Manuscript 1, 1869
Remarks by Ellen G. White in Battle Creek,
March 26, 1869.]
I do not intend to speak long enough to
weary you this afternoon. I have not strength, and should I consult
my own feelings, I should not be here at all. I feel deeply for
the people of God, but what to say or do to arouse them from
their present lethargy, I know not. It seems that the strength
of my life is nearly spent, but I shall not cease pleading with
you until I fall at my post, if that is to be my fate.
The light of truth has shone in this place
with great clearness. That light has been given line upon line,
precept upon precept, here a little and there a little. But the
truth which it has been your privilege to enjoy has not been
carefully cherished and carried into the practical life. This
is the reason why there is so little power among us at the present
time.
There are many who inquire, Why is it that
we have so little strength? Is it because heaven is sealed? Is
it because there are no precious lessons in store for us? Is
it because our source of strength and power is exhausted, and
we can receive no more? Why is it that we are not all light in
the Lord? He who was a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief,
who was wounded for our transgressions, and bruised for our iniquities,
by whose stripes we are healed. [He] is high and lifted up, and
the glory of His train fills the temple. Why is this glory withheld
from us who are in a world of sin and trouble, sorrow and sadness,
corruption and iniquity?
The trouble lies with ourselves. It is
our iniquities which have separated us from God. It is because
we do not feel our need, because we do not hunger and thirst
after righteousness, that we are not filled. The promise is that
if we hunger and thirst after righteousness we shall be filled.
The promise is to you, my brethren and sisters. It is to me,
it is to every one of us. It is the hungering, thirsting souls
who will be filled. We may come to Christ just as we are, with
our weakness, our folly and imperfections, and in repentance
drop at His feet, offering our petition in faith.
In spite of our errors, our continual backsliding,
the voice of the long-suffering Saviour is heard inviting us,
"Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and
I will give you rest." To the needy, the fainting, those
who are weighed down with burden and care and perplexity, the invitation is, "Come." It
is Christ's glory to encircle us in the arms of His mercy and
love, and bind up our wounds, to sympathize with those who need
sympathy, and strengthen those who need strength. When we have
been almost ready to sink, we have sent up the earnest cry, "Lord,
save, or I perish," and how sweet it has been to find His
hand stretched out to save. He has been to us just what He promised,
a present help in every time of need.
The Lord has graciously invited all to
come. When He was on earth He said to the unbelieving, obstinate
Pharisees, "Ye will not come unto Me, that ye might have
life." Oh, that this may never be said of us. There is life
and peace and joy in Jesus Christ. He is the sinner's friend.
There is power and glory and strength for us all in Him, and
if we believe that this power and glory is ours, if we comply
with the conditions laid down in His Word, we shall be strong
in the strength of the mighty One.
There are many who may well be represented
by the vine that is trailing upon the ground, and entwining its
tendrils about the roots and rubbish that lie in its path. To
all such the message comes, "Come out from among them, and
be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing;
and I will receive you, and will be a Father unto you, and ye
shall be My sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty"
[2 Cor. 6:17, 18].
There are conditions to meet if we would
be blessed and honored and exalted by God. It is separation from
the world, a refusal to touch those things which would separate
our affections from God. God has the first and highest claim
upon you. Set your affections upon Him and heavenly things. Your
tendrils must be severed from everything earthly. You are exhorted
to touch not the unclean thing, for in doing this you will yourself
become unclean. It is impossible for you to unite with those
who are corrupt and still remain pure. "What fellowship
hath light with darkness? and what concord hath Christ with Belial?"
God and Christ and the heavenly host would have man know that
if he unites with the corrupt, he will become corrupt. If we
are found mingling with the world, we shall share the fate of
the world.
The requirements of God are set plainly
before us, and the question to be settled is, Will we comply
with them? Will we accept the conditions laid down in His Word--separation
from the world? This is not the work of a moment or of a day.
It is not accomplished by bowing at the family altar and offering
up lip service, neither by public exhortation and prayer. It
is a life-long work. Our consecration to God must be a living
principle, interwoven with the life, and leading to self-denial
and self-sacrifice. It must underlie
all our thoughts and be the spring of every action. This will
elevate us above the world, and separate us from its polluting
influence.
All our actions are affected by our religious
experience, and if this experience is founded on God, and we
understand the mysteries of godliness, if we are daily receiving
of the power of the world to come, and hold communion with God,
and have the fellowship of the Spirit, if we are each day holding
with a firmer grasp the higher life, and drawing closer and still
closer to the bleeding side of the Redeemer, we shall have inwrought
in us principles that are holy and elevating. Then it will be
as natural for us to seek purity and holiness and separation
from the world as it is for the angels of glory to execute the
mission of love assigned them in saving mortals from the corrupting
influence of the world.
