1 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… even more the high priest of the sun than the emperor of Rome. He valued the power of the throne only as it enabled him to carry on and promote the wild, unbridled …

61865 Sunday: The Origin of its Observance in the Christian Church, p. 96.1 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… be more obsequiously devoted to an imperial patron than was Eusebius to Constantine. His “Life of Constantine” is one continued eulogy. Everything that the …

61866 Sunday: The Origin of its Observance in the Christian Church, p. 99.2 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… honor than those of Apollo. In one part of the city stood the Pythian, in the other the Sminthian deity. The Delphic tripod, which, according to Zosimus, contained …

61867 Sunday: The Origin of its Observance in the Christian Church, p. 102.1 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

“The first day of the week, on which Christians were accustomed to meet for the worship of God, Constantine required, by a special law, to be observed more sacredly than before.”— Century 4, part 2, chapter 4;section 5 .

61868 The Sure Foundation and the Keys of the Kingdom, p. 13.4 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… “labored more abundantly than they all.” 1 Corinthians 15:10. And not only were the keys given to Peter and Paul, as pioneers in the great work of the gospel, but …

61869 Waggoner on Romans, p. 13.2 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… is more blessed to give than to receive.” Verse 35 .

61870 Waggoner on Romans, p. 13.3 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… am more; in labors more abundant, in stripes above measure, in prisons more frequent.” 2 Corinthians 11:23. “But by the grace of God I am what I am; and his grace which …

61871 Waggoner on Romans, p. 21.1 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… worse than guessing the meaning of a text of Scripture, unless it is the acceptance of somebody else’s guess. Nobody can know any more of the Bible than the …

61872 Waggoner on Romans, p. 22.2 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… creature more than the Creator, who is blessed forever. Amen. For this cause God gave them up unto vile affections; for even their women did change the natural …

61873 Waggoner on Romans, p. 23.10 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

They “worshiped and served the creature more [rather] than the Creator.”

61874 Waggoner on Romans, p. 23.19 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… much more than this. He means, as the context plainly shows, that people by their perverseness restrain the working of the truth of God in their own souls. But …

61875 Waggoner on Romans, p. 28.1 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… pleasures more than lovers of God; having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof.” 2 Timothy 3:1-5. This all springs from self, the very source of the …

61876 Waggoner on Romans, p. 38.3 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… the more marked. The man who knows much and does wrong is obviously more blameworthy than the one who knows only little. “Take heed therefore how ye hear.” Luke …

61877 Waggoner on Romans, p. 42.3 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… have more than others, but they had nothing that they had not received, yet they boasted as though they had not received it. They glorified themselves, rather …

61878 Waggoner on Romans, p. 50.2 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… is more interested in having us know the sins, so as to give them up to him, than we are to know them. It is not an unheard of thing, by any means, to find professed Christians …

61879 Waggoner on Romans, p. 51.5 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… argument more emphatic than before. So in the verses next following it is very evident that the truths set forth in the second chapter would not be very acceptable …

61880 Waggoner on Romans, p. 51.6 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)

… hath more abounded through my lie unto his glory; why yet am I also judged as a sinner? And not rather (as we be slanderously reported, and as some affirm that we …