- Results
- Related
- Featured
- Weighted Relevancy
- Content Sequence
- Relevancy
- Earliest First
- Latest First
- Exact Match First, Root Words Second
- Exact word match
- Root word match
- EGW Collections
- All collections
- Lifetime Works (1845-1917)
- Compilations (1918-present)
- Adventist Pioneer Library
- My Bible
- Dictionary
- Reference
- Short
- Long
- Paragraph
-
1 EGW GC 574.1 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… which the pagan festival attained its position of honor in the Christian world. The first public measure enforcing Sunday observance was the law enacted …
-
2 EGW GC 587.1 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… to the desecration of the so-called “Christian sabbath,” and that the enforcement of Sunday observance would greatly improve the morals of society. This claim …
-
3 EGW GC 54.1 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… on Sunday made it the Christian Sabbath. But Scripture evidence is lacking. No such honor was given to the day by Christ or His apostles. The observance of Sunday …
-
4 EGW GC 694.8 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… Ethiopia observed the seventh-day Sabbath. The Ethiopians also kept Sunday, the first day of the week, throughout their history as a Christian people. These …
-
5 EGW GC 447.4 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… observing the Sunday are recognizing her power. In the Catholic Catechism of Christian Religion, in answer to a question as to the day to be observed in obedience …
-
6 EGW GC 449.1 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… Christians of past generations observed the Sunday, supposing that in so doing they were keeping the Bible Sabbath; and there are now true Christians in …
-
7 EGW GC 53.2 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… gather the Christian world under his banner and to exercise his power through his vicegerent, the proud pontiff who claimed to be the representative of …
-
8 EGW GC 53.1 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… if the same day was observed by both Christians and heathen, it would promote the nominal acceptance of Christianity by pagans and thus advance the power …
-
9 EGW GC 577.2 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… all Christians remember that the seventh day was consecrated by God, and hath been received and observed, not only by the Jews, but by all others who pretend …
-
10 EGW GC 52.1 (1911 The Great Controversy)
… exalt the festival observed by the heathen as “the venerable day of the sun.” This change was not at first attempted openly. In the first centuries the true Sabbath …