Search for: White
76941 In Defense of the Faith, p. 339.3 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White’s gross ignorance, is how such a person managed to produce “ten bound volumes” which he calls the Seventh-day Adventist Bible. Usually persons in …
76942 In Defense of the Faith, p. 340.1 (William Henry Branson)
Mrs. White’s books on the principles of Christian education, written for the guidance of teachers in the denominational colleges and schools, have been …
76943 In Defense of the Faith, p. 341.2 (William Henry Branson)
… Sister White.... The historical part is good, but that which was of the most intense interest to me, was the last part, beginning with ‘The Origin of Evil.’ The ideas …
76944 In Defense of the Faith, p. 341.3 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White. The things he says of her now, and the facts of her life work and influence as recognized by himself in earlier years, cannot be harmonized.
76945 In Defense of the Faith, p. 342 (William Henry Branson)
The “Mistakes” Of Mrs. White
76946 In Defense of the Faith, p. 344.2 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White that are later given by Mr. Canright as evidence that the Testimonies are unreliable and faulty. Considering the vast number of pages combed by …
76947 In Defense of the Faith, p. 344.3 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White: “The system of slavery, which has ruined our nation, is left to live and stir up another rebellion.” Then our critic comments: “Was slavery left to live …
76948 In Defense of the Faith, p. 345.1 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White will be seen not to have been intended as her prediction. It is a statement of the thoughts of others, as expressing their feelings at that time. Here …
76949 In Defense of the Faith, p. 346.1 (William Henry Branson)
Thus it is seen that Mrs. White was simply expressing the fears of others as to what the outcome of the Civil War might be, rather than predicting that it would surely be so.
76950 In Defense of the Faith, p. 347.2 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White in these words:
76951 In Defense of the Faith, p. 347.4 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White’s books and from which Mr. Canright has extracted the above sentence, can hardly be said to be a prediction. It was written during an early period …
76952 In Defense of the Faith, p. 348.4 (William Henry Branson)
Here again the context shows that this statement quoted by Mr. Canright is expressive merely of the view-point of other nations, and is not a prediction by Mrs. White at all:
76953 In Defense of the Faith, p. 349.3 (William Henry Branson)
Instead of predicting final failure for the North in the Civil War, Mrs., White clearly intimated when and by what means the tide of victory would be turned. Here it is in this same chapter:
76954 In Defense of the Faith, p. 350.3 (William Henry Branson)
In an attempt to arouse patriotic indignation against Mrs. White, Mr. Canright quotes one other isolated sentence from an article on “The Rebellion.” This perversion of her meaning and misrepresentation of her loyalty should be noticed:
76955 In Defense of the Faith, p. 350.5 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White was here referring to blood that had, been needlessly shed by the mismanagement of certain men in the Northern Army who were in sympathy with slavery …
76956 In Defense of the Faith, p. 351.2 (William Henry Branson)
Again Mr. Canright quotes from Mrs. White: “‘The nations are now getting angry.’ Early Writings, 29 .” He then remarks: “That was thirty-eight years ago. It takes, a long time for them to get fighting mad.”— Seventh day Adventism Renounced, p. 146.
76957 In Defense of the Faith, p. 351.3 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White, was the one who made a mistake and figured things out wrongly.
76958 In Defense of the Faith, p. 351.4 (William Henry Branson)
“One of the worst blunders Mrs. White ever made,” says Mr. Canright, “was the move she made on dress.”— Ibid ., p. 149.
76959 In Defense of the Faith, p. 351.5 (William Henry Branson)
… , Mrs. White, like some other reformers, advocated a reform dress for women. She urged that women’s dresses should “clear the filth of the streets” at least an inch …
76960 In Defense of the Faith, p. 352.1 (William Henry Branson)
… Mrs. White and other reformers of her day advocated that the skirts should stop. And today a modest woman can go about the streets with her “dress cut halfway …