[PORTION OF AN ADDRESS
GIVEN AT THE OPENING OF THE FERNANDO, CALIFORNIA,
SCHOOL, OCT. 1, 1902.]
I am glad to see so many here this morning.
Students, I desire to say to you that the prosperity of the school
depends largely upon your endeavors. Your teachers will do all
that they can to help you. They will try to show you what you
must do to inherit eternal life. They will try to show you how
to become conversant with the living principles of truth, that
you may stand before God and men on vantage ground. Will you
cooperate with your teachers? Will you strive earnestly to become
useful men and women? Christ is waiting to help you, and He is
an all-powerful Helper. When God gave Him to our world, He gave
all heaven. He placed in His hands every power, every facility
of heaven, to give to those who receive Him. Christ came to our
world to give us an example of what we may become, to show us
that we may live a perfect life. He says to us, "Lo, I am
with you alway, even unto the end of the world" [Matt. 28:28].
Students, you are here to obtain an education
that will help you to stand by the side of Christ in unselfish
service. This is the highest education that you can possibly
obtain. The Word of God declares, "Ye are laborers together
with God." "Work out your own salvation with fear and
trembling. For it is God which worketh in you both to will and
to do of His good pleasure" [Phil. 2:12, 13]. As you stand
firm for God, filled with courage and perseverance, constantly
revealing self-denial, angels from heaven will come into this
school. They will keep guard over you. Your health will be precious
in God's sight, because you keep His commandments.
Do not let self-assertion mingle with your
work. Remember the lesson that Christ gave to His disciples when
they were contending as to who among them should be the greatest.
Placing a little child in the midst of them, He said, "Except
ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not
enter into the kingdom of heaven. Whosoever therefore shall humble
himself as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom
of heaven" [Matt.
18: 3,4].
In your school work, do not spend time
in learning that which will be of little use to you in your after
life. Instead of trying to gain a knowledge of foreign languages,
strive first to speak the English language correctly. Be sure
to learn how to keep accounts. Gain a knowledge of those lines
of study that will help you to be useful wherever you are.
Remember constantly your need of a union
with Christ. United with Him, you will bring into your work the
fragrance of His character, and your well-ordered life will be
a blessing to your teachers and your fellow-students. The sanctifying
presence of God will be with you as you seek to do His will with
a sincere desire to glorify Him.
Among these students there are those who
have come here to prepare themselves for missionary work. May
the Lord help you and bless your efforts. The number of our missionaries
is not half large enough. The fields are white, ready to harvest,
but the laborers are few. God is waiting to endow you with power
from on high, that you may go forth to work for him.
There will come to you many opportunities
to help one another. Not all are able to grasp ideas quickly.
If you see that a fellow-student has difficulty in understanding
his lessons, explain them to him. Be patient and persevering, and by-and-by his hesitancy and dullness
will disappear. He will gain courage and strength to endure trial.
And in the effort to help others, you, too, will be blessed.
God will give you power to advance in your studies. He will cooperate
with you in your effort to help your fellow-students, and in
heaven the words will be spoken of you, "Well done, good
and faithful servant."
Let two or three students meet together,
and ask God to help them to be missionaries in this school, a
blessing and a help to their fellow-students. The lives of such
ones will exert a powerful influence for good on those who scoff
at religion.
Let your faith be pure and strong and steadfast.
Bring all the pleasantness you can into the school, Let gratitude
to God fill your hearts. Remember the words, "Whoso offereth
praise glorifieth God" [see Ps. 50:23]. When you rise in
the morning, kneel at your bedside and ask God to give you strength
to fulfill the duties of the day and to meet its temptations.
Ask Him to help you to bring into your work Christ's sweetness
of character. Ask Him to help you to speak words that will draw
those around you nearer to Christ.
Live in this world to some purpose. If
you waste the life that God has given you, when Christ comes
to gather His children home you will have no place in the mansions
that He is preparing for those that love Him.
God wants you to receive the wisdom that
He has for you. He wants you to be Bible students and Bible believers,
living in obedience to the words, "Thou shalt love the Lord
thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all
thy strength, and with all thy mind: and thy neighbor as thyself"
[Luke 10:27]. Then He can bestow on you the power of His truth.
Then He can mold and fashion you
after the divine similitude. Living in conformity to Christ's
will, you will be changed into His likeness. You will grow up
into Him, and at last the pearly gates of the holy city will
for you swing back on their glittering hinges, and you will enter
to hear the words, "Blessed are they that do His commandments,
that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in
through the gates into the city" [Rev. 22:14]. In your hands
will be placed a golden harp and, touching its strings, you will
join with the redeemed host in filling all heaven with songs
of praise to God and to His Son.
Students, do your best. This is all that
God asks of you. He who has given His life for you will aid you
in your efforts to win eternal life. God wants you to have a
far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory. Obey Him and
in this school His salvation will be revealed. I want to meet
you all around the throne of God. Learn here the lessons God
desires to teach you, and you will join in the song of triumph
in the heavenly courts. --Ms 125a, 1902. ("The Student's
Privilege." Portion of an address given at the opening of
the Fernando, California, School, Oct. 1, 1902.) (MR 900.6)