Manuscript 37, 1901
(Talk given in the Review chapel in 1901.)
We stand in a very responsible position
before God. We claim to have advanced light. We claim to be giving
the most solemn message ever borne to the world. For some years,
as the field has been opened before me, I have felt a great sadness.
God designs that there shall be means in His treasury to sustain
the work in all its branches. It is represented to me that the
barren places in the Lord's vineyard are as a reflection cast
upon Him. The contrast between what should be done and what is
not done is plain, and upon God is thrown the blame of the neglect.
The wickedness of the places in which no standard is raised for
God cries out against those who have neglected to advance the
work, who have hovered over the churches when the members should
be educated to rely upon God and have root in themselves.
This is why I said that Elder Jones's place
is not in the editorial chair. He has a message to bear and power
with which to bear this message, and he should enter the fields
where the need is greatest and open the truths of the Word of
God to the people.
Field after field has been opened before
me. The English-speaking field in Europe is a very important
field. In it people will be raised up who will carry the truth
to others.
These things have been opened before us.
Over and over again has been given the message, Enter new territory.
Plant the standard in new places. Do not leave any portion of
the Lord's vineyard unworked. It casts reflection upon God to
leave His children without light. In the day of judgment this
reflection will be cast back upon those who have neglected their
God-given work. The responsibility of those handling sacred truth
has always been presented to me in such a solemn light that I
have felt like bearing the message again and again, and this
I have done.
The idea that our ministers must hover
over the churches might just as well be given up now as later.
The members of the churches must be taught to keep themselves
at work, showing the intelligence and spirituality God requires
in those who claim to be members of His church.
What is going to give life to the churches?
Nothing can do this like seeing the work advancing in the harvest
field. And in this work the members of the churches can all take
part. They may not preach, but they can help in many other ways.
Many can work as Brother Shireman has worked. God has given us
Brother Shireman's work as an object lesson. God has encouraged
Brother Shireman in his work. The Spirit of the Lord has guided
and blessed him. There are others who can and should work as
he has worked.
For some time the Southern field has been
represented to me as a sick child. I have been shown that our
people have turned away from this sick child, who needed help
and attention, to those who were not sick. If there are any people
in the world who cannot help themselves, it is the people of
the South, a portion of the whites as well as the colored race.
The necessity for work among the poor whites is just as great
as the necessity for work among the colored people.
The colored people need someone to devise
and plan for them. We cannot say, Do this, or, Do that, to those
who do not yet know their ABC's. A casual work will not help
these people. A worker goes there, looks at the field, sees the
objectionable features, and leaves. This has been done over and
over again. How much does it help? Thus one thing after another
has hindered the work.
Recently some work has been done in the
Southern field. Some schools have been established. But I am
talking about the field when nothing was done, when my son and
Brother Palmer began to work. From the commencement of their
work their efforts should have been encouraged by the prayer
and counsel of their brethren. But was this done?
It was understood that the Gospel Primer
was to be published to help the work in the Southern field. The
way in which this book was handled has brought the reproach of
God upon those who took part in this matter. In the place of
taking hold to do what they might have done to help the Southern
field, men allowed the selfishness which God abhors to enter
because they saw that there was money to be made through the
sale of the Primer. Every scheme that could be laid was laid
to divert the proceeds of this book from the Southern field.
I have not said this before, even to Edson, but I felt that it
ought to be presented this morning. An underhand work was done.
God desires everyone to realize that He
hates and despises underhand work. He will never give prosperity
to those who engage in it. But work of this kind has been done.
Things were brought to bear upon Edson and Brother Palmer in
such a way that it was too much for them.
If I had been on the grounds, I could have told them what to
do. I could have stood with them. And I would have stood with
them to the last, had I been here. But I was not here, and no
one dared to say to the men at the heart of the work, Why do
ye thus?
The matter of the Gospel Primer is not
healed. This matter is presented to me again and again. A patchwork
effort has been made to set things right, but this effort the
Lord does not accept. Unless the men who took part in this work
learn the meaning of true principle, unless they have eyes to
see and ears to hear and hearts to understand, unless they realize
that God's work is sacred in His sight, they might better sever
their connection with the work. The reproach of God rests upon
the effort made to keep back funds from the Southern field.
The Southern field must be worked intelligently.
Some have thought that because the people in the South are so
ignorant, it did not matter what kind of workers are sent there.
But the fact that the people are so ignorant makes it necessary
to send the most capable workers, workers who know how to deal
with human minds. Those who work successfully for people who
have sunk so low as the colored people in the South must be men
and women who will not labor foolishly, who will not work a little
while and then get tired and go home. This field needs workers
who will say, I will not fail or be discouraged.
When I was living in Cooranbong, the need
of the Southern field was opened before me. In the night season
I was standing before a large congregation, making an appeal
to them. That night I arose at eleven o'clock and began to write
out this appeal. The money raised in response to this appeal
was not to be sent to places which had received help. It was
to be sent to places which had not received help. It was to be
sent to the field where a beginning must be made, where everything
was wrong, where help must be given in order for anything to
be done.
About $11,000 was raised in response to
this appeal, and I waited and waited to see what was done with
this money. Edson kept writing to me, saying that he wanted to
do this and that to start the work, but could not for want of
means. In this work he found people who needed clothing and he
longed to be able to relieve their necessities, but his wages
were small and he had very little money to do anything with.
I tried to help him, giving him an order on the Review and Herald
for $400, which money he was to use in clothing the naked and
feeding the hungry.
Where did the money go that was raised
for the Southern field? How long has it been since that money
was raised? It was raised five years ago, but I do not know where
it went, and if there is anyone here who has knowledge on this
point, I wish he would tell me. Those who kept back the money
that was raised for the Southern field in response to my appeal
are accountable to God, for He led me to make this appeal.
