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41 EGW 1BIO 86.7 (1985 Ellen G. White: The Early Years: 1827-1862 (vol. 1))
Bennett claimed that the attainment of true holiness carried the mind above all earthly thoughts, but still, observed Ellen White, “he sat at the table and ate temporal food.”— Ibid.
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42 EGW 1BIO 91.3 (1985 Ellen G. White: The Early Years: 1827-1862 (vol. 1))
This experience, apparently in her own home in Portland, Maine, in the late spring or early summer in 1845, marks a significant turn in Ellen's experience, for she observed as she related it:
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43 EGW 1BIO 116.4 (1985 Ellen G. White: The Early Years: 1827-1862 (vol. 1))
For a few weeks prior to this trip to Massachusetts, James and Ellen had been observing the seventh day of the week as the Sabbath. Of this she wrote:
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44 EGW 1BIO 303.5 (1985 Ellen G. White: The Early Years: 1827-1862 (vol. 1))
Ellen White was totally unconscious while in vision; she knew nothing of the circumstances observed by others. Later she wrote of why the visions were thus given.
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45 EGW 1BIO 413.3 (1985 Ellen G. White: The Early Years: 1827-1862 (vol. 1))
As evangelists labored in Iowa, Ohio, and Wisconsin, they held their meetings in courthouses, often in churches when not closed to them, and in private homes. While on this tour White observed:
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46 EGW 3BIO 478.3 (1984 Ellen G. White: The Lonely Years: 1876-1891 (vol. 3))
A. T. Robinson, who had been in Salamanca with Ellen White on November 3, made an observation on that Sabbath meeting, relative to a point that had particular significance to him:
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47 EGW 4BIO 80.2 (1983 Ellen G. White: The Australian Years: 1891-1900 (vol. 4))
Our camp meeting in Napier was excellent from the commencement to the close. Several decided to observe the Sabbath for the first time, and some who had left the church came back.
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48 EGW 4BIO 110.3 (1983 Ellen G. White: The Australian Years: 1891-1900 (vol. 4))
As the camp meeting opened, Ellen White observed that Mrs. Brown, of Long Point, only twenty miles distant, was not there. She hastened off a note to her:
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49 EGW 6BIO (1982 Ellen G. White: The Later Elmshaven Years: 1905-1915 (vol. 6))
“Go and bear your testimony, teaching them to observe all things I have commanded you, and ‘lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world.’”— Manuscript 154, 1907 .
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50 EGW 6BIO 383.5 (1982 Ellen G. White: The Later Elmshaven Years: 1905-1915 (vol. 6))
You will observe that this chapter is made up of three parts: first, a broad statement on general principles of deportment. This was drawn from Testimonies for the Church, volume 4.
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