Search for: god

19641 The Great Controversy, p. 72.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God’s dealings with men in the past, and a revelation of the responsibilities and duties of the present, but an unfolding of the perils and glories of the …

19642 The Great Controversy, p. 72.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God’s avenging wrath, many suffered on, until exhausted nature gave way, and without one ray of light or hope they sank into the tomb.

19643 The Great Controversy, p. 73.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God, and to point them to Christ as their only hope of salvation. The doctrine that good works can atone for the transgression of God’s law they held to be …

19644 The Great Controversy, p. 73.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God, and even of Christ, as stern, gloomy, and forbidding. The Saviour was represented as so far devoid of sympathy with man in his fallen state that the mediation …

19645 The Great Controversy, p. 73.3 (Ellen Gould White)

… a God of vengeance, waiting to execute justice. With quivering lip and tearful eye did he, often on bended knees, open to his brethren the precious promises …

19646 The Great Controversy, p. 74.3 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God was thus brought forth and read, sometimes to a single soul, sometimes to a little company who were longing for light and truth. Often the entire night …

19647 The Great Controversy, p. 75.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God, and it carried conviction to those who heard.

19648 The Great Controversy, p. 76.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… to God alone and would eventually destroy the supremacy of Rome.

19649 The Great Controversy, p. 76.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… against God’s people in their mountain homes. Inquisitors were put upon their track, and the scene of innocent Abel falling before the murderous Cain was …

19650 The Great Controversy, p. 76.4 (Ellen Gould White)

… worship God according to the will of the pope. For this crime every humiliation, insult, and torture that men or devils could invent was heaped upon them.

19651 The Great Controversy, p. 77.3 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God’s law, but erected a standard to suit themselves, and determined to compel all to conform to this because Rome willed it. The most horrible tragedies …

19652 The Great Controversy, p. 78.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… this God-fearing people were endured by them with a patience and constancy that honored their Redeemer. Notwithstanding the crusades against them, and …

19653 The Great Controversy, p. 79.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… , but God had not suffered His word to be wholly destroyed. Its truths were not to be forever hidden. He could as easily unchain the words of life as He could open …

19654 The Great Controversy, p. 79.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God had for ages been locked up in languages known only to the learned; but the time had come for the Scriptures to be translated and given to the people of …

19655 The Great Controversy, p. 80.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God, he had acquired the intellectual discipline of the schools, and he understood the tactics of the schoolmen. The power of his genius and the extent and …

19656 The Great Controversy, p. 80.3 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God and had found the great truth of His free grace there revealed. In their teachings they had spread a knowledge of this truth, and had led others to turn …

19657 The Great Controversy, p. 81.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God he found that which he had before sought in vain. Here he saw the plan of salvation revealed and Christ set forth as the only advocate for man. He gave himself …

19658 The Great Controversy, p. 81.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God for human tradition; he fearlessly accused the priesthood of having banished the Scriptures, and demanded that the Bible be restored to the people …

19659 The Great Controversy, p. 82.2 (Ellen Gould White)

… of God of none effect by their tradition. Thus homes were made desolate and parents were deprived of the society of their sons and daughters.

19660 The Great Controversy, p. 84.1 (Ellen Gould White)

… from God rather than from the pontiff of Rome. (See Appendix note for page 59.) Not a few were alarmed at the rapacity of the friars, whose greed seemed never to …