Sermon at Santa Rosa, California
Sabbath, March 7, 1885
Text: Matthew 7:22-28
Here are brought before us two classes--the
hearer and the doer. There is one that hears and does not; there
is one that hears and does. This is he that not only hears but
is a doer of the Word of the Lord: and this is the class that
is building on the Rock. We want to be among the class that is
riveted to the eternal Rock, and not of that class that is building
upon the sand. For in these two classes of builders brought to
view here, the one is laying his foundation in the sand, the
other on the rocks. And the question comes home to us, How are
we building?
How we are building is of great consequence.
We want to know that the foundation is deep, so that the floods
shall not move us. Our salvation cost something; it cost us the
blood of the Son of God. While everything has been done that
can be done to bring us into right relation with God, we want
to think much of every privilege brought to us, and not to be
always questioning God's dealings with us, whether this is right
or that is right; but pursue a course that will stand the test
of His law, a test that shall work out for us an eternal weight
of glory.
God demands of us that we build a character
that will stand that close test of the judgment. We will not
have His protection in the time when the flood comes, if at that time it is found that we have
wasted the hours of probation granted us now to build characters
for eternity. For the character which we now build is not only
for time, but for eternity. Those that are set forth in this
parable as building on the sand are they that feel that they
are all right. They come right up before the Lord and say, I
have done this, I have done that. "Many will say unto me
in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name?
and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many
wonderful works?" But this goes for nothing to the Lord.
"Then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart
from me, ye that work iniquity." (See Matt.
7:22-23)
What is iniquity? Sin. And what is sin?
Sin, says the beloved John, is the transgression of the law.
Here is a class that is transgressing the law of God, and at
the same time they come to Him boasting of what they have done,
expecting His favor. And it is this class that is here represented
as building on the sand. They have erected a standard of their
own.
What is a perfect standard of character?
The only standard ever given to man is the law of God, His holy
commandments. If we have been building upon this rock, it will
stand the test. If we have been erecting a standard of our own,
and claim by that standard that we are perfect, and that we have
reached perfect righteousness and holiness, we shall know in
the day of God. No one will claim that they are perfect and holy
if they tremble before the exalted standard of God. Is it safe
to do this and cast aside the immutable law of God and then to
claim to be holy?
Here is a mirror into which we are to look,
and search out every defect of character. But suppose that you
look into this mirror and see many defects
in your character, and then go away and say, "I am righteous,"
will you be righteous? In your own eyes you will be righteous
and holy. But how will it be at the bar of God? God has given
us a rule, and we are to comply with its requirements and if
we dare to do otherwise, to trample this under our feet, and
then stand up before God and say, "I am holy, I am holy,"
we shall be lost in the great day of accounts.
What if we were to go out into the streets
and soil our clothes with mud, and then come into the house and,
beholding our filthy garments as we stand before the glass, we
should say to the mirror, "Cleanse me from my filth,"
would it cleanse us from our filth? That is not the office of
the looking glass. All that it can do is to reveal that our garments
are defiled; it cannot take the defilement away.
So it is with the law of God. It points
out the defects of character. It condemns us as sinners, but
it offers no pardon to the transgressor. It cannot save him from
his sins. But God has made a provision. Says John, "If any
man sin we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous," So we come to Him and there we find the character
of Jesus, and the righteousness of His character saves the transgressor--if
we have done on our part all that we could.
And yet while He saves the transgressor,
He does not do away with the law of God, but He exalts the law.
He exalts the law because it is the detector of sin. And it is
Christ's cleansing blood that takes away our sins when we come
to Him with contrition of soul seeking His pardon. He imputes
His righteousness; He takes the guilt upon Himself.
Now, suppose that someone shall say, "Jesus
has pardoned me and I have no need of the law any further. I
will no longer live in obedience to the law." The question
may be asked, "Shall we continue to sin that grace may abound"?
