Search for: Joseph
14281 A Review of “Our Authorized Bible Vindicated,” by B. G. Wilkinson, p. 68.5 (Warren Eugene Howell)
[Review Sec. III, Ch. 6, p. 7] that the three verses read as they do frees the Revisers from any such charge. Moreover, the word Joseph appears only in the Alexandrian and some later secondary MSS, while the other major copies read “His father.”
14282 A Review of “Our Authorized Bible Vindicated,” by B. G. Wilkinson, p. 107.2 (Warren Eugene Howell)
… of Joseph and Mary to Egypt with the child Jesus, and their returning again to Nazareth. It is interesting to note that the Septuagint renders the verb call …
14283 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 24 (James R. Nix)
2. Joseph Bates
14284 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 24.2 (James R. Nix)
Early in 1844, Joseph Bates sold his home in Fairhaven, Massachusetts, to pay for his preaching activities, which included a trip to Maryland, a destination against which he had been warned.
14285 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 25.1 (James R. Nix)
… name Joseph Bates?” I answered, “Yes.” He said that he remembered my visiting his father’s house when he was a small boy, and informed me that his mother and family …
14286 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 26.2 (James R. Nix)
… cent. —Joseph Bates, Autobiography of Joseph Bates, 1868, pp. 277-280.
14287 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 38.2 (James R. Nix)
Joseph Bates traveled north from where he was living in Fairhaven, Massachusetts, to attend what turned out to be an extremely important Millerite camp …
14288 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 38.4 (James R. Nix)
… autumn.—Joseph Bates, Second Advent Way Marks and High Heaps, 1847, pp. 30, 31.
14289 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 49.10 (James R. Nix)
… Elder Joseph Bates, the reading of which brought in our beloved Elder James White and his wife.—Mrs. M. C. Stowell Crawford, “A Letter from a Veteran Worker,” The Watchman …
14290 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 49.12 (James R. Nix)
Once fully convicted of the seventh-day Sabbath, nothing could stop Joseph Bates from observing it or from sharing it with others. Bates came to be known in Adventist history as “The Apostle of the Sabbath.”
14291 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 50.1 (James R. Nix)
… City.—Joseph Bates, The Seventh-Day Sabbath, A Perpetual Sign, From the Beginning to the Entering into the Gates of the Holy City, According to the Commandment …
14292 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 55.2 (James R. Nix)
… 1846, Joseph Bates published his first pamphlet advocating the seventh-day Sabbath. The 48-page pamphlet, entitled “The Seventh Day Sabbath, A Perpetual Sign …
14293 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 55.3 (James R. Nix)
… with Joseph Bates from Fairhaven, Massachusetts, where they both lived, down into Maryland. See p. 14.
14294 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 56.1 (James R. Nix)
… , 1940.Joseph Bates’ first tract on the Sabbath; others think Charles H. Gurney was in error and that his father actually paid off a later tract by Joseph Bates …
14295 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 56.3 (James R. Nix)
… of Joseph Bates’ first small tract on the Sabbath. However, based on the following two sources, it seems more likely that the story actually pertained to the …
14296 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 57.1 (James R. Nix)
Elder Joseph Bates, of Fairhaven, Mass.. .. accepted the Sabbath in 1845, and at once began to preach the truth from State to State. He soon saw that a book, or even a …
14297 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 57.2 (James R. Nix)
… said, “Joseph, I haven’t flour enough to make out the baking;” and at the same time mentioned some other little articles that she needed. “How much flour do you lack …
14298 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 58.3 (James R. Nix)
… excitedly, “Joseph, just look out on the front porch. Where did that stuff come from? A drayman came here and would unload it. I told him it didn’t belong here, but …
14299 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 62.2 (James R. Nix)
… truth. —Joseph Bates, Review and Herald, January 13, 1852, p. 80.
14300 Passion, Purpose & Power, p. 79.3 (James R. Nix)
… . When Joseph Bates met them in Jackson in 1852, he remarked that all of them except “the first named” [Henry Lyon] were “professed public teachers, and feel the burden …