Search for: argument

7041 Facts for the Times, p. 86.4 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… thousand arguments drawn from any other source .”—Ib. p. 100.

7042 Facts for the Times, p. 99.7 (Merritt E. Cornell)

“In putting departed souls in heaven, hell and purgatory, you destroy the arguments wherewith

7043 Facts for the Times, p. 105.6 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… by arguments which if valid prove immensely more than we can desire to see established, or could persuade ourselves to think in any degree probable.” Physical …

7044 Facts for the Times, p. 106.2 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… irresistible argument against the Mass, Purgatory, and Prayer to the saints. This was simply to deny the immortality of the soul, etc. They left Wittemburg …

7045 Facts for the Times, p. 106.6 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… the arguments which he had adduced in order to confirm the doctrine in question, it so fell out, that his mind was satisfied of it only when directly employed …

7046 Facts for the Times, p. 107.1 (Merritt E. Cornell)

“It is notorious also that Socrates, the next most able advocate among the heathen for the same doctrine, has adduced arguments to establish the never-ceasing existence of the soul, which will not bear the test of examination.”

7047 Facts for the Times, p. 107.7 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… philosophical arguments may be urged in its favor, the proof of immortality should never be built upon it.” Knapp’s Christian Theology.

7048 Facts for the Times, p. 126.9 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… the argument to oblige us to a conformity to his death, by dying to sin, being taken hence; and this immersion being religiously observed by all Christians …

7049 Facts for the Times, p. 130.8 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… conclusive arguments against infant immersion, (for then there was no sprinkling,) he assumes as a foundation principle not to be questioned, that immersion …

7050 Miraculous Powers, p. 41.2 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… next argument for the perpetuity of miraculous powers is founded on the prophecy of Joel. “And it shall come to pass afterward, that I will pour out my Spirit …

7051 Miraculous Powers, p. 55.2 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… an argument to justify their bitterness, resentment, and perfidy.” Church History, p. 143.

7052 Miraculous Powers, p. 105.3 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… this argument speaks volumes in favor of the work. For of what avail is a religion of decency and order, without righteousness?”— Biography of B. W. Stone, pp. 42-44 …

7053 Miraculous Powers, p. 111.1 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… the arguments of the aged stranger; and in the end, I found the divine Scriptures to be the only sure philosophy.”— Milner’s Church Hist., p. 67.Probably one of the …

7054 Miraculous Powers, p. 118.3 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… an argument against the correctness of the other parts of my narrative. This probably would have been good policy in me as a mere author, for I am pretty sure …

7055 The State of the Churches, p. 15.2 (Merritt E. Cornell)

… . The arguments used for such a course are, ‘If we do not have a fine church the rich will leave us.’”

7056 The Bible Class, p. 93.2 (Roswell Fenner Cottrell)

… their arguments on some points of obedience, that they think that they may break the commandments of God, and neglect every institution of the gospel, and …

7057 The Bible Class, p. 97.1 (Roswell Fenner Cottrell)

… this argument: The servant is not greater than his lord, neither he that is sent greater than he that sent him. Verse 16. This leaves no excuse to any servant who …

7058 Both Sides, p. 6.2 (Roswell Fenner Cottrell)

… , his argument is excusable otherwise, it is an unworthy cavil. I will say, when you will produce the passage, addressed to the people of God since the establishment …

7059 Both Sides, p. 14.1 (Roswell Fenner Cottrell)

… my argument, respecting the Harbinger’s rule, “excusable;” for I understood him to mean as he said. The demand was, that the passage should read that either Jew …

7060 Both Sides, p. 15.4 (Roswell Fenner Cottrell)

When we present God’s holy law. And arguments from Scripture draw; Objectors say, to pick a flaw, “It’s Jewish.”