Search for: 119
1921 Ellen White’s Predictions, p. 10.3 (Robert W. Olson)
… . 118, 119.
1922 Ellen White’s Trinitarian Statements: What Did She Actually Write?, p. 20.2 (Timothy L. Poirier)
… , Letter 119, 1895.
1923 The Fannie Bolton Story, p. 119.1 (Ellen Gould White)
We have no sympathy with any spirit or any person that in any way belittles her person or her writings. We who knew her intimately for a half of a century, knew …
1924 The Fannie Bolton Story, p. 119.2 (Ellen Gould White)
We regard it as one of God’s greatest blessings to us, to have had the privilege of traveling with her and living in her home. She was one of God’s noblest characters. She finished her work nobly and well and a great reward awaits her waking.
1925 The Fannie Bolton Story, p. 119 (Ellen Gould White)
W. C. White to G. B. Starr, August 24, 1933
1926 The Fannie Bolton Story, p. 119.3 (Ellen Gould White)
I am glad for what you have said about the strange story told by Fannie Bolton in which she claimed that she saw Mrs. White eating oysters, and cheese.
1927 The Fannie Bolton Story, p. 119.4 (Ellen Gould White)
Regarding the beefsteak story, I will tell you in a few words the facts. There were about 35 of us going from Battle Creek to Oakland in 1884 in two skeleton sleeping …
1928 The Fannie Bolton Story, p. 119.5 (Ellen Gould White)
Sister White began the journey after much wearisome labor in general meeting, and on the journey she had done some writing and had spoken several times to passengers on the train who gathered into our car to hear her.
1929 The Fannie Bolton Story, p. 119.6 (Ellen Gould White)
As we approached to the border line between Nevada and California, it was found that our provisions were running low. Some of us were able to make good meals …
1930 The Fannie Bolton Story, p. 119.7 (Ellen Gould White)
We were in a country where fresh fruit was very expensive and so one morning at a station where our train had stopped for half an hour, I went out and purchased …
1931 The Fannie Bolton Story, p. 119.8 (Ellen Gould White)
For years the White family had been vegetarians, but not teetotalers. We had always reckoned that in a case of emergency, it was justifiable to eat sparingly of clean meats, and especially so if we had the conviction that the animals were healthy.
1932 The Fannie Bolton Story, p. 119.9 (Ellen Gould White)
When I bought the beefsteak, I reasoned that freshly killed ox from this cattle country, would probably be a healthy animal and that the risk of acquiring …
1933 The Fannie Bolton Story, p. 119.10 (Ellen Gould White)
When I see you, I will tell you more about the instances in which the White family partook of flesh meats on long journeys and on camp meeting expeditions.
1934 The Fannie Bolton Story, p. 119.11 (Ellen Gould White)
You will find in Sister White’s writings several instances where she says flesh meats do not appear on our table and this was true. During a number of years when on rare occasions a little meat was used, [it] was considered to be an emergency.
1935 Inspiration/Revelation: What It Is and How It Works, p. 56.10 (Roger W. Coon)
… ( Psalm 119:105 ).
1936 Seventh-day Adventism—The Spirit Behind the Church, p. 5.4 (White Estate & Biblical Researech Institute)
Francis D. Nichol, Ellen G. White and Her Critics, 1951, pp. 119-121.
1937 Seventh-day Adventism—The Spirit Behind the Church
… , pp. 119-157.
1939 Spirit of Prophecy Counsels Relating To Church-State Relationships, p. 119 (Ellen Gould White)
V—Satan’s Efforts To Destroy God’s Government—The Dragon’s Voice
1940 Spirit of Prophecy Counsels Relating To Church-State Relationships
Satan Takes the World Captive The Dragon’s Voice in America Rome and Religious Liberty