Everyone who enters the pearly gates of
the city of God will be a doer of the Word. He will be a partaker
of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in
the world through lust. It is our privilege to realize the fullness
there is in Christ, and be blessed by the provision made through
Him. Ample provision has been made that we should be raised from
the lowlands of earth, and have our affections fastened upon
God and heavenly things.
Will this separation from the world in
obedience to the divine command unfit us for doing the work the
Lord has left us? Will it hinder us from doing good to those
around us? No; the firmer hold we have on heaven, the greater
will be our power of usefulness in the world. We should study
to copy the Pattern, that the Spirit that dwelt in Christ may
dwell in us. The Saviour was not found among the exalted and
honorable of the world. He did not spend His time among those
who were seeking their ease and pleasure. He went about doing
good. His work was to help those who needed help, to save the
lost and perishing, to lift up the bowed down, to break the yoke
of oppression from those who were in bondage, to heal the afflicted,
and to speak words of sympathy and consolation to the distressed
and sorrowing.
We are required to copy this Pattern. Let
us be up and doing, seeking to bless the needy and comfort the
distressed. The more we partake of the Spirit of Christ, the
more we shall see to do for our fellow man. We shall be filled
with a love for perishing souls, and shall find our delight in
following the footsteps of the Majesty of heaven.
Probation is about to close. In heaven
the edict will soon go forth, "It is done." "He
that is unjust, let him be unjust still: and he which is filthy,
let him be filthy still: and he that is righteous, let him be
righteous still: and he that is holy, let
him be holy still. And, behold, I come quickly; and my reward
is with me, to give every man according as his work shall be"
[Rev. 22:11, 12]. Then the last prayer for sinners will have been
offered, the last tear shed, the last warning given, the last
entreaty made. The sweet voice of mercy will be heard no more.
This is why Satan is making such mighty
efforts to secure men and women in his snare. He has come down
with great power, knowing that his [time] is short. His special
work now is to secure professing Christians in his ranks, that
he may through them allure and destroy souls. The enemy is playing
the game of life for every soul. He is working to remove everything
of a spiritual nature from us, and in the place of the precious
graces of Christ [to] crowd our hearts with all the evil traits
of the carnal nature--hatred, evil surmising, jealousy, love
of the world, love of self, love of pleasure, and pride of life.
We need to be fortified against the incoming of the foe, who
is working with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them
that perish, for if we are not watchful and prayerful, these
evils will enter the heart and crowd out all that is good.
Many who profess to believe the Word of
God do not seem to understand the deceptive working of the enemy.
They do not realize that the end of time is near. But Satan knows
it, and while men sleep he works. The lust of the flesh, and
the lust of the eye, and the pride of life are controlling men
and women. Satan is at work, even among the people of God, to
cause disunion and difference of opinion. There is biting and
devouring among them, and Satan designs that they shall be consumed
one of another. Selfishness, corruption, and evil of every kind
is taking a firm hold upon hearts.
With many the precious Word of God is neglected.
A novel or a story book engages the attention and fascinates
the mind. Anything that will excite the imagination is eagerly
devoured, while the Word of God is set aside. Why was it that
the Jewish nation rejected and turned from Christ, insisting
[that] a robber be granted them and that the Prince of life be
crucified? Why did such blindness come upon the people? It was
because they overlooked the Word of Life, because they failed
to search the Scriptures.
In these last days many are weighed in
the balances and found wanting, because they suffer their minds
to be engrossed with things of little importance, while eternal
truth is neglected. The truth of God, which would elevate, sanctify,
refine, and fit us for the finishing touch of immortality, is
set aside for things of minor importance. Oh, that this blindness
might pass away, and men and women understand he work that Satan is accomplishing among them.
Provision has been made whereby the communication
between heaven and our souls may be free and open, that we may
have the influence of the holy angels. We can place ourselves
where rays of light and glory from the throne of God will be
given us in abundance. The light of the knowledge of the glory
of God as seen in the face of Jesus Christ may shine upon us,
and we may stand in the position where it can be said of us,
"Ye are the light of the world."
Were it not for the communication between
heaven and earth, there would be no light in the world. Like
Sodom and Gomorrah all would perish beneath the wrath of an offended
God. But the world is not left in darkness. The long-suffering
and mercy of God is still extended to the children of men. It
is His design that the divine rays of light which emanate from
the throne of God shall be received in our hearts and reflected
by the children of light.
The love revealed in the Saviour's life
of self-denial and self-sacrifice is to be seen in the lives
of His followers. We are called upon "so to walk even as
He walked." The cause of our weakness lies in our refusal
to obey this command. On every side there are opportunities to
work for our fellow men, not only in supplying their temporal
wants, but their spiritual necessities. It is our duty to lead
souls to the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world.