No. If one should steal the money out of my purse, and then come,
and confessing the crime, ask me to forgive him, and I shall
pardon him, and then he go and do the same thing again, does
not this show that there is no change in his life? So it is with
those who have asked God to forgive them and then gone right
on transgressing His law. They say, "Lord, Lord," but
He says, "Depart from Me." While I freely pardoned
you, you were doing the same thing again. Your very course was
leading others in the way of the transgressor. For this reason
they were called the workers of iniquity. This very course of
action was the means of leading others astray.
Christ offers a prayer to the Father, and
He uses these words in this prayer, "Sanctify them through
thy truth: thy word is truth" (John
17:17). I have sent them into the world as thou hast sent
Me into the world, even so have I sent them into the world. And
for their sakes I sanctify Myself, that they also might be sanctified
through the truth. (See John
17:17-19.) Mark these words, "I sanctify Myself."
Thus He observes a life of perfect obedience, for He is the perfect
pattern. Then He goes on and says, "That they may be sanctified"--by
what? Through emotion? through feeling? No. Through the truth.
We cannot trust to feeling; we must know the truth.
Now, here is Christ praying to His Father
that He will sanctify His followers through the truth. Then there
is a truth that sanctifies, that has a sanctifying power upon
the believer. And it becomes every one of us in this congregation
to inquire what is the truth.
If we are to believe the truth and be sanctified
by the truth, then we must search the Scriptures that we may
know what is the truth. If we do this, we shall not build upon
a false foundation. But if we do not, we shall find at last that
we have made a great mistake and laid our foundation in the sand,
to be swept away in the time of storm and tempest. I want eternal
life if it takes out the right eye and if it takes off the right
arm. The question with me is, am I right with God? Am I serving
Him in humility and meekness of soul?
We are right amid the trials that shall
try every soul of men that dwelleth upon the face of the earth.
We may know what is the truth, and we may know what is error.
We may know that we are laying our souls upon the foundation;
we may know that we are not leading souls away from the truth.
God help us that we may every one of us make sure of eternal
life.
And here is another Scripture. [Deuteronomy
13:1-5 quoted.] Here the commandments are set before them
as a test of character. Said Christ, "I have kept My Father's
commandments." And He is our pattern in all things. Now
do we do the commandments from the heart? Are we studying to
carry out in our lives the principle of the Sabbath commandment
which God has put right in the bosom of His law?
We may go to the heathen and say to them
that we love the truth and serve the true God; and they will
tell you that they worship the true and living God. We have no
other way to tell who the true and living God is, only as we
turn to this commandment. That God who made the lofty trees and
every thing that is lovely and beautiful under the heavens, He
that weighs the hills in the balances--that God is the true and
living God; He created
the whole universe. And these commandments
tell us who the true God is. If Satan can get this fourth commandment
out of the Decalogue, then you will not be able to tell who the
true and living God is.
Well, who is the true God? The God that
created everything that is beautiful in nature. We are to look
up through nature to nature's God. There we are to see the true
God, the Maker of the heavens and the earth. The first four of
these commandments show our duty to God, and the last six to
our fellow men. We cannot break one of these first four and be
in favor with God. Neither can we break one of the last six and
be in favor with God. These we must urge upon the people.
Here are the words of David, "It is
time for Thee, Lord, to work: for they have made void thy law"
(Ps.
119:126). David refers to the last days, the very time when
we are to know and be sanctified by the truth. We must cling
to the truth. We must not let go the truth for friend or foe.
There is a time coming when there will be great tribulation,
such as never was or ever will be. Men will come claiming to
be Christ. And here is a class that say, "I am sinless,
I am holy." I have never heard one claim that who was not
a sinner. They are not doers of the Word.
One man came to Oakland a short time ago,
who at his own home was known to be a dishonest man. Here he
falls into the hands of the holiness people, and now he is holy,
he is sinless. He goes on step-by-step in this delusion until
he claims to be a sinless man. Now for this class we have to
be prepared; we must know what spirit they are of. There are
some of these people that are deceived by these workers of iniquity.
