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/legacy/issues-voting-html/
James White, as a Review editor, wrote: "The political excitement of 1860 will probably run as high as it has for many years, and we would warn our brethren not to be drawn into it. We are not prepared to
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/legacy/cdrom-bib_com-asp/
James White. 1851. 64 pp. [ExV] Sketches From the Life of Paul. 1883. Battle Creek, MI: Review and Herald, 1883, 1974 facsimile. 334 pp. [LP] A Solemn Appeal. 1870. Battle Creek, MI: Seventh-day Adventist Publishing Association, 1870. 272 pp. [SA]
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/legacy/issues-egw-tithe-htm/
James White and Loughborough perpetuated this misapplication in print. All three were very close to Mrs. White, and all three misinterpreted an important facet of this vision! Closeness to a prophet does not guarantee correctness. W. C. White, A. G.
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/legacy/issues-docdev-html/
James White asked J. N. Andrews to study the subject and to present his finding to the others. His conclusion from Bible study was that the Sabbath begins at sunset. Bates and Ellen White still doubted. A vision was then
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/legacy/sop-2010-hymns-asp/
James Edson White, the third son of James and Ellen G. White. We do not know how Edson White obtained this song, for most of Fannie Crosby's prolific output was controlled by the publisher Bigelow and Main in Chicago. This
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/resources/centennial/estate-2015plans/
the White Estate website all of James White’s letters. (We will do our best to meet this expected deadline to release these letters on ellenwhite.org.) On November 26, 2015, on the anniversary of Ellen White’s birthday, making available for free
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/legacy/issues-video-html/
James White (not Ellen G. White alone). Resources: Seventh-day Adventist Encyclopedia, vol. 10, 1996 ed., p. 170; vol. 11, pp. 873, 890. 2. Seventh-day Adventists depend on Ellen G. White for their teachings. She is "the last word on doctrine."
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/about/issues/psychobiography/
James White and suggests that she borrowed (and even “attributed to God”) what James White simply reprinted from another properly identified author (94, 342 [n. 62]).[36] Surprising as it may sound, Daily has no difficulty in making Ellen White to
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/legacy/guides-cdf-html/
James White, husband of Ellen G. White and a church administrator, refers to this in his statement, "The Spirit of Prophecy and the Cause of Reform," which appears in this pamphlet on pages 50 to 52, Appendix A. Eating habits
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/legacy/sop-2012-hymns-asp/
James Edson White, the second son of James and Ellen G. White.) The hymn was named in honor of Eliza H. Morton, a teacher at Battle Creek College, where Barnes attended in 1881. He was also a teacher of music