Search for: argument
6941 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 206.1 (Sylvester Bliss)
… his arguments with the utmost fairness; and, in speaking of them, he sometimes retorted in terms of great severity. Considering his treatment, by the religious …
6942 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 213.3 (Sylvester Bliss)
… sceptic argument, - ‘this is your construction,’ - and then not dare to tell us what it means! Awake, awake, ye shepherds of the flock! Come, tell us why these things are …
6943 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 226.2 (Sylvester Bliss)
“Are these your arguments, sinner?
6944 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 226.4 (Sylvester Bliss)
… stronger arguments than these, I would not blame you for not believing, for not one of yours can you or have you supported with a particle of proof. They are mere …
6945 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 236.2 (Sylvester Bliss)
… their arguments, to lower down the standard of holiness to their present capacity. Instead of looking for a blessed hope at the appearing of Jesus Christ …
6946 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 256.3 (Sylvester Bliss)
… weighty arguments. It was evidently guess-work with them; and I then thought, and do now, that their denial was based more on an unwillingness for the Lord to …
6947 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 270.3 (Sylvester Bliss)
… . No arguments are used or needed: all seem convinced that they have the truth. There is no clashing of sentiments: all are of one heart and of one mind. Our meetings …
6948 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 282.3 (Sylvester Bliss)
… in argument over our opponents to ourselves. We were seeking the honors or applause of men, more than of God. We were, some of us, seeking to be leaders, instead …
6949 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 295.2 (Sylvester Bliss)
He then recapitulated the arguments which were drawn from the types in reference to the seventh month, showing their plausibility, and proceeded to the second point in the controversy, thus:
6950 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 295.5 (Sylvester Bliss)
… his arguments, and contended that probation only terminated with the personal coming of Christ. His letter, as published, gave little satisfaction to either …
6951 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 297.1 (Sylvester Bliss)
“The arguments, in my humble opinion, on both sides, want a great quantity of brotherly love to make them digest easily. I, then, beg and pray my brethren we may let …
6952 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 322.1 (Sylvester Bliss)
… an argument against its being applied to other uses, is to set up a man of straw which cannot stand alone, and, in knocking it down, take to one’s self the credit …
6953 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 334.1 (Sylvester Bliss)
… the arguments in its favor rest on a certain meaning attached to such words as perish, destroy, death, etc. But when we find that the old world, being only overflowed …
6954 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 339.1 (Sylvester Bliss)
… no arguments that were sustained by the Scriptures that, in my opinion, invalidated my position. I cannot, therefore, conscientiously refrain from looking …
6955 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 350.5 (Sylvester Bliss)
… an argument.
6956 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 350.6 (Sylvester Bliss)
… study, argument, or reason, rejected the (to me at least) glorious news of the coming Saviour. Neither did I suppose that a man or woman could have been found on …
6957 Refutation of Forty-Four So-Called Objections Against the Ancient Sabbath, p. iii.2 (Daniel T. Bourdeau)
… affirmative arguments of the Sabbath, as well as its seemingly objectionable features.
6958 Sanctification, p. 13.1 (Daniel T. Bourdeau)
… lengthy argument to convince the candid that we are living in the last days. By comparing the sure word of prophecy with history and the signs of the times …
6959 Sanctification, p. 47.4 (Daniel T. Bourdeau)
… labored argument to prove this. Reason, common sense and experience teach that the digestive organs demand the exercise of the working powers, and that proper …
6960 Sanctification, p. 117.4 (Daniel T. Bourdeau)
… by arguments, or alluring us to it by promises, warning us against transgression by threatenings, or exciting us to the one, and restraining us from the other …