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7381 Analysis of Sacred Chronology, p. 89.1 (Sylvester Bliss)

Asa, his son, reigned in his stead. And in [the end of] the twentieth year of Jeroboam, king of Israel, reigned Asa over Judah.” 15:2, 8, 9. B. C. 970.

7382 Analysis of Sacred Chronology, p. 89.2 (Sylvester Bliss)

“The days which Jeroboam reigned were two and twenty years; and he slept with his fathers, and Nadab his son reigned in his stead.” 14:20. B. C. 968.

7383 Analysis of Sacred Chronology, p. 89.3 (Sylvester Bliss)

“ Nadab, the son of Jeroboam, began to reign over Israel in the second year of Asa, king of Judah, and he reigned in Israel two [current-one complete,] years.” 15:25 .

7384 Analysis of Sacred Chronology, p. 89.4 (Sylvester Bliss)

As the sum of the years of the kings of Israel, from the commencement of Jeroboam’s and Rehoboam’s to the close of Ahaziah’s of Judah, and Joram of Israel’s …

7385 Analysis of Sacred Chronology, p. 89.5 (Sylvester Bliss)

Baasha. “In the third year of Asa, king of Judah, did Baasha [son of Abijah, of the house of Issachar,] slay him, [Nadab,] and reigned in his stead, .. to reign over all Israel …

7386 Analysis of Sacred Chronology, p. 89.6 (Sylvester Bliss)

“In his [Asa’s] days the land was quiet ten years;” 2 Chronicles 14:1; after which the Ethiopians attacked Judah, and were destroyed with a great slaughter. v. 12. B.C. 960.

7387 Analysis of Sacred Chronology, p. 229 (Sylvester Bliss)

… , 88, 89 Asa, 88-91 Ahab, 91, 93, 97 Ahaziah, 93, 99 Athaliah, 100 Amaziah, 103, 104 Azariah, 105 Amos, 105, 106 Ahaz, 110, 111 Amon, 118 Ahasuerus, 137-146 Ariaxerxes, 145-149, 151 …

7388 Analysis of Sacred Chronology, p. 232 (Sylvester Bliss)

… Nadah, 89 Naboth, 99 Nineveh, 104 Nabuchadonosor, 119 Nebuchadnezzar, 123 Nahum, 121 Nerriglisar, 136 Nabonadius, 186 Nero, 180, 181 Newton, 217 Olympiads, 19, 20 …

7389 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 70.7 (Sylvester Bliss)

… , Psalm 89:19. Hosea 12:10. Habakkuk 2:2. Acts 2:17. 1 Corinthians 10:6. Hebrews 9:9, 24. Psalm 78:2. Matthew 13:13, 34. Genesis 41:1-32. Daniel 2nd, 7th & 8th. Acts 10:9-16 .

7390 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 200.8 (Sylvester Bliss)

… . D. 89, seven years before the Revelations were written, says that he and many others are of this mind, “that Christ shall reign personally on earth,” and that “all …

7392 Sanctification, p. 89.1 (Daniel T. Bourdeau)

Self-examination, with us, may be defined as follows: A strict investigation of our spiritual state, to know whether we are in the faith, to know our defects that …

7393 Sanctification, p. 89.2 (Daniel T. Bourdeau)

1. This duty is enforced by a divine command. “Examine yourselves, whether ye be in the faith,” is the language of inspiration. 2 Corinthians 13:5. See also 1 Corinthians 11:28; Galatians 6:4 .

7394 Sanctification, p. 89.3 (Daniel T. Bourdeau)

2. Since the heart is deceitful above all things, if we neglect to examine ourselves, we shall fail to obtain a thorough and correct knowledge of our own characters …

7395 Sanctification, p. 89.4 (Daniel T. Bourdeau)

3. By attending to self-examination we shall be enabled to guard against self-deception, which consists in a wrong judgment of our spiritual condition. The grand remedy for self-deception, is self-examination.

7396 Sanctification, p. 89.5 (Daniel T. Bourdeau)

How liable men in every age have been to deceive themselves in regard to their characters, to call good evil, and evil, good, and act accordingly. And how many …

7397 The Change of the Sabbath, p. 89.1 (George Ide Butler)

“As for the Saturday, that retained its wonted credit in the Eastern churches, little inferior to the Lord’s day, if not plainly equal; not as the Sabbath, think …

7398 The Change of the Sabbath, p. 89.2 (George Ide Butler)

After Constantine’s time, there seems to have been in a measure a revival of interest in, and reverence for, the Sabbath in the minds of many Christians, at least in the Eastern churches, where the influence of the Roman Church was less powerful.

7399 The Change of the Sabbath, p. 89.3 (George Ide Butler)

Professor Stewart, in speaking of the period from Constantine to the Council of Laodicea, AD. 364, says:

7400 The Change of the Sabbath, p. 89.4 (George Ide Butler)

“The practice of it [the keeping of the Sabbath] was continued by Christians who were jealous for the honor of the Mosaic law, and finally became, as we have seen …