Manuscript 66, 1899
[Extracts from a talk given by Mrs. E.G.
White at the opening of College Hall, Avondale, Australia, April
13, 1899.]
School work is a work of partnership. Those
who have come to this school with an earnest desire to make of
themselves all that it is possible, by the help of the Lord,
may be assured that One who is mighty in power will link up with
them and teach them the way of the Lord. But those who have come
here for their own amusement, who do not put their minds to the
task of securing a right education, will lose much. They will
miss the mark entirely.
We are fitting for heaven, the higher school.
We expect to see a company of workers raised up in this school
who will win souls to Christ because they are laborers together
with God, because it is their greatest desire to spread the knowledge
of truth. This was Daniel's object, and we read that God gave
him knowledge and understanding in all learning and wisdom.
Light is to go forth from this school to
place after place, reaching to Queensland and the regions beyond,
to Sydney and Melbourne. If every student will put his mind to
the task, deciding that he will make of himself all that God
designed him to be, he will receive great light and rich blessing.
God desires students to receive an education that will enable
them to see the possibilities and probabilities within their
reach, to see what they may become by cooperating with the great
Teacher.
He says, "Come unto me, all ye that
labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take My
yoke upon you, and learn of Me, for I am meek and lowly in heart,
and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For My yoke is easy,
and My burden is light." You may go to this place and that
place in search of amusement and self-gratification, but when
these are found, what real happiness do they bring? Christ says,
"Come unto Me . . . and ye shall find rest." This promise
was uttered by lips that never lie. We have the positive assurance
that by coming to Christ, we shall find rest. This rest each
student may have if he will give to the Saviour the powers of
his being.
Students, you can be servants of God. It
is possible for you to win the crown of life which fadeth not
away. Set your aim high. Instead of indulging in frivolity and
cheap talk, speak sound words,
words which will be a blessing to those who hear them. Enter
the school of Christ. Take firm hold of Him who is mighty, who
will lift up for you a standard against the enemy. Close the
windows of the soul earthward, against the malarious atmosphere
of doubt, and open them heavenward that the bright beams of the
Sun of Righteousness may shine upon you.
God loves children and youth. He greatly
blessed Joseph in Egypt. He passed by the aged Eli, who had neglected
to train his children in ways of obedience, and to the child
Samuel communicated what should befall Israel because of their
wickedness. Every student may hold communion with God. Every
student may know what it means to be taught by the Holy Spirit.
God longs to have you reach after Him in
faith. He longs to have you expect great things of Him. He longs
to give you understanding in temporal as well as spiritual matters.
He can sharpen the intellect. He can give tact and ingenuity.
All that we have God gave us, and in return He expects us to
lay ourselves at His feet. He will accept this offering, and
will sanctify every power of mind and body.
Students, do not disappoint your Creator.
Do not think that you have come to school to do very much as
you please. Do not allow your mind to be filled with lightness
and trifling. Keep yourselves in the channel of light. Consecrate
yourselves to God. He will accept all who put away the evil of
their doings. Your parents are watching your progress with intense
interest. Do not disappoint them. Make them happy by following
a right course. Make a covenant with God by sacrifice. He will
accept your offering, and make you vessels unto honor.
[Extracts from discourse given by Mrs.
E. G. White in the Avondale Church, March 25, 1899.]
"I beseech you, therefore, brethren,
by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice,
holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.
And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by
the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good,
and acceptable, and perfect, will of God" [Rom 12:1].
The Lord says this because He knows it
is for our good. He would build a wall around us, to keep us
from transgression, so that His blessing and love may be bestowed
on us in rich measure. This is the reason we have established
a school here. The Lord instructed us that this was the place
in which we should locate, and we have had every reason to think
that we are in the right place. We have been brought together as a school, and we need to realize
that the Holy Spirit, who is as much a person as God is a person,
is walking through these grounds, unseen by human eyes; that
the Lord God is our Keeper and Helper. He hears every word we
utter and knows every thought of the mind.
No one will be forced into the kingdom
of heaven. Those who do not wish to enter show it by their actions.
It is because we want to enter this kingdom that we have established
a school here, and have called for the youth to come. We desire
that they should be educated and trained aright, that they may
learn what they should do in order to keep the intellect unimpaired.
As we look at the world we know that iniquity abounds. Very little
that is of God and heaven can be seen. We desire to bring all
of heaven we possibly can into our homes, into the church, into
the school, and we desire that the Lord shall see in us no perversity,
no stubbornness, no disobedience.
God has given each of us talents upon which
to trade. To some He has given ten talents, to others two, and
to others one. He expects us to use wisely what He has given
us. By exercise our talents may be improved, and as they are
improved, we are given more upon which to trade.
We are to strive most earnestly to place
mind, soul, and body in the best condition for God's service.
When the lawyer asked Christ what he should do to inherit eternal
life, Christ said, "What is written in the law? how readest
thou?" The lawyer said, "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."