It is important that we fill aright our position in the world,
in society, and in the church; but we cannot do this unless we
have a firm hold upon righteousness.
Our faith must reach within the veil, whither
our Forerunner has for us entered. It is possible for us to take
hold by faith of the eternal promises of God, but to do this
we must have a faith that will not be denied, a steadfast, immovable
faith, that will take hold of the realities of the unseen world.
It is our privilege to stand with the light
of heaven upon us. It was thus that Enoch walked with God. It
was no easier for Enoch to live a righteous life in his day than
it is for us at the present time. The world in Enoch's time was
no more favorable to a growth in grace and holiness than it is
now, but Enoch devoted time to prayer and communion with God,
and this enabled him to escape the corruption that is in the
world through lust. It is his devotion to God that fitted him
for translation.
We are living amid the perils of the last
days, and we must receive our strength from the same source as
did Enoch. We must walk with God. A separation from the world
is required of us. We cannot remain free from this pollution
unless we follow the example of faithful Enoch and walk with
God. But how many are slaves to
the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eye, and the pride
of life.
This is the reason why they are not partakers
of the divine nature, and do not escape the corruption that is
in the world through lust. They are serving and honoring self.
Their constant study is, What shall I eat, what shall I drink,
and wherewithal shall I be clothed.
Many talk of sacrifice, when they do not
know what sacrifice is. They have not tasted its first draught.
They talk of the cross of Christ, they profess the faith, but
they have had no experience in self-denial, lifting the cross
and bearing it after their Lord. If they were partakers of the
divine nature, the same spirit that dwelt in their Lord would
dwell in them. The same tenderness and love, the same pity and
compassion, would be manifested in their lives. They would not
then wait to have the needy and unfortunate come to them, and
be entreated to feel for their woes. It would be as natural for
them to aid the needy and minister to their wants as it was for
Christ to go about doing good.
Every man, woman, and youth who professes
the religion of Christ should realize the responsibility resting
upon them. All should feel that this is an individual work, an
individual warfare, an individual preaching of Christ in the
daily practice. If each would realize this, and take hold of
the work, we should be mighty as an army with banners. The heavenly
dove would hover over us. The Sun of Righteousness would shine
upon us, and the light of the glory of God would no more be shut
away from us than it was from the devoted Enoch.
The command is given us, "Come out
from among them, and be ye separate." It is not for you
to say, I have nothing to do with my neighbor; he is buried in
the world; I am not his keeper. For this very reason you should
have something to say to him. The light given you, you should
not hide under a bushel. You are not to keep it for yourself
alone. This is entirely contrary to the will of God. Let your
light shine before men, is the command. Will you let it shine--by
your words, your deeds?
It may be understood that you believe the
Sabbath, that you believe in the Lord's soon return; but what
good will that do your neighbor unless you carry this belief
into your daily life? You may talk of being a follower of Christ,
but this will not benefit those around you unless you imitate
the great Example.
It is not merely by reading or writing
that you battle for your faith, but by showing your good works,
by leading sinners to the Lamb of God. Your profession may be
as high as heaven, but it will not save you or your fellow men
unless you are a Christian. Your example will go farther toward
enlightening the world than all
your profession. We want the living preacher carried out in the
living example. In this way your light will shine, and others,
seeing your good works, will glorify your Father which is in
heaven.
Oh, that the Lord would give us to feel
as we have never felt before. If you knew that you had but one
more hour of probation, you would change your course. You would
not dare to stand in the position you are in today. If you knew
that probation would close in one year, you would not continue
the course you are now pursuing, and yet you do not know that
you will live one day longer. You have not one day to call your
own. We know not how soon death may be feeling for the heart-strings
of any one of us. We know not how soon the axe may be laid at
the root of the tree, and the sentence go forth, "Cut it
down. Why cumbereth it the ground?" Will you pass on in
your sinful state, with envy and jealousy and hatred in your
heart? While you do this, you are no more fit for heaven than
Satan himself.
If you think you can lay down the oars,
and still make your way up stream, you are mistaken. It is only
by earnest effort, by using the oars with all your might, that
you can stem the current. How many there are as weak as water,
when they have a never-failing Source of strength. Heaven is
ready to impart to us, that we may be mighty in God, and attain
the full stature of men and women in Christ Jesus.
But who of you in the past year has been
making progress in the way of holiness? What increase of spiritual
power have you gained? Who has come off conqueror over the foe?
Who has been enabled to gain one precious attainment after another,
until envy, pride, malice, jealousy, and every evil stain, has
been swept away, and only the graces of the Spirit remain--meekness,
forbearance, gentleness, charity?
God will help us if we take hold of the
help He has provided. "Let him take hold of My strength,"
He says, "that he may make peace with Me, and he shall make
peace with Me" [Isa.
