Search for: the aged years
1341 A Prophet Among You, p. 330.3 (T. Housel Jemison)
… to the printer, and in later years to do the same for letters and other communications. For some years, Elder James White was the one who gave help along this …
1342 A Prophet Among You, p. 367.3 (T. Housel Jemison)
… and the islands of the sea, Mrs. White in her old age met with the world representatives of the movement for the last time. At the close of the days of conference …
1343 A Prophet Among You, p. 437.1 (T. Housel Jemison)
… out the Bible story the remaining volumes of the Conflict of the Ages Series— Patriarchs and Prophets, Prophets and Kings, and The Acts of the Apostles —should …
1344 A Prophet Among You, p. 472.1 (T. Housel Jemison)
… of the year—it was not wise for one of her age to do so.
1345 Believe His Prophets, p. 52.1 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… the old trunk, lifted the lid, and went down to the bottom of the trunk, and sure enough, there was the envelope, a bit yellow from age, after so many years had passed …
1346 Believe His Prophets, p. 61.5 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… hundred years the different Adventist bodies—other than Seventh-day Adventists—that stemmed from the Millerite movement of the early 1840’s total less …
1347 Believe His Prophets, p. 99.2 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… seventeen years of age, through the whole seventy years of her labors. There is a continuity, a unity, and an agreement, that is most marvelous and almost miraculous …
1348 Believe His Prophets, p. 227.2 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… served the cause of God nearly fifty years after that, and at this writing is still living, well over ninety years of age.
1349 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 33.2 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… the old trunk, lifted the lid and went down to the bottom of the trunk, and sure enough there was the envelope, a bit yellow from age, for twenty-eight years had …
1350 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 59.3 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… all the way through from the very first vision, when she was seventeen years of age, through the whole seventy years of her work. There is a continuity, a unity …
1351 Divine Guidance in the Remnant of God’s Church, p. 61.1 (Denton Edward Rebok)
… the book Desire of Ages, and read to the class some of those beautiful passages from that book. The professor asked for the privilege of reading the book …
1352 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 23.3 (Francis D. Nichol)
… hundred years the different Adventist bodies—other than Seventh-day Adventists—that stemmed from the Millerite movement of the early 1840’s total less …
1353 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 24.3 (Francis D. Nichol)
… nine years old, that her plans for education had virtually to be abandoned, and her life was often despaired of. She lived to an advanced age but never became …
1354 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 30.6 (Francis D. Nichol)
… the truth. My health was so poor that I was in constant bodily suffering, and to all appearance had but a short time to live. I was only seventeen years of age, small …
1355 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 44.8 (Francis D. Nichol)
During the early years death had twice visited her home, taking her youngest son as an infant, and her oldest at the age of sixteen. Now death struck once more …
1356 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 55.2 (Francis D. Nichol)
So much for the descriptions of her public visions. But she also had night visions. Here is the way she pictures a night vision she received in 1896, when almost seventy years of age:
1357 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 75.5 (Francis D. Nichol)
… of years, which, with a full knowledge of her history from the beginning, gave me no chance to doubt her (‘divine’) attacks to be simply hysterical trances. Age itself …
1358 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 80.2 (Francis D. Nichol)
… long years” he “had every opportunity to study her case,” is correct. He was the medical director of the Battle Creek Sanitarium almost from its opening, and down …
1359 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 80.4 (Francis D. Nichol)
… to the church. He refused to accept her testimony against him, and for the same reason that some others refused to do so—the testimony cut squarely across his …
1360 Ellen G. White and Her Critics, p. 382.5 (Francis D. Nichol)
The Hygeia author observes, regarding this prevalent and often fatal malady, that probably one man in thirty, over forty years of age, “will suffer an attack of coronary thrombosis this year.”