Search for: argument

9201 American Sentinel, vol. 4 August 14, 1889, page 227 paragraph 9

… no argument to show that a man who denies Christ is not a Christian. If it is true, as Miss Willard says, that all the Christian Unions in the United States are …

9202 American Sentinel, vol. 4 September 18, 1889, page 264 paragraph 6

… by argument to be right, the SENTINEL will not oppose. Nay; more; although we do not believe that Sunday has the slightest sacredness, or has any claim to respect …

9203 American Sentinel, vol. 4 September 18, 1889, page 264 paragraph 7

… bringing arguments to bear upon them. They have a right to publish papers and circulate them everywhere, wherever they can induce people to read them. Against …

9204 American Sentinel, vol. 4 September 18, 1889, page 267 paragraph 2

… only argument he presented in the course of the whole evening (and his discourse was on Sunday evening too) was that there would be pecuniary profit in resting …

9205 American Sentinel, vol. 4 October 16, 1889, page 298 paragraph 10

… an argument against the Prohibition party. At the same time it is a fraud upon the readers of AMERICAN SENTINEL, or a queer confession of the idiocy of its constituency …

9206 American Sentinel, vol. 4 October 16, 1889, page 299 paragraph 2

… an argument against the Prohibition party. The SENTINEL has no fight with the Prohibition party upon its prohibition principles. We have to do simply with …

9207 American Sentinel, vol. 4 October 16, 1889, page 306 paragraph 4

… specious arguments of those who are working for the Sunday law. To every individual that petition will be presented, and many will be misled by its outward …

9208 American Sentinel, vol. 4 October 30, 1889, page 313 paragraph 4

… all argument for a Sunday law; and if they say that a man has not a right to rest upon Saturday, they thereby confess that their proposed law is a law against the …

9209 American Sentinel, vol. 4 October 30, 1889, page 313 paragraph 13

… same arguments and the same tactics against us. They must be counted together, which we very much regret, but which we cannot help. The first-named is the leader …

9210 American Sentinel, vol. 4 November 6, 1889, page 323 paragraph 1

… make arguments, and draw conclusions, to show that it is in favor of Church and State union, they have never yet attempted to show the fallacy of one of the arguments

9211 American Sentinel, vol. 4 November 20, 1889, page 338 paragraph 3

… . Cosgrove’s argument showed that it was designed simply to advertise to the people of the world that the people of Washington were religious, although the …

9212 American Sentinel, vol. 4 November 20, 1889, page 341 paragraph 3

… no argument for the enactment of a Sunday law. It is strange that people cannot see that the anxiety for Sunday laws is purely from a church standpoint. These …

9213 American Sentinel, vol. 4 November 27, 1889, page 345 paragraph 11

We say that with such a Constitution as this, persecution would be inevitable; but as facts are better than arguments, we will give an instance illustrative of the working of such a Constitution in the past.

9214 American Sentinel, vol. 4 December 25, 1889, page 378 paragraph 1

… direct argument, we might call attention to the fact that their suspicion of our motives gives evidence of their real ideas of the natural results of the …

9215 American Sentinel, vol. 4 December 25, 1889, page 379 paragraph 9

… no argument to show that one man’s violation of Sunday does not deprive another man of his privilege to rest. That ten men in any community who do not observe …

9216 American Sentinel, vol. 4 December 25, 1889, page 380 paragraph 11

… the argument for the suppression of Sunday newspapers. The National Presbyterian, of January, 1889, in an editorial on “The Church and the Sunday Newspaper …

9217 American Sentinel, vol. 4 December 25, 1889, page 380 paragraph 19

… no argument to show that the religion thus fostered will be only a hollow shell. It will be State religion, and not the religion of the Spirit of God.

9218 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 2, 1890, page 7 paragraph 4

… of argument embodying proofs as strong as Holy Writ. Wherever there are Sunday laws, therefore, there is a union of church and State. This is one great reason …

9219 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 9, 1890, page 16 paragraph 8

… the argument’s sake their claim that they do not propose to compel everybody to worship, they do propose to compel everybody to rest, on what they themselves …

9220 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 30, 1890, page 39 paragraph 3

… . No argument has ever yet been made professedly from a civil or social point of view that did not in fact rest upon the religious. And no such argument never …