Search for: Storrs*
1 The Ellen G. White Letters and Manuscripts: Volume 1, p. 374.2 (Ellen Gould White)
… George Storrs shocked his colleagues when, within a few weeks of the disappointment of October 22, 1844, he denied that the power of the movement should be …
2 The Pocket Ellen G. White Dictionary, p. death.2 (Jud Lake & Michael W. Campbell)
… George Storrs and other Millerites who adopted the nonimmortality of the soul.
3 Messenger of the Lord, p. 184.1 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… . George Storrs wrote in 1844: “Take care that you do not seek to manufacture another church. No church can be organized by man’s invention but what it becomes …
4 Messenger of the Lord, p. 488.6 (Herbert E. Douglass)
… George Storrs, with several variations, believed that the Second Advent would usher in the millennial kingdom on earth during which time the world would …
5 Understanding Ellen White, p. 113.1 (Dr. Merlin Burt)
… death. Storrs’s ideas influenced Ellen White’s mother, Eunice Harmon, who shared them with her daughter, Ellen, who was about fifteen years old then. Ellen’s …
6 The Gift of Prophecy, p. 286.3 (Dr. Alberto Timm & Dwain Esmond)
… George Storrs. The seventh-day Sabbath concept was largely a result of the influence of Seventh Day Baptists. Ellen White accepted conditional immortality …
7 Advent Experience, p. 9.6 (George Ide Butler)
… George Storrs, did so, and within six months large numbers had become unsettled. The leaders began to look around for some new ground to stand upon. Instead …
8 The Gathering of Israel, p. 4.4 (Julia Neuffer)
… , George Storrs (the Millerite most active in teaching conditional immortality) concluded that the destruction at the Second Advent would not be complete …
9 The Gathering of Israel, p. 4.6 (Julia Neuffer)
… ). Thus Storrs was regarded as taking a position outside the ranks of Adventists. The Day-Star, August 11, 1845, 7:3. For Storrs’ statement see Bible Examiner, n.s …
10 The Gathering of Israel, p. 6.6 (Julia Neuffer)
… , 1850; [Storrs], in Bible Examiner, reprinted in Advent Harbinger, n.s. 3:77, Aug. 23, 1851; Marsh, Editorial, Advent Harbinger, n.s. 2:236, Jan. 11, 1851.
11 The Gathering of Israel, p. 7.8 (Julia Neuffer)
… Marsh. Storrs has been mentioned already. Others were J. B. Cook and Henry Grew, both of whom wrote in the Advent Harbinger. O. R. L. Crosier also advocated this view …
12 The Gathering of Israel, p. 8.5 (Julia Neuffer)
… introduced Storrs to the doctrine of conditional immortality). J. B. Cook, Letter, in Bible Advocate, 1:121-123, Oct. 24, 1846 (on his advocacy of the Sabbath, ibid., 3 …
13 The Gathering of Israel, p. 9.2 (Julia Neuffer)
… to Storrs, who promoted therein a book on British Israelism, teaching the inheritance of Palestine by the supposed British descendants of the ten tribes …
14 The Truth About The White Lie, p. 2.11 (Ellen G. White Estate & Biblical Research Institute)
… George Storrs and Josiah Litch. In this, Smith was not hypocritical. He, like other nineteenth-century writers, simply drew the line between plagiarism and …
15 W. W. Prescott and the 1911 Edition of The Great Controversy, p. 20.10 (Arthur Lacey White)
… George Storrs, one of the early Adventist writers.
20 The First Day of the Week Not the Sabbath of the Lord, p. 19.2 (John Nevins Andrews)
… from Storrs’ Six Sermons. It was written in defense of the author’s views of future punishment; but the remarks are of equal value with respect to the Sabbath …