Search for: White
76921 In Defense of the Faith, p. 330.4 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White’s writings, but because they now clearly shine forth from the Old Book. It is not a new or additional Bible that the church needs today, but inspired …
76922 In Defense of the Faith, p. 332.1 (William Henry Branson)
When Mr. Canright was preaching for the Seventh day Adventists, he was well aware that they made a distinction between the Bible and the writings of Mrs. White. And while still among them he wrote a clear testimony to that effect. Here it is:
76923 In Defense of the Faith, p. 332.2 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White’s visions instead. No; if there is a class’ of people under heaven who believe the Bible strongly, who love it devotedly, who study it and go to it for …
76924 In Defense of the Faith, p. 332.3 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White’s writings.
76925 In Defense of the Faith, p. 333.1 (William Henry Branson)
Mrs. White has published to the world her own estimate of the absolute and final authority of the Scriptures, and of the ‘relationship of her writings to the Bible. The following is from her pen:
76926 In Defense of the Faith, p. 333.5 (William Henry Branson)
Mrs. White always emphatically declared that her writings were not to be, considered an addition to the Word of God, and that anyone who claims this for them …
76927 In Defense of the Faith, p. 334 (William Henry Branson)
Mrs. White’s Character and Work
76928 In Defense of the Faith, p. 334.2 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White. Before quoting some of these, let us note a former statement regarding her character and work, written by him before he left the ‘Seventh-day Adventists …
76929 In Defense of the Faith, p. 334.3 (William Henry Branson)
… Sister White, I beg leave to say that I think I know something about it. I have been acquainted with Sister White for eighteen years, more than half the history …
76930 In Defense of the Faith, p. 335.1 (William Henry Branson)
… Sister White to be an unassuming, modest, kindhearted, noble woman. These traits in her character are not simply put on and cultivated, but they spring gracefully …
76931 In Defense of the Faith, p. 336.1 (William Henry Branson)
… Sister White admit that she is a Christian. How they can make this admission is more than I know. They try to fix it up by saying that she is deceived. They are not …
76932 In Defense of the Faith, p. 336.2 (William Henry Branson)
This earnest tribute to the character of Mrs. White, based on an intimate acquaintance of eighteen years, was written by Mr. Canright in 1877. In 1885 he again bore testimony to his confidence in the integrity of Mrs. White’s work:
76933 In Defense of the Faith, p. 337.1 (William Henry Branson)
… Sister White and all our ministers not only so teach, but exert all their influence to have our people live lives of devotion, of honesty, of purity, of love, of …
76934 In Defense of the Faith, p. 337.2 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White and her writings express the sum of ‘his convictions resulting from twenty-six out of the twenty-eight years of his labors among the Seventh-day …
76935 In Defense of the Faith, p. 337.3 (William Henry Branson)
“I long studied Mrs. White to determine for myself her real character till her case is clear to my mind.”— Seventh day Adventism Renounced, p. 137.
76936 In Defense of the Faith, p. 338.3 (William Henry Branson)
“I know Sister White to be an unassuming, modest, kindhearted, noble woman. These traits in her character are not simply put on and cultivated, but they spring gracefully and easily from her natural disposition.”
76937 In Defense of the Faith, p. 338.6 (William Henry Branson)
“She is not self-conceited, self-righteous, and self-important, as fanatics always are..’.. I have ever found Sister White the reverse of all this.”
76938 In Defense of the Faith, p. 338.9 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White in 1877, when he claims to have had eighteen years’ acquaintance with her, and in 1885, at which time his acquaintance had lengthened to twenty-six …
76939 In Defense of the Faith, p. 339.1 (William Henry Branson)
Mr. Canright, after renouncing Adventism, also said of Mrs. White:
76940 In Defense of the Faith, p. 339.2 (William Henry Branson)
“Mrs. White received no school education, except a few weeks when a child. She, like Joanna Southcott, Ann Lee, and Joseph Smith, was wholly illiterate, not knowing the simplest rules of grammar.”— Ibid ., P. 35.