That is the message of these 18 readings written on the topic of salvation. The gem of the collection is an manuscript, perhaps Ellen White's most definitive statement on justification by faith, written during the theological ferment that followed that Minneapolis General Conference of Justification is wholly of grace and not procured by any works that fallen man can do.
Any works that man can render to God will be far less than nothingness. Compiled from various other works, these complete and unabridged articles give detailed counsel on the topic of education, while also providing the full context of each statement.
From the Biblical method of schooling, to home training, to the work and qualifications of teachers, this publication gives thorough guidance for anyone working with children or in the educational field. A compilation of Ellen G. White statments about Seventh-day Adventist's being part of God's remnant people led by Him until the end of time.
This is a revised and enlarged compilation from the writings of Ellen G. It has become a highly prized handbook of counsel and instruction to ministers and to all other missionary workers connected with the Seventh-day Adventist movement. Volume 5 of the Conflict of the Ages series carries the story of the controversy between God and Satan to its ultimate and glorious conclusion.
Beginning with the destruction of Jerusalem and continuing through the persecutions of Christians in the Roman Empire, the apostasy of the Dark Ages, the shining light of the Reformation, and the worldwide religious awakening of the nineteenth century, this volume traces the conflict into the future, to the Second Coming of Jesus and the glories of the earth made new. As the end draws ever closer, the vital issue of loyalty to God will become decisive. In this concluding volume, the author powerfully points out the principles involved in the impending conflict and how each person can stand firmly for God and His truth.
As you go through life, you may sense that the world is gripped in a conflict between good and evil. From what you see in the news it may look as if evil is winning. Headlines describe famine, wars, unemployment, pollution, and disease.
The media can tell you what is happening, but this book reveals why. The Great Hope also tells you what will happen next. This glimpse into the future is based on a source that has never failed in its prophecies—the Bible. The conflict between good and evil is coming to a dramatic climax that will affect every family on the planet.
But take hope. You can choose to be on the winning side. This publication was compiled to form a comprehensive collection of Ellen White's statements regarding food production and distribution as part of the evangelistic work. Emphasis is placed on the use of the health food work as a way to win souls.
The included counsels give encouragement—as well as warnings against dangers and misconceptions in the work—in order to ensure that this part of the right arm work remains in the right relation to the body of Christ. Compiled from the writings of Ellen G.
White by Dr. When she came out of vision, this world seemed dark and lonely compared with the brilliant beauty of the world to come which she had seen so vividly. And she often struggled to find the words to describe what she had been shown in vision.
This compilation gathers the choicest statements and descriptions she has given over the years about heaven—the future home of the redeemed. The life of Jesus, His methods of teaching and working, His great sacrifice and love for fallen humanity.
These are the themes which all of heaven delights to contemplate, and which bring the greatest joy to God's children. In lively language, and with deep lessons for our lives today, From Heaven With Love a condensed version of The Desire of Ages brings the reader face to face with their Saviour—the Lord of heaven, who became one of us for our redemption.
A practical guide to everyday blessings. Are you searching for life above the ordinary? Do you want true and lasting relationships, a genuine godly character, and a practical everyday faith that fills your life and the lives of those you touch with blessings? Then this powerful booklet is exactly what you need. Here you will find down-to-earth, everyday guidance that has helped thousands of Christians to live successful Christian lives.
Each chapter is a treasure chest filled with rich gems of wisdom for getting along with yourself, with others, and with God. Carry this booklet with you. Read a page or two in your free moments, and memorize some of the gems. The love and character of God has been put in question since the fall of Lucifer, who has spent millennia warring against the Lord and His faithful subjects.
The E. This booklet is a collection of 8 crucial chaptes from the book: The Great Controversy. It covers the entrance of sin into the universe, answering in a clear, convincing manner many of the questions that have puzzled the minds of men in all ages.
Its author, Ellen G. White, deals with the unseen forces of good and evil that constantly battle for the mastery of every human being's soul. A new look for an important message: In the trustees of the Ellen G. This book consists of letters and other counsel which Mrs. White gave to couples in love. It is full of thoughtful advice for all contemplating marriage. This publication includes chapters written by Ellen White regarding her early life and work.
The autobiographical portion chronicles the progress of the Advent movement in the s and s. These pages are part of a larger book containing text from other authors. In these pages Ellen White recounts, in her own words, a brief account of her childhood days, and her early Christian experience in connection with the great second advent movement of to She vividly recalls the sorrows and joys of youthful ministry in the years following the Great Disappointment.
She pictures the struggles and successes that attended the efforts of the small band of earnest souls who built up the work that would eventually become the Seventh-day Adventist Church. She goes on to tell of the extended labors of herself and her husband from their marriage until his death in The first of Mrs.
White's compilations on the colporteur work, Manual for Canvassers touches on topics such as the importance of the publishing work, the qualifications of the workers, and practical guidance in the carrying out of literature distribution.
This publication's material was reprinted in both Colporteur Evangelist and Colporteur Ministry. Ellen White wrote a great deal about health.
Much of her counsel in this book is directed to medical workers, but people not directly involved in health-care work also will find much of interest and value.
The author placed great importance on obedience to God's law as a foundation for good health. She believed that disregarding God's moral law leads to disregard for His physical laws that govern the health of body and mind.
This comprehensive view of health—one that involves body, mind, and spirit—is set forth in this book. Several generations of youth have been nourished by this uncompromising call to duty, purity, and service.
The author, who began her ministry when only 17 years of age, invites youth to examine their reading, dress, music, and social life, and discard cheap amusements that retard spiritual progress. She examines those fundamental traits of character that make for success or failure in the spiritual life, and discusses practical subjects such as home and parents, health, courtship and marriage, and how to recognize true love.
