Search for: Choice
6301 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 18, 1895, page 209 paragraph 2
… free choice, and they were given the desires of their own hearts, but had in consequence leanness of soul. God has the same purpose toward his people today. To …
6302 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 19, 1895, page 225 paragraph 4
… of choice works, all having been selected with a view to their special fitness for the lines of work carried on in the school. A very much larger library should …
6303 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 21, 1895, page 269 paragraph 4
… our choice. When God said, “I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed,” he set every man free to choose which master he would …
6304 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 21, 1895, page 269 paragraph 7
… own choice. The Scriptures demonstrate it. And every one can be made perfectly righteous at his choice. And the Scriptures demonstrate this. No man will die …
6305 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 24, 1895, page 312 paragraph 11
… the choice of the Sabbath-school officers should not be considered simply as something that concerns the school, but the entire church. It seems to me that …
6306 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 24, 1895, page 313 paragraph 2
… the choice of the superintendent and secretary. Now we have been hearing something of the duties of the Sabbath-school officers from Brother Brown, and the …
6307 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 25, 1895, page 331 paragraph 13
And he brings it into my human nature yet, to your human nature at our choice, by the Spirit of God bringing to us his divine presence, and emptying us of ourselves, and causing God to appear instead of self.
6308 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 25, 1895, page 344 paragraph 4
… man’s choice are left out of the question entirely. In how marked contrast is this from that false method of putting the interpretation of the word by vote …
6309 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 26, 1895, page 350 paragraph 2
… our choice, bringing to us that divine mind of his which is the mind that empties self wherever it goes, wherever it can find an entrance, wherever it can find …
6310 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 27, 1895, page 381 paragraph 1
… our choice now and forever to choose only God’s way? to choose to glorify him, and him alone?
6311 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 27, 1895, page 381 paragraph 10
… , the choice to be, is the choice to glorify God, and the choice to glorify God is the choice that self shall be emptied and lost, and God alone shall appear and be …
6312 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 27, 1895, page 383 paragraph 7
… of choice all the time; he was not simply a machine in the Father’s hands. His own privilege of choice was with him all the time, and the temptation which Christ …
6313 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 27, 1895, page 385 paragraph 1
… our choice is whether Christ shall be our head, or whether Satan shall be our head.
6314 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 27, 1895, page 385 paragraph 2
… the choice possible. So we find ourselves under the service of Satan, but God has by the gift of Jesus Christ to humanity given to every human being the privilege …
6315 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 27, 1895, page 385 paragraph 3
… constant choice and willing submission.
6316 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 February 28, 1895, page 390 paragraph 10
… his choice were the few who would not permit their own wants to delay them in the discharge of duty. The three hundred chosen men not only possessed courage …
6317 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 March 4, 1895, page 453 paragraph 4
… of choice between living in Great Britain or living in Michigan, the choice on my part would be in favor of the other side of the water. We do not get the intense …
6318 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 December 1895, page 624 paragraph 6
… that choice bit of earth produces specimens of every class of plants which grow on the surface of the earth, from the tropics to the pole. The flowers, foliage …
6319 General Conference Bulletin, vol. 1 January 1, 1896, page 686 paragraph 7
Which the parent or teacher can readily fill out. An effort has been made to give choice matter, appropriately illustrated, printed in clear type, on good paper, and at a price so low that all may buy.