Search for: White
78821 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 25.2 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… Mrs. White had been shown anew that our people should not erect very large institutions in any place. Counsels of former times were repeated that instead …
78822 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 25.3 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… Mrs. White and of the executives of the General Conference. It was interpreted that the instruction meant that the sanitarium now well under way, should have …
78823 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 29.1 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… Mrs. White concerning the work of the medical leader. His position was not to be made difficult, but all were to stand by the good work he was doing. The medical …
78824 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 29.3 (William Ambrose Spicer)
As though in answer to this proposition, Mrs. White, in a later message said:
78825 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 30.1 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… , Mrs. White told the officers of scenes that had passed before her regarding these dangers. She said she must come before the conference and open up the whole …
78826 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 30.2 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… , Mrs. White had proposed to take her stand against the teaching, and the Lord had restrained her.
78827 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 30.3 (William Ambrose Spicer)
But to the officers came a message from Mrs. White, saying:
78828 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 34.2 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… . Mrs. White wrote later how it came about that the messages were sent off just at that time:
78829 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 38.1 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… Mrs. White in the first enclosure that was rushed to the train at St. Helena. (There was no air mail then.) This “Decided Action” statement was the key message for …
78830 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 38.3 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… ,” Sister White told us. And consider the unusual complexity of the teaching knocking at our door. Yet as one reads “Decided Action” it is seen to meet the issue …
78831 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis
Ellen G. White
78832 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 46.5 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… , Mrs. White wrote ( July 31, 1904 ):
78833 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 49.1 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… Mrs. White had been led to change her teaching. At one of the schools Mrs. White had spoken to the students saying that it should not be said that God is in tree …
78834 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 49.2 (William Ambrose Spicer)
“This, of course, is very different from what she wrote some years ago. W. C. White and others have made her believe we are teaching a pernicious doctrine, so it must be downed.”
78835 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 49.4 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… , Mrs. White felt stirred. True, the modern school of religio-scientific thought in all the world has long been perverting phrases of Scripture to support error …
78836 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 50.3 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… Sister White has been teaching.’ This assertion struck right to my heart. I felt heartbroken; for I knew that this representation of the matter was not true …
78837 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 51.2 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… Mrs. White’s experience and views, published in 1851 there was a refutation of the teaching that diffused the personality of God in the things of nature. These …
78838 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 52.1 (William Ambrose Spicer)
Again, later, in Early Writings Mrs. White wrote in warning against the view that diffused the Deity in nature:
78839 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 64.1 (William Ambrose Spicer)
… , Mrs. White had called earnestly on the old institution to help in planting the first sanitarium in Australia. As the issue was developing, in the Autumn of …
78840 How the Spirit of Prophecy Met a Crisis, p. 65.2 (William Ambrose Spicer)
In the meantime, Mrs. White had returned from Australia. The burning of the old institution in early 1902 had raised the question of finance for rebuilding, and Mrs. White had repeated the plea of not so much building in one place.