They accept the Lord, and they accept this holiness doctrine,
with the Lord; but they are not the people that have power with
God.
John saw the temple of God opened in heaven,
and in that temple he saw the ark of His testimony. Says John,
"Here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the
faith of Jesus" (Rev.
14:12). The path of true obedience is found in the commandments
of God. But Satan is going about as a roaring lion, seeking whom
he may devour. He does not always appear like a lion; he has
the power of clothing himself like a lamb, and he has a soft
and a tender voice. And how shall we meet him? shall we let him
come in and take the control of our hearts? shall we let him
have the charge of our minds and lives? We cannot afford it.
Now here are those that come to us boasting
that they are holy. There was one that claimed this in the city
of Oswego. He was holding a revival meeting there. He worked
so hard that he bled at the lungs, and they thought he would
die. Yet while he was thus at work, and boasting of his holiness,
the officers of the law were after him for stealing. While he
was preaching, his wife saw the officer coming. She slipped out,
and digging a little hole in the snow, buried the money and then
came into the house. But she was seen to do this, and while they
were protesting their innocence, here comes the officer into
the room with the bag of money in his hands. Now, we meet this
class everywhere we go.
There was a man, perhaps you know him.
He claimed to be holy. "The idea of repentance," said
he, "is not in the Bible." "If," said he,
"a man comes to me and says that he believes in Jesus, I
take him right into the church, whether he is baptized or not;
I have done so with a good many." "And," said
he, "I have not committed a sin in six years." "There
are some on this boat," he said, "that believe that
we are sanctified by keeping the law. There is a woman on this
boat by the name of White that teaches this."
I heard this, and I stepped up to him and
said, "Elder Brown, you hold right on. I cannot permit that
statement to go. Mrs. White has never said such a thing in any
of her writings, nor has she ever spoken such a thing, for we
do not believe that the law sanctifies anyone. We believe that
we must keep that law or we will not be saved in the kingdom
of heaven. The transgressor cannot be saved in the kingdom of
glory. It is not the law that sanctifies anyone, nor saves us;
that law stands and cries out, Repent that your sins may be blotted
out. And then the sinner goes to Jesus, and as the sinner promises
that he will obey the requirements of the law, he blots out their
guilty stains and sets them free, and gives them power with God."
John saw a company standing around the
throne of God, and the angel asked him, Who are these in white
robes? He answered, thou knowest. And the angel said, "These
are they who have washed their robes, and made them white in
the blood of the Lamb." (See Rev.
7:13-14). There is a fountain in which we may wash from every
stain of impurity. And says the angel, "He shall lead them
to fountains of living waters, and shall wipe away all tears
from their eyes." (See
v. 17.) This will be the happy privilege of those that have
kept the commandments of God in the earth.
Men will arise saying, Here is Christ,
here, here, here; but is He there? While they are trampling the
commandments under their feet, Christ says, "Whosoever shall
break one of these least commandments, (MacNight) you shall be
of no esteem in the reign of heaven. Not as long as the heavens
remain, shall one jot or one tittle pass." And one said
to me, why do you talk so much about the law, why not talk more
about Jesus? We honor both
the Father and the Son when we talk about
the law. The Father gave us the law, and the Son died to magnify
it and make it honorable.
But, says John, in speaking of the deceiver
that doeth great wonders, He shall make an image to the beast,
and shall cause all to receive his mark. (See Rev.
13:14-16.) Will you please consider this matter? Search the
Scriptures and see. There is a wonder-working power to appear,
and it will be when men are claiming sanctification, and holiness,
lifting themselves up higher and higher and boasting of themselves.
Look at Moses and the prophets; look at
Daniel and Joseph and Elijah. Look at these men and find one
sentence where they ever claimed to be sinless. The very soul
that is in close relation to Christ, beholding His purity and
excellence, will fall before Him with shamefacedness.