Volume 1: This collection of inspired writings deals with a wide spectrum of topics including the place of true psychology in the gospel work, as well as the dangers of its popular counterfeit. By this is expressed the importance and nobility of our God-given task as co-workers together.
Volume 2: What is the true psychology in the gospel work, as well as the dangers of its popular counterfeit? This and other important wide-ranging topics are covered in this volume. Counsels on education, the importance of home influences, as well as the science behind mental growth and cultivation is provided. Many things contribute to good health—cheerfulness, fresh air, exercise, diet, and positive relationships with other people, to name a few. Crucial also is a personal relationship with the Creator who gave us life and everything we need for health and happiness.
In this book Ellen White deals with sickness of the soul and the healing balm to be found by trusting God for all things. Written in simple, beautiful language, Ministry of Healing will point you to a life full of joy and gladness—a life in touch with the Source of healing power. This volume is a call to action—a plea for believers to work for their Savior by bringing the gospel to the millions of people in the cities of the world.
Topics include the challenges of ministering in the city, strategies, methods, selecting and training workers, and lessons from Scripture. What does true conversion mean? A New Life focuses on the revival and reformation process, answering questions about the theme. The text is drawn from various articles, and compiled into a small handbook. From the rich treasury of Ellen White's writings, the compilers of this book have brought together a selection of inspired counsels that apply most directly to the life and work of the local church pastor.
Members of the General Conference Ministerial Association in conjunction with The White Estate are pleased to make this compilation available. Here the local pastor will find instruction on the work of ministry, relationships, evangelism and church growth, lay training, worship and special services, pastoral care and nurture, organization and administration.
An invaluable resource for every Adventist pastor. Patriarchs and Prophets is the first volume in the Conflict of the Ages series. It covers the sweeping panorama of human history from the creation of Earth to the reign of Israel's King David. With unusual insights, the author describes the role of our planet in the cosmic conflict between right and wrong, truth and error. She describes the tragic rebellion that took place in heaven many thousands of years ago and makes plain that this ongoing conflict between Satan and God affects each person who lives on Earth.
Patriarchs and Prophets shows how this conflict worked itself out in the lives of men and women in Old Testament times. It answers such questions as, Where did we come from? Where are we going? Did God send a prophet? Printer-friendly Page. White Overview Page For the sake of further investigation , we have made available on this site a number of books, some by Ellen G. These books are arranged in the following three categories: Featured Books Ellen G.
Site published by AdventWeb. Click here if you have a question on Ellen White or the Bible. White to fit her own thought and chapter outline. Whereas Conybeare and Howson give little spiritual application of and commentary on the events Paul encountered, White emphasizes the spiritual lessons to be gained from these events. In these spiritual applications she borrows little from the earlier authors.
When in Ellen White published an expanded edition of Sketches from the Life of Paul and included its content in Acts of the Apostles , she used even less material from Conybeare and Howson and added more of her own theological and practical commentary.
In this case one critic has argued that she did not simply take fine language and historical information from other authors, but ideas as well Spectrum , Autumn , However, a careful comparison between White and Stowe reveals a different perspective. Stowe at a time prior to the writing of this manuscript. Indeed, some of these references antedate any possible awareness on her part of Dr.
Calvin E. Stowe Origins and History of the Books of the Bible Ellen G. White Manuscript 24, It is not the words of the Bible that were inspired , it is not the thoughts of the Bible that were inspired; it is the men who wrote the Bible that were inspired. Inspiration generally is a purifying and an elevation, and an intensification of the human intellect subjectively, rather than an objective suggestion and communication; though suggestion and communication are not excluded.
The Divine mind is , as it were, so diffused through the human, and the human mind is so interpenetrated with the Divine, that for the time being the utterances of the man are the word of God. It is not the words of the Bible that are inspired, but the men that were inspired. Assigning levels of literary dependency to this example is difficult because although the words are the same, the theological thought is not.
What is striking in this example are Stowe's words and thoughts she left out. Stowe advocated a theory of inspiration in which the subjective elements of the prophet are predominant and in which inspiration is an encounter between the divine and the human.
There is no actual transmission of objective information between God and the prophet. In her explanation of the process of inspiration there is an actual objective transmission of information between God and the prophet.
Although much of Ellen White's wording is taken from Stowe, the two views are very different. Yet she did not mindlessly copy from Stowe but carefully weighed the theological concepts and understood the difference she wished to emphasize in her own understanding of the process of inspiration. A third example is taken from her writings on the human nature of Christ, a topic that has generated much discussion in Adventism.
While living in Australia in the s, Ellen White wrote extensively on the life of Christ. Shaw, Octavius Winslow The Glory of the Redeemer Ellen White Manuscript 57, It surely requires not an argument to show that, as God, he could not be tempted , but that, as man, he could. His inferior nature was finite and created; it was not angelic, it was human. It was perfectly identical with our own ,— its entire exemption from all taint of sin , only except ed.
A human body and a human mind were his, with all their essential and peculiar properties. He breathed our air , trod our earth , at our food. The higher attributes of our being were his also. In addition, God did not see fit even to preserve the messages of some prophets who had written out their messages see, for example, 1 Chron. Jeremiah tells us that when he re-wrote his message for king Jehoiakim he "added besides unto them many like words" Jer.
In responding to the charge of suppression in , Ellen White wrote, "So far from desiring to withhold anything that I have ever published, I would feel great satisfaction in giving to the public every line of my writings that has ever been printed" Selected Messages, Such a statement would hardly be made by one whose motivation for changes in her writings was to suppress embarrassing statements.
An examination of Ellen White's alleged "suppressions" is found in F. Nichol's Ellen G. White and Her Critics, pp.
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