Search for: use of time

81 Child Guidance, p. 68.3 (Ellen Gould White)

… approval of God. As she takes up her work understandingly, she will receive power to perform her part. The Signs of the Times, April 3, 1901 .

82 Child Guidance, p. 73.4 (Ellen Gould White)

… take time to make the dear Saviour a daily companion and familiar friend. Let her take time for the study of His Word, take time to go with the children into the …

83 Child Guidance, p. 95.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… righteousness of Christ, the sanctification of the Spirit of God, the beauty of holiness, that you may reveal to those around you the Light of life. Manuscript …

84 Child Guidance, p. 106.3 (Ellen Gould White)

… the time, He requires no less of us who live in ceiled houses, where impurities are more observable and have a more unhealthful influence. Counsels on Health …

85 Child Guidance, p. 111.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… work of teaching neatness and order will take a little time each day, but it will pay in the future of your children, and in the end will save you much time and …

86 Child Guidance, p. 120.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… workshop of their minds. Give your children something to think of, something to do, that they may be fitted for usefulness in this life and in the future life …

87 Child Guidance, p. 122.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… —One of the surest safeguards of the young is useful occupation. Children who are trained to industrious habits, so that all their hours are usefully and pleasantly …

88 Child Guidance, p. 123.2 (Ellen Gould White)

Use of Time —Where there is an abundance of idleness, Satan works with his temptations to spoil life and character. If youth are not trained to useful labor …

89 Child Guidance, p. 123.3 (Ellen Gould White)

Children should be educated to make the very best use of their time, to be helpful to father and mother, to be self-reliant. They should not be allowed to consider themselves above doing any kind of labor that is necessary. Letter 11, 1888 .

90 Child Guidance, p. 126.3 (Ellen Gould White)

… economize time so that no minutes may be lost in their allotted hours of work. Manuscript 60, 1903 .

91 Child Guidance, p. 135.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… love of display. There is no time now to invent ways of using money. Your inventive faculties are to be put to the stretch, to see how you can economize. Manuscript …

92 Child Guidance, p. 135.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… for us in the feeding of the five thousand, a lesson that has a special application to those times when we are placed in trying circumstances and are compelled …

93 Child Guidance, p. 153.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… With Time and Money —Men are wanted whose sense of justice, even in the smallest matters, will not allow them to make an entry of their time that is not minute …

94 Child Guidance, p. 154.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… . At times a natural impulse may bring temptation to diverge from the straightforward path of honesty, but do not vary one hairsbreadth. If in any matter you …

95 Child Guidance, p. 164.3 (Ellen Gould White)

… the time for all to cultivate the powers that God has given them, that they may form characters for usefulness here and for a higher life hereafter.

96 Child Guidance, p. 165.5 (Ellen Gould White)

… gives us strength, reasoning power, time, in order that we may build characters on which He can place His stamp of approval. He desires each child of His to build …

97 Child Guidance, p. 197.2 (Ellen Gould White)

of the father of Joseph been of an opposite character, the pen of inspiration would never have traced upon the pages of sacred history the story of integrity …

98 Child Guidance, p. 202.4 (Ellen Gould White)

… , for time and eternity, what our habits make us. The lives of those who form right habits, and are faithful in the performance of every duty, will be as shining …

99 Child Guidance, p. 231.4 (Ellen Gould White)

… and usefulness, is best serving God or the world while his time is given to other pursuits, to the neglect of his own children. The Signs of the Times, February …

100 Child Guidance, p. 234.4 (Ellen Gould White)

times, because of this affection, parents seemed to be bereft of their reason. It is like the tender mercies of the wicked—cruelty disguised in the garb of so …