JavaScript seems to be disabled in your browser.
You must have JavaScript enabled in your browser to utilize the functionality of this website. Click here for instructions on enabling javascript in your browser.
This reprint of the 1898 compilation of many health-related topics is amazingly up-to-date when compared with today’s medical knowledge. The compilers have not attempted to make it an exhaustive work on Ellen White’s subject matter of health, but rather to make it comprehensively representative of the principles of healthful and hygienic living, which have been set forth extensively in Mrs. White’s writings. Unnecessary repetition has been avoided as much as possible, and great care has been taken to preserve the setting and context of the thoughts expressed.
Readers will be blessed and amazed by the extent of these nuggets of healthful principles, especially considering that nothing like this was taught at the time they were given to Ellen White. If implemented in the life and taken into the heart, these principles can revolutionize your life and health — physically, as well as spiritually and mentally.
Paper, 336 pages.
Contents: I. Our Bodies Temples of the Holy Ghost II. Duty to Study the Laws of Life III. The Great Decaogue IV. Natural Law Part of the Law of God V. Blessings From Obeying Natural Law VI. The Consequence of Violating Natural Law VII. Natural Law: How Violated VIII. Health IX. Health Reform X. Vital Vigor and Energy XI. Disease and Providence XII. The Influence of Disease Upon the Mind and Moras XIII. Heredity XIV. Causes of Disease XV. Resistance Against Disease XVI. Ventilation XVII. Appetite XVIII. Diet XIX. Flesh Foods XX. Stimulants XXI. Dress XXII. Exercise XXIII. Manual Training XXIV. Hygiene XXV. The Organs of Digestion XXVI. The Lungs and Respiration XXVII. The Heart and Blood XXVIII. The Skin and Its Functions XXIX. The Brain and the Nervous System XXX. Auto-Intoxication, or Self-Poisoning XXXI. Cold XXXII. Fevers and Acute Diseases XXXIII. Moral Maladies XXXIV. Rational Remedies for Disease XXXV. Prayer for the Sick XXXVI. Drugs XXXVII. The Missionary Nurse XXXVIII. Medical Students XXXIX. The Missionary Physician XL. Medical Missionary Work XLI. Christian Help Work XLII. Lessons From the Experience of the Children of Israel