Daniel was a man to whom God had given
great skill and learning, and when he fasted the angel came to
him and said, "Thou art greatly beloved." And he fell
prostrate before the angel. He did not say, Lord, I have been
very faithful to you and I have done everything to honor you
and defend Your Word and name. Lord, You know how faithful I
was at the king's table, and how I maintained my integrity when
they cast me into the den of lions." Was that the way Daniel
prayed to God? No; he prayed and confessed his sins. He said,
"Hear O Lord, and deliver; we have departed from Thy Word
and sinned." (See Dan.
9:5) And when he saw the angel, he said,
"My comeliness was turned in me into corruption" (Dan. 10:8).
He could not look upon the angel's face, and he had no strength;
it was all gone. So the angel came to him and set him upon his
knees, but he could not behold him. And then the angel came to
him with the appearance of a man. Then he could bear the sight.
Why is it that so many claim to be holy
and sinless? It is because they are so far from Christ. I have
never dared to claim any such thing. From the time I was fourteen
years old, if I knew what the will of God was, I was willing
to do it. You never have heard me say I am sinless. Those that
get sight of the loveliness and the exalted character of Jesus
Christ, who was holy and lifted up, and His train fills the temple,
will never say it. Yet we are to meet with those that will say
such things more and more, every year.
A lady came to me in the city of Oakland,
threw her arms around my neck, and said, "You are a child
of God, but I am sanctified, I am holy; and we want you to come
in with us." I turned to the Bible and showed her what is
said. Then I said to her, "Suppose you should go to your
children and say to them, 'You need not keep the commandments
of God, you are holy. All you need do is to say that you love
Christ; you need not think you have anything to do, but simply
say I love my father and mother.' What would be the results?
Just as surely as you stand opposed to the law of God, you have
no investigation to make. If your character is not in harmony
with the law of God, it is not in harmony with heaven, however
you may profess to be holy and sinless."
In the days of Martin Luther, there were
those that came to him and said, "We do not want your Bible,
we want the Spirit." Martin Luther said to them, "I
will rap your spirit on the snoot." However great their
pretences, they are not the children of God.
I remember thirty-six years ago, I was
in New York, in the house of Brother Abbey. A man came in there
with an umbrella in his hands, and there he stood and said, "I
am Christ." I had looked upon Christ, and I said to him,
"Sir, you have no part with Christ. If you were Christ you
would never have uttered that sentence." He raised his umbrella
to strike me, but my husband stepped in between him and me, and
said to him, "What are you going to do sir?" He said,
"I am Christ, and will execute His will upon those that
dispute His claims."
I met a man at St. Helena that boasted
that he had not committed a sin for six years. And one of his
own party said to me, "I will not have him in my house again;
he is a tyrant. He will come into my house and say, 'I have just
as much right in this house as you,' and order my wife around,
and demand her to wait upon him." And this is the man that
had not committed a sin for six years.
I want you to understand that pretences
are not the evidences of true character. Now I speak these words
to you because wherever there is a little company raised up,
Satan is constantly trying to annoy and distract them. When one
of the people turns away from his sins, do you suppose that he
will let him alone? No, indeed. We want you to look well to the
foundation of your hope. We want you to let your life and your
actions testify of you that you are the children of God.
Let there be that littleness, that humbleness
of soul, that they may know that you have been taught in the
school of Christ. And when He shall appear in the clouds of heaven,
we shall exclaim, "Lo, this is our God; we have waited for
him, and he will save us" (Isa. 25:9). Then it is that
the crown of life will be placed upon the brow of the faithful
ones. Then will come the voice
of the Saviour saying, "Well done thou good and faithful
servant; . . . enter thou into the joy of thy Lord" (Matt. 25:21-23).
What, faithful in putting their feet upon the law of God? No,
No. These have not the mark of the beast upon them. I want that
peace that comes through an obedience to all of the commandments
of God. Amen.--Ms. 5, 1885. (MR
900.8)