Search for: comfort

17041 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 228.3 (Sylvester Bliss)

… many comforters, only they do not come to see me, as Job’s did.” Two weeks later, he was again much more feeble, and his physicians prohibited visitors from seeing …

17042 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 244.4 (Sylvester Bliss)

… but comfortable dwelling-place, equally free from the marks of wasteful neglect or extravagant expenditure, I saw, never as I saw before, the folly and malignity …

17043 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 255.2 (Sylvester Bliss)

… sickness, comforts me in tribulation, and gives me patience to endure the scoffs and taunts of the selfish and ungodly. My faith and confidence in God’s word …

17044 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 272.2 (Sylvester Bliss)

… are comforted and faith strengthened that the seventh month begins to-morrow. We have two meetings to-day, and we expect the Spirit of God to be with us......Let us …

17045 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 276.2 (Sylvester Bliss)

… needed comforts. The next morning, their faith in Georgas’ vision having failed, all but about a dozen returned to the city. A few days later the others returned …

17046 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 277.4 (Sylvester Bliss)

… has comforted me. I have now much more evidence that I do believe in God’s word. My mind is perfectly calm, and my hope in the coming of Christ is as strong as ever …

17047 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 277.6 (Sylvester Bliss)

… to comfort one another with the words of Christ’s coming, to strengthen those who are weak among us, to establish the wavering, and to raise up the bowed down …

17048 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 285.2 (Sylvester Bliss)

… may comfort and console each other in our trials, be ourselves established in the present truth, and our minds be stirred up to remember that our Judge standeth …

17049 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 310.2 (Sylvester Bliss)

… been comforted, and our brotherly love established, for fables? We ought to be careful lest we grieve the Holy Spirit. How did we receive this doctrine at first …

17050 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 349.5 (Sylvester Bliss)

… was comfortably furnished with seats, and accommodated very respectable congregations, composed of the more intelligent and pious portion of the community …

17051 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 355.4 (Sylvester Bliss)

… to comfort the saints with the words of his coming, and to stir them up to a remembrance of the things which Christ, the prophets, and apostles, have spoken concerning …

17052 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 360.5 (Sylvester Bliss)

He, no more than others, placed any reliance on dreams; yet the comfort he derived from one, about the middle of November, caused him afterwards to write it out for publication. In a letter, written three weeks subsequently, he thus relates it:

17053 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 361.1 (Sylvester Bliss)

… received comfort and consolation from the following, which may pass for

17054 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 374.4 (Sylvester Bliss)

… , they comforted them and departed,’ Acts 16:40. He was drawn, in his easy-chair, from his room to the kitchen, where he remained till the close of the services. He was …

17055 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 376.4 (Sylvester Bliss)

… quite comfortable. On entering his room, he immediately recognized my voice, and, on approaching his bed-side, he was able to distinguish my features, though …

17056 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 377.5 (Sylvester Bliss)

… greatly comforted in hearing the hymn by Dr. Watts -

17057 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 392.1 (Sylvester Bliss)

… peace, comfort, consolation, and reconciliation, in this duty? Or do we pray to be seen of men, or to stop the gnawings of a guilty conscience? Or do we neglect this …

17058 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 416.3 (Sylvester Bliss)

… ; No comfort near, nor desolation past. In vain I spread my hands; for there is none To comfort me or bring my children home. The Lord commands; in terror I am bound …

17059 Memoirs of William Miller, p. 417.1 (Sylvester Bliss)

Abroad the sword, at home is naught but death, I sigh, a rebel, with my every breath. There’s none to comfort, though they hear me sigh “The Lord has done it all,” they gladly cry.

17060 Refutation of Forty-Four So-Called Objections Against the Ancient Sabbath, p. 5.5 (Daniel T. Bourdeau)

… and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope” ( Romans 15:4 ); 10. The Holy Scriptures (which Timothy had known from a child) “are able to make thee wise unto salvation …