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75761 In Defense of the Faith, p. 11.1 (William Henry Branson)

… seems more than passing strange that certain religious leaders should give their endorsement as many have done, and as some are still doing-to a book which …

75762 In Defense of the Faith, p. 23.1 (William Henry Branson)

… is more than well, it is essential. But sometimes they go beyond this, and declaim against the preaching of the law,—intimate that it belongs to a past age, a less …

75763 In Defense of the Faith, p. 23.6 (William Henry Branson)

… no more be abrogated than can God Himself.”—Editorial in Sunday School Times, Jan. 3, 1914.

75764 In Defense of the Faith, p. 27.1 (William Henry Branson)

… grown more holy? Have they progressed more rapidly in their conquest of the world for Christ? Are their converts truer Christians than were those made by …

75765 In Defense of the Faith, p. 31.3 (William Henry Branson)

… little more than two years before he became grieved again at some of his associates, and finally dropped out of the Seventh-day Adventist Church altogether …

75766 In Defense of the Faith, p. 60.1 (William Henry Branson)

… , no more the wicked than the righteous. This shows that the law does still exist, and is able to hold men under its power.

75767 In Defense of the Faith, p. 85.1 (William Henry Branson)

“‘Six days shall thou labor, and do all thy work.’ Is not that enough for any man to work in any country or in any nation? Can the Gentiles endure to work more days than the Jews? ...

75768 In Defense of the Faith, p. 87.4 (William Henry Branson)

… for more than two thousand years after the occasion on which it was appointed had taken place? And especially as the reason for the celebration existed from …

75769 In Defense of the Faith, p. 91.4 (William Henry Branson)

… nothing more sure than that there has been an accurate accounting of the days of the week from creation to the present hour. The week was instituted in Eden …

75770 In Defense of the Faith, p. 93.2 (William Henry Branson)

… arise more from a carnal heart unwilling to submit itself to the plain requirements of the law of God than they do from any real difficulty in the case.

75771 In Defense of the Faith, p. 98.2 (William Henry Branson)

… much more easily lost than the Sabbath, which comes once every week, besides being a day much more sacredly observed. 5. The records and genealogies were all …

75772 In Defense of the Faith, p. 120.1 (William Henry Branson)

… would more deliberately set at naught the law and authority of the great Creator? Reader, we beseech you to stop and think seriously of this matter, and consider …

75773 In Defense of the Faith, p. 142.2 (William Henry Branson)

… as more than passing strange is the fact that, in an effort to prove which day is the Lord’s day, the testimony of almost everyone else is sought except that …

75774 In Defense of the Faith, p. 142.3 (William Henry Branson)

… know more about it than the learned writers of dictionaries, the pagan emperor Constantine, or Henry IV of England. Why not at least hear what He has to say about …

75775 In Defense of the Faith, p. 145.1 (William Henry Branson)

… be more unsatisfactory, or rather childish, than the explanations of Holy Writ sometimes given by these ancient expositors.... Very few of the Fathers of this …

75776 In Defense of the Faith, p. 166.7 (William Henry Branson)

… was more fascinating than the more crude form of paganism, and made a pretense of holding up high standards of morality. This new heathenism soon captured …

75777 In Defense of the Faith, p. 169.4 (William Henry Branson)

… no more obedience there, than it had done before in the Western parts.”— History of the Sabbath, part 2, chap. 5, par. 6.

75778 In Defense of the Faith, p. 170.2 (William Henry Branson)

… , rather than enjoined, by an ecclesiastical authority (the third Council of Orleans), and this expressly that people might have more leisure to go to church …

75779 In Defense of the Faith, p. 170.5 (William Henry Branson)

… were more with paganism than with Christianity. Even this was not an ecclesiastical law of the church at that time, but merely a civil law made by the ruling …

75780 In Defense of the Faith, p. 178.3 (William Henry Branson)

… something more than a coincidence that 538 A. D. was the beginning of that period.”—D. M. Canright, Tabernacle Lectures, Lecture Ten, pp. 76-83.