Search for: James White

8381 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 190.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

James White, though elected that spring to the presidency of the General Conference, was too ill to do much promotion work. John N. Loughborough, then president …

8382 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 193.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… of James White and other parents, start a private school. This developed until it was taken under the wing of the General Conference, and the first building …

8383 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 194.4 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… Creek. James White had been ill for sixteen months. Stricken down by paralysis in August of 1865, he had, after a month of unavailing home treatments, been taken …

8384 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 196.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… , with James White presiding at least in the beginning over the committee. For he recovered, with strenuous labor on the part of his wife, who gave him daily water …

8385 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 197.2 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… by James and Ellen White and Uriah Smith. The subject of camp meetings was introduced. At first Elder White’s idea seemed to be a general camp meeting for the …

8386 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 197.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… and James White in The Review and Herald, July 14, 1868, pp. 56, 57

8387 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 199.4 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

Some three hundred people were camped on the ground, but the attendance at its height was over two thousand. The speakers were eleven in number, chief of whom were James and Ellen White, Joseph Bates, J. N. Andrews, and J. H. Waggoner.

8388 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 200.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… how James White gathered the children together and talked with them, and gave them each a small book, titled, from its first story, Little Will. Clara, her sister …

8389 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 200.3 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… son James, Ruel’s father, who was the second church elder. The faith has been kept in the family of Root. How well I remember, from my Michigan boyhood, the benevolent …

8390 Footprints of the Pioneers, p. 205.1 (Arthur Whitefield Spalding)

… of. James and Ellen White often visited them, and once when he was sick they brought him up in a democrat wagon on a bed, and he spent three months with them. “I was …

8391 The Story of our Health Message, p. 8.1 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

… of James and Ellen White, and of other leaders in the development of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, have been indispensable in the preparation of this …

8392 The Story of our Health Message, p. 51.1 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

… gospel.”—James White, The Early Life and Later Experience and Labors of Elder Joseph Bates, 16. Battle Creek, Michigan: 1878.

8393 The Story of our Health Message, p. 58.2 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

… class.” (James White, The Early Life and Later Experience and Labors of Elder Joseph Bates, 143 .)

8394 The Story of our Health Message, p. 58.3 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

… with James and Ellen White in proclaiming this and other fundamental doctrines now held by Seventh-day Adventists. He was uncompromising in urging the …

8395 The Story of our Health Message, p. 62.2 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

… Elder James White, “there were trials, and these trials generally arose in consequence of a disposition to draw off from the great truths connected with the …

8396 The Story of our Health Message, p. 62.3 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

… Elder James White himself, not yet having been impressed with the Scriptural reasons against the use of swine’s flesh, took issue with some who, as he believed …

8397 The Story of our Health Message, p. 64.2 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

… Elder James White so regarded it, for, referring to the foregoing counsel, he later wrote:

8398 The Story of our Health Message, p. 64.4 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

… Elder James White had not progressed in the reform as far as Elder Bates, nevertheless he was able to say of himself at the age of twenty:

8399 The Story of our Health Message, p. 66.5 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

As time went on, the objections to tobacco were stated more positively. This is indicated in the following statement, written by Elder James White regarding some who pleaded poverty as a reason for not helping to sustain the Review and Herald:

8400 The Story of our Health Message, p. 68.3 (Dores Eugene Robinson)

… . Elder James White, in June, 1856, estimated that there were probably “no less than one thousand families who have left (or should immediately leave) the use of …