J. N. Andrews 
        The doctrine of the Trinity which was established in the church by 
          the council of Nice, A. D. 325. This doctrine destroys the personality 
          of God, and his Son Jesus Christ our Lord. The infamous, measures by 
          which it was forced upon the church which appear upon the pages of ecclesiastical 
          history might well cause every believer in that doctrine to blush. --J. 
          N. Andrews, March 6, 1855, Review & Herald, vol. 6, no. 24, page 
          185. 
         
        And as to the Son of God, he would be excluded also, for 
          he had God for his Father, and did, at some point in the eternity of 
          the past, have beginning of days. So that if we use Pauls 
          language in an absolute sense, it would be impossible to find but one 
          being in the universe, and that is God the Father, who is without father, 
          or mother, or descent, or beginning of days, or end of life. --J. N. 
          Andrews, September 7, 1869, Review & Herald, also found in the January 
          4, 1881 edition of Review & Herald. 
         This is exactly the case of Melchisedec. He is introduced in Genesis 
          without record of his parentage, the Holy Spirit having purposely omitted 
          that matter. He is said by Paul to have no beginning of days, nor end 
          of life. This does not mean absolutely that there was no beginning of 
          existence with him, for it is only true of one 
          being in the universe, viz., God the Father. But the evident 
          meaning of the apostle is this: that no record of his birth or of his 
          death appears in the history which is given us of him. He appears without 
          any intimation given us of his origin; and the story of this priest 
          of the Most High ends without any record of his death. --Ibid. 
          
         
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