"Thou hast answered right," said the great Teacher,
"This do, and thou shalt live." [See Matt. 19:16-18.]
It is because we desire you to learn of
God and His law that we have established a school here, and students
are to understand that they must be obedient. They are to place
themselves under the rules and regulations of the school. As
soon as they persist in introducing into the school practices
which the school was established to separate from students, they
will be separated from the school, because we have not consented
to engage in this expense; we have not hired hundreds of pounds
to establish a school here to bring together students who will
carry out wrong practices.
No child need think that because he has
been allowed to rule at home, he can rule here. Suppose we should
let students come in to sway things in their own way, what kind
of a school would we have? How could we train men and women to
be missionaries? Every student who enters this school must place
himself under discipline. Those who refuse to obey
the regulations can return to their homes.
We desire to bind the students to our hearts
by the cords of love and kindness, but [with] strict discipline.
Love and kindness are worth nothing unless they are united with
the discipline which God has said should be maintained. We call
upon every student who has a knowledge of God to exert an influence
on the Lord's side. We desire you all to be in the Lord's army.
We desire you to stand under the bloodstained banner of Prince
Emmanuel, to fight manfully the battles of the Lord. We want
you to put on the whole armor of righteousness. We want you to
gain everything that Christ suffered so much to make it possible
for you to gain.
Courting is not to be carried on in the
school. That is not what you are here for. We are here to prepare
for the future life, where we may see the King in His glory,
where we shall have that life which measures with the life of
God. If we do not live in harmony with the law of God here, we
shall never see His face. The disobedient can never enter the
city of God. The Word of Inspiration declares, "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].
I wish to say to everyone here today, You
can be a laborer together with God. As you seek to help and bless
those who come to the school, you stand under the protection
of God. But those who exert an influence which encourages disobedience
and vice stand under the displeasure of God. He knows all about
their course, and He will arrange matters so that they will not
stay long at the school unless they are converted. But we very
much desire that they shall be converted. We want this school
to be a place where God can abide in answer to our prayers.
We need to ask ourselves the question,
What shall I do to inherit eternal life? Christ gave His own
life that the transgressor of the law should not suffer the penalty
of the law, that as our Redeemer He might stand before the Father
with pierced, uplifted hands, and say, "Lay their sins on
Me. I am responsible for them. I will bear their transgressions.
I have graven them upon the palms of My hands." The sinner
may be pardoned if he accepts Christ as a personal Saviour. There
is only one condition--the acceptance of the robe of Christ's
righteousness.
"I beseech you therefore, . . . by
the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice"
[Rom. 12:1]. "Ye are not your own; for ye are bought with
a price, therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit,
which are God's" [1
Cor. 6:19, 20]. When this is done, we
shall expect to see every promise of God fulfilled. "And
be not conformed to this world:
but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may
prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of
God" [Rom. 12:2]. If we walk in the footsteps of Jesus, we shall
be an obedient people, because we shall keep the windows of the
soul opened heavenward. Thus we may have the light, the peace,
the joy of heaven.
"Present your bodies a living sacrifice
. . . which is your reasonable service." God requires us
to cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit.
If there are those in the school who desire to indulge habits
against which we have been working for the last thirty years,
we would say to them, You are here to learn how to give up those
things which destroy your vitality, or to separate from the school.
The Lord of heaven marks every deceptive act. When the children
of Israel came to Ai, they went out against the city with full
confidence in their own power. But the record says that they
fled before the men of Ai. "Wherefore the hearts of the
people melted, and became as water" [Josh. 7:5].
Joshua was in deep distress at this calamity.
He fell upon his face to the earth, and said, "O Lord, what
shall I say, when Israel turneth their backs before their enemies!
For the Canaanites and all the inhabitants of the land shall
hear of it, and shall environ us round, and cut off our name
from the earth: and what wilt thou do unto thy great name? And
the Lord said unto Joshua, Get thee up; wherefore liest thou
thus upon thy face?
"Israel hath sinned, and they have
also transgressed my covenant which I commanded them: for they
have even taken of the accursed thing, and have also stolen,
and dissembled also, and they have put it even among their own
stuff.... Up, sanctify the people, and say, Sanctify yourselves
against tomorrow: for thus saith the Lord God of Israel, There
is an accursed thing in the midst of thee, O Israel: thou canst
not stand before thine enemies, until ye take away the accursed
thing from among you" [Josh.
7:8-13].
Those now being educated in this school
should go from it to educate others. They are to eat, drink,
and dress to the glory of God. We shall not keep here those who
say, I am not going to keep the rules. They can return to their
homes if they are not willing to come into order. Let not the
teachers think they are doing the students a kindness by allowing
wrong to go unrebuked. We should stand where the Lord will not
need to say to us, "Neither will I be with you any more,
except ye destroy the accursed from among you."--Ms. 66,
1899.