Search for: argument
11481 The Advent Testimony, vol. 1 (partial) April 1846, page 11 paragraph 5
… my argument, which had been published in the Voice of Truth. Through that false view was adapted to cover me all over with odium, it stands uncorrected. My explanatory …
11482 The Advent Testimony, vol. 1 (partial) April 1846, page 12 paragraph 2
… of argumentation.
11483 The Present Truth, vol. 1 July 1849, page 8 paragraph 5
If we would understand the Apostle’s subject and argument, we must read the whole chapter.
11484 The Present Truth, vol. 1 July 1849, page 8 paragraph 13
… Sabbath argument. I have shown that the no-Sabbath system has no foundation in this portion of Scripture; and by the help of the Spirit of truth, I will show that …
11485 The Present Truth, vol. 1 September 1849, page 26 paragraph 14
… whole argument that sustained it was drawn from this one text, “For as Jonas was three days and three nights in the whale’s belly, so shall the Son of man be three …
11486 The Present Truth, vol. 1 December 1849, page 44 paragraph 1
… the arguments of the faithful servants, and seeing good evidence that the signs were fulfilling, were led thereby to go forth to meet the bridegroom. We here …
11487 The Present Truth, vol. 1 March 1850, page 49 paragraph 14
… his argument, but it perverts the word of God. The word Sabbath is not mentioned in Deuteronomy 5:1-5, yet the readers of the “Harbinger” are told that the “testimony …
11488 The Present Truth, vol. 1 April 1850, page 70 paragraph 11
… an argument that Christ is not the Messiah, because Christians, who profess to be his followers, are Sabbath-breakers, concluding from thence, that Christ …
11489 The Present Truth, vol. 1 November 1850, page 81 paragraph 6
… this argument be good for calling the first day the Sabbath, and if the fact of its being a rest -day makes it the Sabbath, then may the Mohammedans properly call …
11490 The Present Truth, vol. 1 November 1850, page 81 paragraph 7
… the argument be good, then the Lord’s Supper may be called the Passover, and King Solomon may be called King David .
11491 The Present Truth, vol. 1 November 1850, page 82 paragraph 2
… deceptive arguments.
11492 The Advent Review, vol. 1 August 1850, page 2 paragraph 7
… the arguments which were brought to bear against our position, no allusion was made to that point; and time alone accomplished what our opponents had been …
11493 The Advent Review, vol. 1 August 1850, page 3 paragraph 1
… the arguments which were advanced against us, with a sincere desire to know the truth and be kept from error; but we must confess that the varied and multiform …
11494 The Advent Review, vol. 1 August 1850, page 4 paragraph 4
… an argument drawn from the types of the Mosiac law, which had electrified and aroused to newness of life the Advent bands throughout the land, and by which …
11495 The Advent Review, vol. 1 August 1850, page 6 paragraph 3
… the arguments used, but which did not materially effect the result. It was not until within about two weeks of the commencement of the seventh month, that we …
11496 The Advent Review, vol. 1 August 1850, page 21 paragraph 8
… their arguments at length as soon as some other matter is disposed of. The following note is all we have room to insert now.
11497 The Advent Review, vol. 1 August 1850, page 28 paragraph 4
… scriptural argument. The unlearned and unreflecting could see the natural signs, and feel the beating of the public pulse. Thousands and tens of thousands …
11498 The Advent Review, vol. 1 August 1850, page 28 paragraph 5
… scriptural argument was convincing, that the day of Atonement, the set time for cleansing the typical sanctuary, was the time, to expect the Antitype of all …
11499 The Advent Review, vol. 1 September 1850, page 37 paragraph 8
… this argument. These parts of the scene preparatory to the Second Advent, cannot have transpired “without our Father;” Matthew 10:29. If so, then the Advent cause …
11500 The Advent Review, vol. 1 September 1850, page 39 paragraph 10
… in argument. They were reputed wise and devout, yet their case was more hopeless than that of ‘publicans and harlots.’ They having rejected John and his ministry …