Sermon by Ellen G. White, August 30, 1898,
a portion of which appears in Evangelism.
[Col.
1:25-29, quoted.]
The ministry is a sacred office. Christ
crucified is the power of God unto salvation to all who will
believe. A Saviour lifted up--a Saviour full and complete to
all who accept Him--is the science of salvation. The subject
is never exhausted. It is always fresh; for today Christ is a
living Intercessor before the Father in the heavenly courts.
Christ, the propitiation for the sins of the world, is a living
subject instinct with divinity, and always fresh and new.
It is through His merits, through an example
of suffering, that the chosen disciples of Christ are fitted
for every work of ministry and for every trial and discouragement
in this work. Looking unto Jesus--His self-denying life, His
sacrifice, His humiliation in their behalf--they are ready to
follow in His footsteps, to endure the cross, despise the shame,
and go without the camp bearing His reproach. The Holy Spirit
makes them one with Christ, their divine Leader. The truth enthroned
in the heart sanctifies the soul, and the power and grace of
God within manifests itself in the life as the power and wisdom
of God.
Christ promised His followers, "If
I go away, I will send another Comforter, that He may abide with
you forever" [cf. John
14:16]. With this divine endowment the
human agent is qualified to work in Christ's lines. Christ continued,
"He shall teach you all things, and bring all things to
you remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you" [verse
26].
Individually living the life of Christ,
His followers become living working agencies. They possess the
character of Christ. They have the love of Christ, His faith,
His hope, His oneness with the Father. They lean on Christ as
their only staff and sufficiency. They are Christ's living witnesses.
By their words, their spirit, their true courtesy, their influence,
by their every action, they testify of Christ. A power goes out
from these human agencies, bearing the testimony that they are
laborers together with God, that they have communion with their
Saviour.
The preaching of the Word is not to be
undervalued. The work for the salvation of souls is a sacred,
holy work. Says the prophet, "How beautiful upon the mountains
are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth
peace; that bringeth good tidings of good, that publisheth salvation;
that saith unto Zion, Thy God reigneth" [Isa. 52:7].
What honor is conferred upon men in that
they may be laborers together with God, His messengers, to proclaim
as did the forerunner of Christ, "Behold the Lamb of God,
which taketh away the sin of the world." Lift up the risen
Saviour, and say to all who will hear, Come to Him who has loved
us and died for us. Let the self-denial,
the compassion, the great love wherewith Christ has loved us
in purchasing us with His own life, be unfolded before men. The
science of salvation is to be the burden of every sermon, the
theme of every song. Let it be poured forth in every supplication.
Let nothing be brought into the preaching
of the Word to supplement Christ, the Word and power of God.
Let His name, the only name given under heaven whereby we may
be saved, be exalted in every discourse, and from Sabbath to
Sabbath let the trumpet of the watchmen be given a certain sound.
Christ is the science and eloquence of the gospel, and His ministers
are to hold forth the word of life, presenting hope to the penitent,
peace to the troubled and desponding, and grace and completeness
and strength to the believing.
Encouragement should be given to the precious
lambs of the flock. Said the Majesty of heaven, "Suffer
the little children to come unto Me, and forbid them not; for
of such is the kingdom of God" [Mark 10:14]. He does not send
those children to the rabbis. He does not send them to the Pharisees.
He says, The mothers who have brought their children to Me have
done well. "Suffer the little children to come unto me,
and forbid them not; for of such is the kingdom of God."
Then let the mothers accept the invitation,
and lead their children to Christ. Let the ministers of the gospel
take the children in their arms and bless them. In the name of
Jesus let words of tenderness and love be spoken to the little
ones, because Christ took the lambs of the flock in His arms
and blessed them.
Our expectation is from God who in the
crucified One, has given us rich and powerful truths and weighty
arguments to move the hearts of men. The simple prayer indited
by the Holy Spirit will ascend through the gates ajar, the open
door [of] which Christ has declared, "I have opened, and
no man can shut" [cf. Rev.
3:7]. Those prayers, mingled with the
incense of the perfections of Christ, will ascend as fragrance
before the Father, and answers will come. The Holy Spirit will
descend, and souls will come to a knowledge of the truth. Sinners
will be converted, and their faces turned from the world and
earthly things toward heaven. The Sun of righteousness will inspire
them with motives for action, and they will realize that they
are witnesses for Christ.
We are to be judged according to the deeds
done in the body. "By thy words thou shalt be justified,
and by thy words thou shalt be condemned" [Matt. 12:37].