Brother Palmer was taken from the field.
He was needed to stand by Edson. They had little enough help
in the field. But he was taken away to engage in other work.
This move was not successful, and I knew
that it would not be. It was not favorable to Brother Palmer's
spirituality. My great fear has been that under the pressure
that was put upon him, he would backslide altogether. I was afraid
that he would leave the truth. But the Lord gave me light that
He would keep Brother Palmer and establish him in the place from
which he was taken. But I did not design to say anything of this
to Brother Palmer until he himself made the proposition to return
to the work in the South. Things are coming about in accordance
with God's design. He desires Edson and Brother Palmer to stand
together. He designed them to stand together years ago.
The night before last I slept for only
one hour. I was revolving over and over in my mind the matters
of which I have spoken this morning. I asked myself, Will I be
free when I go from this place if I say nothing about them? Will
I stand free before God? I did not mean to say a word. I thought
that when the Spirit of God came into our meetings there would
be those who would understand that they had something to say
in order to remove the reproach of heaven which for years has
rested upon the work here. Many of those who acted a prominent
part in the wrongs done are not here, but there are those here
who have been following the same principles of wrong. To forsake
right principles is like taking away the foundation of a house.
If men who have grown to manhood cannot understand what pure
principles mean, they might better go apart and meditate and
pray until they understand this. From the light which I have
had, I know that principles which do not meet the approval of
heaven have been followed.
It is working upon wrong principles that
has brought the cause of God into its present embarrassment.
The people have lost confidence in those who have the management
of the work.
Yet we hear that the voice of the conference
is the voice of God. Every time I have heard this, I have
hought that it was almost blasphemy. The voice
of the conference ought to be the voice of God, but it is not,
because some in connection with it are not men of faith and prayer;
they are not men of elevated principle. There is not a seeking
of God with the whole heart; there is not a realization of the
terrible responsibility that rests upon those in this institution
to mold and fashion minds after the divine similitude.
These things have kept my soul in great
distress. At times I rise above it a little and yet I know that
the wound is not cured, because if it were the matter would not
be continually presented to me. A thing that is healed, is healed.
I was referred to the case of Achan. The entire congregation
of Israel was affected by Achan's sin. Because of it God could
not help them, and when they went out to battle they were beaten
by their enemies. Joshua prostrated himself before the Lord and
asked, "What does it mean that the children of Israel flee
before their enemies?" God told him that there was an accursed
thing in the camp, that spoil had been taken from the enemies
of Israel. He told him that there was robbery and dissembling
in the camp and that His blessing could not rest on the people
till these things were cleansed from them.
These sins have been practiced in the work
that has been done here. That God could bear with those who acted
a part in this work as long as He has done, is a marvel to me.
Before I came here God told me what course
I was to pursue. I was to bear a straight testimony. I was to
bear it without making any excuse as to why it was given. Then
my work would be done. The responsibility would rest upon those
to whom the testimony had been given. If they did not act upon
it, the guilt would be theirs. Guilt would not rest upon me if
I did my duty.
There have been those who have tried to
undermine the influence of Edson White. They forgot while they
were doing this that much more might have been done to undermine
their influence. They have spoken of Edson with a sneer, with
expressed contempt. My son did not know that I was going to speak
of this. But I feel that it [is] my duty to speak these words
this morning. It is a sin against God for men to treat a fellow
worker as some have treated Edson. God has said of him, "My
angel shall go before him, and lead him if he will walk humbly
before Me."
I told my son to be very careful of what
course he took because if he made mistakes there would be those
who would say, It is of no use to place confidence in Edson White.
They would be watching for a chance to criticize him. The angel
put his hand on his shoulder and told him
to work and walk very discreetly because there were those who
stood ready to hinder his work in the South if they could possibly
do this.
God is not with those who criticize and
find fault, and I wish all to know it. If those who had criticized
had gone to the Southern field and had talked with Edson as brother
should with brother, counseling and praying with him, how much
better it would have been. But instead of doing this, they stood
off and fired shots at his work, making things out to be as bad
as possible. Why did they not go over the field for themselves,
so that they could make a true report? They had opportunity to
do this, but instead they took the reports which had been brought
by someone else. We read in the Psalms that the one who will
stand in the courts of the Lord is the man who takes not up a
reproach against his neighbor.
I do not know but that I have said enough
for you to work upon. But I wish to say again that there is a
work to be done in the Southern field. Very little can be done
in the cities of the South until sanitariums are established
there. Let this work be commenced at once. A beginning has been
made at Nashville. A sanitarium must be established there. A
school must be started, not in the city but at a distance from
it. Schools must be established in different places in the South.
And colored teachers must work for the colored people under the
supervision of well-qualified men who have the spirit of mercy
and love.
I wish to say also that the Southern field
is a world of its own. The work there will have to be carried
forward independently, to a large degree, of the conference here.
The workers in the field will have to exercise judgment as to
the best way of advancing. And those who begin this work in any
part of the Lord's vineyard are not to feel that they cannot
make advance moves without consulting those in Battle Creek.
Those at the heart of the work, if they hear that a worker is
not doing as he should, are not to remove him without learning
the real facts in the case.
God wants His people to act sensibly. If
you hear that a worker is not doing as he ought, find out wherein
he is lacking. Talk with him in regard to his course and plead
with him to improve. Show him the best way in which to work.
We have reached the time when the work
cannot advance while wrong principles are cherished. Two or three
voices are not to control everything in the whole field. No,
indeed. In every field God has men of capability. He does not
mean that these men, when they wish to take advance steps, shall
send to Battle Creek in order to find out
the best way in which to move. The Lord says, I will break up
this plan of working. I will sever these connections. Every field
shall bear its own responsibility.--Ms 37, 1901 (MR 900.61).