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7081 Temperance, p. 179.1 (Ellen Gould White)
Commence With the Cradle —If parents had done their duty in spreading the table with wholesome food, discarding irritating and stimulating substances …
7082 Temperance, p. 180.5 (Ellen Gould White)
God Will Supplement the Parents’ Endeavors —When you take up your duties as a parent, in the strength of God, with a firm determination never to relax your efforts …
7083 Temperance, p. 181 (Ellen Gould White)
Chapter 5—Teaching Self-Denial and Self-Control
7084 Temperance, p. 182.1 (Ellen Gould White)
Parents to Blame if Children Are Drunkards —There is a general mourning that intemperance prevails to such a fearful extent; but we fasten the primal cause …
7085 Temperance, p. 198.5 (Ellen Gould White)
Those in High Positions to Sign —To those in high positions we are to present the total abstinence pledge, asking them to give the money they would otherwise …
7086 Temperance, p. 203.5 (Ellen Gould White)
The Dark Blot Remains —Notwithstanding thousands of years of experience and progress, the same dark blot which stained the first pages of history remains …
7087 Temperance, p. 208.5 (Ellen Gould White)
There can never be a right state of society while these evils exist. And no real reform will be effected until the law shall close up liquor saloons, not only …
7088 Temperance, p. 210.5 (Ellen Gould White)
Many parents remove from their country homes to the city, regarding it as a more desirable or profitable location. But by making this change they expose their …
7089 Temperance, p. 213 (Ellen Gould White)
Chapter 5—The Sense of Moral Obligation
7090 Temperance, p. 213.5 (Ellen Gould White)
To Sense the Sacredness of Natural Law —Every law governing the human system is to be strictly regarded; for it is as truly a law of God as is the word of Holy Writ …
7091 Temperance, p. 217.5 (Ellen Gould White)
A Sensible Attitude Toward Other Organizations —The temperance question is to be respected by every true Christian, and especially should it receive the …
7092 Temperance, p. 219.5 (Ellen Gould White)
If the temperance club had been left to stand on its own ground, we, as a people, standing upon our advanced ground, keeping respectively the high standard God …
7093 Temperance, p. 220.5 (Ellen Gould White)
We should not work solely for our own people, but should bestow labor also upon noble minds outside of our ranks. We should be at the head in the temperance reform.— The Review and Herald, October 21, 1884 .
7094 Temperance, p. 221.5 (Ellen Gould White)
To Sense Our Responsibility —Those who have labored in the temperance cause, and who in their work have had the Lord behind them, should have had far more labor …
7095 Temperance, p. 224.5 (Ellen Gould White)
We Cannot Unite With Them in Exalting Sunday —I want to unite with the W.C.T.U. workers, but we cannot unite with them in a work of exalting a false Sabbath. We …
7096 Temperance, p. 225.5 (Ellen Gould White)
Lose Not One Opportunity to Unite With Temperance Work —I am sorry that there has not been a more lively interest among our people of late years to magnify …
7097 Temperance, p. 229.5 (Ellen Gould White)
The world, who act as though there were no God, absorbed in selfish pursuits, will soon experience sudden destruction, and shall not escape. Many continue in …
7098 Temperance, p. 232.1 (Ellen Gould White)
This very man may make large donations to the church; but will God accept of the money that is wrung from the family of the drunkard? It is stained with the blood …
7099 Temperance, p. 233.5 (Ellen Gould White)
I feel distressed as I look upon our people and know that they are holding very loosely the temperance question.... We should be at the head in the temperance reform.— The Review and Herald, October 21, 1884 .
7100 Temperance, p. 236.5 (Ellen Gould White)
Every Church Member to Work —Let those who have their Bibles and who believe the word of God become active temperance workers. Who will now seek to advance the work of our Redeemer? Let every church member work in right lines.— Letter 18a, 1906 .