Search for: canright
1341 In Defense of the Faith, p. 358.5 (William Henry Branson)
… Mr. Canright? We answer: Ask anyone who has ever heard her speak or who has ever read her five large books in the Conflict of the Ages Series. Let any candid man …
1342 In Defense of the Faith, p. 360.4 (William Henry Branson)
… Mr. Canright’s book was in circulation, in which he so shamefully maligned Mrs. White, branding her as a fanatic, a deceiver, an impostor, etc., this same man attended …
1343 In Defense of the Faith, p. 361.1 (William Henry Branson)
Mr. Canright was under no obligation of any kind to be present at the funeral of Mrs. White, much less to offer any eulogy of her life or character. In view of this …
1344 In Defense of the Faith, p. 361.2 (William Henry Branson)
Mr. Canright launches a thrust against the Seventh day Adventists, and particularly against Mrs. E. G. White, because for some time after the disappointment …
1345 In Defense of the Faith, p. 361.4 (William Henry Branson)
Prof. M. L. Andreasen, general field secretary of the General Conference, contributes under date of January 17, 1933, this word confirming the statement made by B. J. Canright:
1346 In Defense of the Faith, p. 361.5 (William Henry Branson)
… Mr. Canright approached the casket. I heard the above words uttered by Mr. D. M. Canright, and testify to their correctness.”
1347 In Defense of the Faith, p. 363.2 (William Henry Branson)
… Mr. Canright brings the more serious charge that Mrs. E. G. White, whom you declare had the prophetic gift, also believed and taught for a time those same faulty …
1348 In Defense of the Faith, p. 368 (William Henry Branson)
Chapter 17 — Mr. Canright’s Remarkable Admission
1349 In Defense of the Faith, p. 368.1 (William Henry Branson)
… , Mr. Canright makes a strange admission of insincerity. He tells of the time when he was still a member of the Seventh-day Adventist Church and when he temporarily …
1350 In Defense of the Faith, p. 370.1 (William Henry Branson)
… Mr. Canright said that when he was among them there were some Seventh day Adventists who did not believe the doctrine of the Trinity, it might have been difficult …
1351 In Defense of the Faith, p. 371.3 (William Henry Branson)
… Mr. Canright was an Adventist, as there may be such individuals even today, but a denial of the doctrine of the Trinity cannot be justly charged against Seventh …
1352 In Defense of the Faith, p. 371.4 (William Henry Branson)
Another deliberate effort to confuse the issue and to create a false impression regarding the belief of Seventh day Adventists is found on pages 74 and 75 of Mr. Canright’s book. We quote him as follows:
1353 In Defense of the Faith, p. 372.1 (William Henry Branson)
… Mr. Canright is professedly writing against. True, he here uses only the terms Adventists and Adventism but he leaves the reader to believe that he is speaking …
1354 In Defense of the Faith, p. 372.2 (William Henry Branson)
… Mr. Canright knew when he wrote these words, that Seventh-day Adventists do not believe these things. Not one of these doctrines was ever held by the Seventh …
1355 In Defense of the Faith, p. 373.1 (William Henry Branson)
… Mr. Canright, but in an effort to confuse the minds of his readers he apparently gathered together all the errors he could think of, charged them against the …
1356 In Defense of the Faith, p. 373.2 (William Henry Branson)
… Mr. Canright tries to make out a case against Seventh-day Adventists because some have left their ranks. He counts up forty-seven who were once connected with …
1357 In Defense of the Faith, p. 374.1 (William Henry Branson)
… . Mr. Canright left the church in 1887. This was forty three years after the work began. At that time he managed to count up forty-seven persons who had had some …
1358 In Defense of the Faith, p. 375.1 (William Henry Branson)
… Mr. Canright’s own evaluation of these persons, as lie stated it in writing just a short while before he left the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Concerning …
1359 In Defense of the Faith, p. 375.5 (William Henry Branson)
… Mr. Canright’s leaving, there are now 10,850 evangelical laborers and as many other workers giving their full time to various other lines of the work of the …
1360 In Defense of the Faith, p. 376.1 (William Henry Branson)
One of the most serious charges made against Seventh day Adventism by Mr. Canright is, “It leads to infidelity.”— Seventh day Adventism Renounced, p. 64.