Search for: canright

1121 In Defense of the Faith, p. 20.1 (William Henry Branson)

… Mr. Canright’s so-called new-found liberty.

1122 In Defense of the Faith, p. 21.1 (William Henry Branson)

… Mr. Canright quotes as authority on a number of points, published a book some years before his death, in which is to be found the following clear-cut statement …

1123 In Defense of the Faith, p. 21.3 (William Henry Branson)

How tragic it is to see ministers like Mr. Canright turn away from this generally accepted doctrine, and help to break down God’s moral barriers against sin and crime.

1124 In Defense of the Faith, p. 25.4 (William Henry Branson)

… Mr. Canright taught after he broke his connection with the Seventh-day Adventist Church and was accepted by the Baptist denomination in Michigan, and ordained …

1125 In Defense of the Faith, p. 26.1 (William Henry Branson)

It was not, therefore, Seventh-day Adventism merely that Mr. Canright renounced, but the eternal law of God. Of this law Jesus said:

1126 In Defense of the Faith, p. 26.5 (William Henry Branson)

… , Mr. Canright has not been alone in this attempt to nullify the law of Jehovah. We live in a lawless age. Men are not only trying to remove the restraints of the …

1127 In Defense of the Faith, p. 29.3 (William Henry Branson)

… Mr. Canright’s confusion began when he renounced the binding claims of the Ten Commandments, and not when he, by the grace of God, was obedient to the divine …

1129 In Defense of the Faith, p. 30.1 (William Henry Branson)

… Mr. Canright’s case is the fact that he must have fully realized that in repudiating Adventism he was going from light into darkness, as is evidenced by a confession …

1130 In Defense of the Faith, p. 31.3 (William Henry Branson)

… Mr. Canright only a little more than two years before he became grieved again at some of his associates, and finally dropped out of the Seventh-day Adventist …

1131 In Defense of the Faith, p. 32.1 (William Henry Branson)

… Mr. Canright presents himself to have been when he first became a Seventh-day Adventist. But by a seasoned minister of some twenty-six years’ experience, and …

1132 In Defense of the Faith, p. 32.2 (William Henry Branson)

… Mr. Canright back into the light in October, 1884, and placed in his heart a settled conviction that Seventh-day Adventism was truth, what spirit was it that …

1133 In Defense of the Faith, p. 33.1 (William Henry Branson)

… Mr. Canright was in the “light” in 1884, when he became fully settled in the Seventh-day Adventist faith, what was he in when he renounced it two years later? Should …

1134 In Defense of the Faith, p. 34.1 (William Henry Branson)

… Mr. Canright’s arguments against the moral law and the seventh-day Sabbath we shall follow quite largely the plan of permitting him to answer himself, by …

1135 In Defense of the Faith, p. 35.1 (William Henry Branson)

Mr. Canright’s chief attacks are leveled at the moral law of God as contained in the Ten Commandments. From among his many declarations on this point, we select the following as typical:

1136 In Defense of the Faith, p. 35 (William Henry Branson)

Mr. Canright Answers Himself

1137 In Defense of the Faith, p. 35.5 (William Henry Branson)

… . M. Canright while he still regarded the law of God as holy. Let the reader note how definitely he answers himself on this subject while he was still a Seventh …

1138 In Defense of the Faith

Mr. Canright continues:

1139 In Defense of the Faith

Canright as an Adventist further says:

1140 In Defense of the Faith, p. 40.1 (William Henry Branson)

… . M. Canright, The Law of God .