Search for: argument

9161 American Sentinel, vol. 2 October 1887, page 76 paragraph 8

… the arguments used in behalf of Sunday laws, and will learn how to expose their fallacy, so that when the Sunday-law mania shall seize their State, as it surely …

9162 American Sentinel, vol. 2 December 1887, page 89 paragraph 6

… an argument against all that is Christian in the usage and administration of’ our Government;

9163 American Sentinel, vol. 2 December 1887, page 90 paragraph 11

… the argument, show most conclusively that Christ is not now ruler of nations until he receives the kingdom from his fore his Father just before his second …

9164 American Sentinel, vol. 3 January 1888, page 3 paragraph 3

… no argument to show that such a state of affairs would simply make hypocrites of more than ninety-nine-one-hundredths of the people.

9165 American Sentinel, vol. 3 January 1888, page 3 paragraph 5

… Reform argument were good for anything it would prove that the religion of this country should be paganism. But the argument does not amount to anything …

9166 American Sentinel, vol. 3 January 1888, page 8 paragraph 6

… every argument that they make proves to be wholly religious, while they try to cover it all up with the word “civil;” but the covering is too narrow for them to …

9167 American Sentinel, vol. 3 February 1888, page 10 paragraph 13

… the argument that National Reform success must be Church and State union. In nothing that has been said in these columns has there been any design to cast …

9168 American Sentinel, vol. 3 March 1888, page 24 paragraph 12

… Sentinel’s arguments, by the sophistical plea that they are “all thoroughly opposed to any union of Church and State,” while at the same time they are all just …

9169 American Sentinel, vol. 3 March 1888, page 24 paragraph 13

… our arguments. But let it be understood that our opposition to so-called Religion and the State, is due solely to our love for true religion and the individual …

9170 American Sentinel, vol. 3 May 1888, page 33 paragraph 18

… an argument on religion in general.

9171 American Sentinel, vol. 3 May 1888, page 33 paragraph 19

“Miller, of Los Angeles, moved to lay the amendments on the table. After argument had been going on for ten minutes the chair ruled the question was not debatable.

9172 American Sentinel, vol. 3 May 1888, page 39 paragraph 4

… the argument of man’s welfare-which cuts loose from the commandment-and then they fly from the argument of man’s liberty in his welfare, to the commandment …

9173 American Sentinel, vol. 3 May 1888, page 39 paragraph 5

… . The argument of man’s welfare makes man free to adapt the inhibition to his welfare. But man may not adapt Jehovah’s seventh-day Sabbath law to his idea of …

9174 American Sentinel, vol. 3 May 1888, page 39 paragraph 7

“Their argument is absolutely destructive to the beneficence of the custom of a rest day. They continually affirm that a Sabbath day is the very foundation …

9175 American Sentinel, vol. 3 June 1888, page 44 paragraph 9

… exhaustive argument for the Sabbath, which will soon appear in Our Day. Able addresses followed: by Dr. T. A. Fernley, secretary of the Philadelphia Sabbath Association …

9176 American Sentinel, vol. 3 June 1888, page 46 paragraph 1

… an argument upon the merits of the controversy between us. But our effort was in vain. Mr. McConnell proves to be as destitute of argument on the merits of the …

9177 American Sentinel, vol. 3 June 1888, page 46 paragraph 2

… our arguments against it are faulty, or wherein our conclusions are illogical. We have offered them our own columns in which to show this. But with a single …

9178 American Sentinel, vol. 3 June 1888, page 47 paragraph 13

In his argument before the Senate Committee in behalf of National Sunday legislation, Dr. Crafts started out with the statement that,-

9179 American Sentinel, vol. 3 June 1888, page 47 paragraph 15

… whole argument, it is evident that it is in this latter sense that his proposition is to be understood. But a moment’s thought shows that the proposition as …

9180 American Sentinel, vol. 3 June 1888, page 47 paragraph 17

… other argument at its command but violence.