27:5]. This is a blessed promise. Many
times, when I have been discouraged and almost in despair, I
have come to the Lord with this promise, and said, "Let
me take hold of Thy strength, that I may make peace with Thee;
and I shall make peace with Thee." And as I have laid hold
of the strength of God, I have found a peace which passeth understanding.
I know that the words I speak to you are
truth, and that you need them. Oh, that you would arouse, and
wrench yourself from the grasp of the enemy, that you would engage
in the battle of life in earnest, putting on every piece of the
armor, that you may war successfully against the wily foe. Satan
is already weaving his net about you,
and ensnaring your soul. He does not wait for his prey to be
brought to him. He goes about like a roaring lion, seeking whom
he may devour. But does he always roar? No; when it serves his
purpose best, he sinks his voice to the softest whisper, and,
wrapped in garments of light, appears as an angel from heaven.
Men have so little knowledge of his wiles, so little understanding
of the mystery of iniquity, that the enemy out-generals them
almost every time.
Many who have lived under the blazing light
of truth act as though they had nothing to do. They watch another
playing the game of life for the soul, and stand by as though
they had nothing to do but watch how the game is carried on.
God calls upon every one of you to take up life's burdens, and
engage in the warfare as you have never done before.
You who are gossipers, who love to speak
of the faults of this one and that one, arouse, I beg of you,
and look into your own hearts. Take your Bibles, and go to God
in earnest prayer. Ask Him to teach you to know your own heart,
to understand your weakness, your sins and follies, in the light
of eternity. Ask Him to show you yourself as you stand in the
sight of heaven. This is the prayer we should offer.
I would close up my instruments of music,
and bowing before God, plead with Him as I had never pled before.
In humility send your petition to heaven, and do not rest day
or night until you can say, Hear what the Lord has done for me;
until you can bear a living testimony, and tell of victories
won. This is the time to sing the songs of Zion.
Jacob wrestled with the angel all night
before he gained the victory. When morning broke the angel said,
Let me go, for the day breaketh. But Jacob answered, "I
will not let thee go, except thou bless me" [Gen. 32:26].
Then his prayer was answered. "Thy name shall be no more
Jacob," said the angel, "but Israel; for as a Prince
hast thou power with God, and hast prevailed" [verse 28].
We need the determined perseverance of
Jacob, and the unyielding faith of Elijah. Time after time Elijah
sent his servant to see if the cloud was rising, but no cloud
was to be seen. At last, after seven times, the servant returned
with the word, "I see a little cloud, as large as a man's
hand." Did Elijah stand back and say, "I will not receive
this evidence. I will wait until the heavens gather blackness"?
No. He said, It is time for us to be going. He ventured all upon
that token from God, and sent his messenger before him to tell
Ahab that there was the sound of abundance of rain.
It is such faith as this that we want,
faith that will take hold, and will not let go. Inspiration tells
us that Elijah was a man subject to like passions as we are. Heaven heard his prayer. He prayed
that rain might cease, and there was no rain. Again he prayed
for rain, and the rain was sent. And why should not the Lord
be entreated in behalf of His people today?
Oh, that the Lord would imbue us with His
Spirit. Oh, that the curtain might be rolled back, and we be
made to understand the mystery of godliness. I long for God.
I hunger and thirst after righteousness. As the hart pants for
the water brooks, my soul pants after God. I plead with Him for
His people that He may send upon us the showers of His grace.
But this is an individual work. Every man
is to build over against his own house. Do not think of any one's
faults but your own. Oh, consider this, for here eternal interests
are involved. You have nothing to do with the sins of others,
but you have much to do with yourself. Act as though there was
not another being in the universe but yourself and a pure and
holy God.
All who profess to be children of God should
be missionaries. You ought to be working in the Master's vineyard.
To one is committed five talents, to another two, and to another
one. And everyone is accountable to God for these gifts. Your
talents are committed to you to be improved, and unless you trade
upon these talents, unless you are faithful to your trust, your
fate will be similar to that of the man who hid his Lord's money
in the earth.
"I knew thee that thou art a hard
man," said the unprofitable servant, "reaping where
thou hast not sown, and gathering where thou hast not strawed:
and I was afraid, and went and hid thy talent in the earth: lo,
there thou hast that is thine" [Matt. 25:24, 25]. The sentence
passed upon him was, "Take ye the unprofitable servant,
and bind him hand and foot, and cast him into outer darkness.
There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth." [See verses 29, 30.] This
will be the portion of many professing Christians at the present
day unless they arouse and work mightily to redeem the time.
God calls upon you to put all your strength
into the work. You will have to render an account for the good
you might have done had you been standing in a right position,
but which you have failed to do. Oh, that you might see that
it is time you were co-workers with Christ and the heavenly angels.