Search for: milk
1341 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 383.4 (Francis D. Nichol)
… of milk and eggs should be wholly discarded. There are poor families whose diet consists largely of bread and milk. They have little fruit, and cannot afford …
1342 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 383.5 (Francis D. Nichol)
… of milk or butter. Tell them that the time will soon come when there will be no safety in using eggs, milk, cream, or butter, because disease in animals is increasing …
1343 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 384.3 (Francis D. Nichol)
… from milk, eggs, and butter, have failed to supply the system with proper nourishment, and as a consequence have become weak and unable to work. Thus health reform …
1344 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 384.4 (Francis D. Nichol)
… as milk and cream and eggs; but it is not necessary to bring upon ourselves perplexity by premature and extreme restrictions. Wait until the circumstances …
1345 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 385.1 (Francis D. Nichol)
… , or milk, or cream. You must use no butter in the preparation of food.’ The gospel must be preached to the poor, but the time has not yet come to prescribe the strictest …
1346 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 386 (Francis D. Nichol)
… good milk and fruit can be obtained, there is rarely any excuse for eating animal food; it is not necessary to take the life of any of God’s creatures to supply …
1347 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 386.2 (Francis D. Nichol)
… good milk.
1348 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 389.4 (Francis D. Nichol)
… good milk, fruit, and bread. I have already consecrated my table. I have freed it from all flesh meats. It is better for physical and mental soundness to refrain …
1349 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 393.5 (Francis D. Nichol)
… about milk. They declared that quite apart from its being a possible carrier of disease, milk was essentially a bad food for any but small children and infants …
1350 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 394.1 (Francis D. Nichol)
… that milk is essentially a bad food for any but small children and infants? What if she had declared that salt is a poison to the body and ought not to be used …
1351 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 394.3 (Francis D. Nichol)
… discarding milk, sugar, and salt. The position to entirely discontinue the use of these things may be right in its order; but the time has not come to take a general …
1352 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 395.1 (Francis D. Nichol)
… “discarding milk, sugar, and salt.” It would be safe to say that he rather represented the general sentiment of the reforming doctors. The only dogmatic speaking …
1353 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 451.4 (Francis D. Nichol)
… , 79 Milk Street, Boston.” He also says that this work was selected “one or two years after Mother’s book was issued.” It was selected before, not after—a very important …
1354 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 668.2 (Francis D. Nichol)
… with milk and honey, and to give us possession; but you have done no such thing. Here you have led us round and round for twenty years. We are no nearer the promised …
1355 Ellen G. White — Messenger to the Remnant, p. 99.5 (Arthur Lacey White)
… no milk for Teresa [Evidently Brother Cramer’s daughter.]. She cries. Oh that we may be as earnest for the bread of life as she is for temporal food. She will not …
1356 Ellen G. White — Messenger to the Remnant, p. 119.14 (Arthur Lacey White)
… little milk from them failed. In her fainting condition she “thought of the traveler perishing in the desert.” “Cool streams of water,” she said, “seemed to lie directly …
1357 Messenger of the Lord, p. 74.6 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… of milk per day for herself and Henry. Then she had to eliminate the milk supply for three days so that she could buy a piece of cloth to make Henry a simple garment …
1358 Messenger of the Lord, p. 96.9 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… use milk, while others thrive on it. Some persons cannot digest peas and beans; others find them wholesome. For some the coarser grain preparations are good …
1359 Messenger of the Lord, p. 157.1 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… the milk, salt, and sugar question now, as the pork question in 1858.” Ibid.
1360 Messenger of the Lord, p. 177.1 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… with milk and not with solid food; for until now you were not able to receive it, and even now you are still not able” ( 1 Corinthians 3:2 ).