"that he may warn them, lest they also come into this place of torment"
It is impossible to mess that up.
"V. Unitarian John Biddle— Persecuted for Conditionalist Beliefs In 1655 the spirit of persecution again broke forth, resulting in unlawful imprisonment of men in the grim confines of old Newgate p rison, and banishment for conscience’ sake to the Isle of Scilly for three years for holding, among other “heresies,” that in death “ the soul of man dyeth or sleepeth when the body is dead.
...
In 1647 he issued a pamphlet concerning the deity of the
H o ly Spirit. Complaint was lodged against him, and Biddle
was summoned before Parliament for an accounting. After a
protracted trial he was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment.
W hile under duress he wrote C on fession o f F aith C on cern in g
th e H o ly T rin ity . After the death of Charles I, Biddle was
released and he founded the Unitarian Society. But under
Crom well he was twice imprisoned thereafter, and his books
were publicly burned.
...
2 . N u t r i t i o n a l C o u n s e l s V e r i f i e d b y S c i e n t i f i c A dv a n c e s .— About the same time, a well-known authority in the
field of nutritional research, Dr. Clive M. McCay, for the past
twenty-three years professor of nutrition, Cornell University,
originally gave an address on April 9, 1958, before the Men’s
Club of the Ithaca (New York) Unitarian Church, titled, “An
Unusual Nineteenth-Century Woman, Mrs. E. G. W hite.” It
was then put into the form of three periodical articles published in February, 1959. The closing sentence of Dr. McCay’s
significant summary in his closing article reads:
“In spite of the fact that the works of Mrs. W hite were w ritten long
before the advent o f m odem scientific n u tritio n , no better over-all guide
is available today.” 21
3 . B e t t e r H e a l t h W o u l d R e s u l t F r o m T e a c h in g s"
https://documents.adventistarchives.org/Books/CFOOF1965-V02.pdf