The watchmen are not to slumber and sleep in their important
mission. They must not only preach, but minister, educating the
souls who have turned from error to truth, by personal labor,
by precept and example teaching them that "denying ungodliness
and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly,
in this present world; looking for that blessed hope, and the
glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ:
who gave His life for us, that He might redeem us from all iniquity,
and purify unto Himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works"
[Titus 2:12-14].
Ministers of God, great is your responsibility
to go forward in Christian experience and righteousness, from
light to still greater light, walking conscientiously, striving
to reach a high and exalted standard. As the powers of darkness
with intense activity work from beneath, the agencies of God
should be more and more vigilant in cooperating with the divine,
in giving the trumpet a certain sound. In earnest tones, distinct
and startling, they are to proclaim the righteousness of the
law, that no watchman may fail to catch the sound of alarm, and
in their turn sound the warnings coming from heaven. All must
be aroused from their lethargy to wakeful, earnest, watching
for souls as they that must give an account.
Light, increased light from heaven, is
waiting to be imparted to those who will walk and work in the
light which they already have. There is to be quick and earnest
thought, talent, and tact displayed in enterprises that will
communicate light to those who are near and afar off. Careful
consideration should be made of every way that is not the way
of the Lord. No sleepy watchman must be tolerated. Under their
leader the principalities and powers and rulers of the darkness
of this world are at work.
Because it has been so difficult to arouse
from their lethargy the many who have long professed to know
the truth, spiritual wickedness in high places has increased.
Men have taken their stand to hedge up the way of the Lord's
army of workers. They have taken souls unaware and led them into
strange paths. May the Lord show these men who have long been
hindrances, who, whenever opportunities have presented themselves,
have placed a stumbling block in
the way of others, [by] whose side they have worked, and make
diligent work of repentance. They have weakened the hands of
others, and given the enemy every advantage.
Time, precious time, has been lost. Golden
opportunities have passed by unimproved, because of a lack of
clear spiritual eyesight and wise generalship to plan and devise
ways and means to frustrate the enemy and preoccupy the field.
These men think they have been doing a very wise work, but the
Judgment will show what has been the character of their warfare
and what has been lost to Christ through their maneuvering. Let
us now wake up. There is earnest work to be done. If we will
draw nigh to God, He will draw nigh to us.
Slumbering watchmen, what of the night?
Do you not know the time of night? Do you feel no burden to lift
the danger signal and give the warnings for this time? If you
do not, come down from the walls of Zion, for God will not entrust
you with the light He has to give. Light is only given to those
who will reflect that light upon others. "We all, with open
face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord, are changed
into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit
of the Lord" [2 Cor.
3:18].
Lift the standard. The minister of the
gospel must not give all his attention to sermonizing. The church
of God must be kept in order. There is ministering to be done.
The sick are to be visited. Men and women are to be educated
after the divine model. "It is high time to awake out of
sleep: for now is our salvation nearer than when we believed.
The night is far spent, the day
is at hand: let us therefore cast off the works of darkness,
and let us put on the armor of light" [Rom. 13:12].
The grace of Christ received in the soul
will work as an educator. The trust received in the heart will
purify the soul. The religion of Jesus Christ never makes the
receiver coarse and rough and uncourteous. Truth is delicate
and elevating. It acts as a refiner. It sanctifies the soul.
The constant influence of truth trains the soul after Christ's
pattern, and molds and fashions the character for the courts
above. It is a grand principle which must be brought into the
daily practical life.
There is no danger of belittling the mind
by giving attention to the little things of life with which we
have to do. Any negligence of acts of politeness and tender regard
on the part of brother for brother, any neglect of kind, encouraging
words in the family circle, parents with children and children
with parents, confirms habits which make the character unChristlike.
But if these little things are performed, they become great things.
They increase to large proportions. They breathe a sweet perfume
in the life which ascends to God as holy incense. An angel presence
is in the home. Love is manifested in kindness, gentleness, forbearance,
and longsuffering.
The man who accepts the position of being
[a] mouthpiece for God should consider it highly essential that
he present the truth with all the grace and intelligence he can,
that the truth may lose nothing in his presentation of it to
the people. Those who consider it a little thing to speak with
an imperfect utterance, dishonor
God. God is not glorified when His servants, in holding forth
the word of life pitch their voices to a high key, and talk in
loud, unnatural tones. By so doing they abuse the organs of speech.
God enjoins us, "Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father
which is in heaven is perfect" [Matt. 5:48]. "Whom we
preach, warning every man, and teaching every man in all wisdom;
that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus" [Col. 1:28].
The apostle Paul could say: [Acts 20:18-20,
Quoted].--Manuscript 107, 1898. (MR 900.30)