I saw the wives of the ministers. Some
of them are no help to their husbands, yet they profess the third
angel's message. They think more of studying their own wishes
and pleasure than the will of God, or how they can hold up the
hands of their husbands by their faithful prayers and careful
walk. I saw that some of them take so willful and selfish a course
that Satan makes them his instruments and works through them
to destroy the influence and usefulness of their husbands. They
feel at liberty to complain and murmur if they are brought through
any strait places. They forget the sufferings of the ancient
Christians for the truth's sake and think that they must have
their wishes and way, and follow their own will. They forget
the suffering of Jesus, their Master. They forget the Man of
Sorrows, who was acquainted with grief--He who had not where
to lay His head. They do not care
to remember that holy brow, pierced with a crown of thorns. They
forget Him, who, bearing His own cross to Calvary, fainted beneath
its burden. Not merely the burden of the wooden cross, but the
heavy burden of the sins of the world, was upon Him. They forget
the cruel nails driven through His tender hands and feet, and
His expiring, agonizing cries: "My God, My God, why hast
Thou forsaken Me?" After all this suffering endured for
them, they feel a strong unwillingness to suffer for Christ's
sake.
These persons, I saw, are deceiving themselves.
They have no part nor lot in the matter. They have hold of the
truth; but the truth has not hold of them. When the truth, the
solemn, important truth, gets hold of them, self will die; then
the language will not be, "I will go there, I will not stay
here;" but the earnest inquiry will be, "Where does
God want me to be? Where can I best glorify Him, and where can
our united labors do the most good?" Their will should be
swallowed up in the will of God. The willfulness and lack of
consecration that some of the ministers' wives manifest will
stand in the way of sinners; the blood of souls will be upon
their garments. Some of the ministers have borne a strong testimony
in regard to the duty and the wrongs of the church; but it has
not had its designed effect, for their own companions needed
all the straight testimony that had been borne, and the reproof
came back upon themselves with great weight. They let their companions
affect them and drag them down, prejudicing their minds, and
their usefulness and influence are lost; they feel desponding
and disheartened, and realize not the true source of the injury.
It is close at home.
These sisters are closely connected with
the work of God if He has called their husbands to preach the
present truth. These servants, if truly called of God, will feel
the importance of the truth. They are standing between the living
and the dead, and must watch for souls as they that must give
an account. Solemn is their calling,
and their companions can be a great blessing or a great curse
to them. They can cheer them when desponding, comfort them when
cast down, and encourage them to look up and trust fully in God
when their faith fails. Or they can take an opposite course,
look upon the dark side, think they have a hard time, exercise
no faith in God, talk their trials and unbelief to their companions,
indulge a complaining, murmuring spirit, and be a dead weight
and even a curse to them.
I saw that the wives of the ministers should
help their husbands in their labors and be exact and careful
what influence they exert, for they are watched, and more is
expected of them than of others. Their dress should be an example.
Their lives and conversation should be an example, savoring of
life rather than of death. I saw that they should take a humble,
meek, yet exalted stand, not having their conversation upon things
that do not tend to direct the mind heavenward. The great inquiry
should be: "How can I save my own soul, and be the means
of saving others?" I saw that no half-hearted work in this
matter is accepted of God. He wants the whole heart and interest,
or He will have none. Their influence tells, decidedly, unmistakably,
in favor of the truth or against it. They gather with Jesus,
or scatter abroad. An unsanctified wife is the greatest curse
that a minister can have. Those servants of God that have been
and are still so unhappily situated as to have this withering
influence at home, should double their prayers and their watchfulness,
take a firm, decided stand, and let not this darkness press them
down. They should cleave closer to God, be firm and decided,
rule well their own house, and live so that they can have the
approbation of God and the watchcare of the angels. But if they
yield to the wishes of their unconsecrated companions, the frown
of God is brought upon the dwelling. The ark of God cannot abide
in the house, because they countenance and uphold them in their
wrongs.
Our God is a jealous God. It is a fearful
thing to trifle with Him. Anciently, Achan coveted a golden wedge
and a Babylonish garment, and secreted them, and all Israel suffered;
they were driven before their enemies. And when Joshua inquired
the cause, the Lord said: "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." Achan had
sinned, and God destroyed him and all his household, with all
they possessed, and wiped the curse from Israel.
I saw that the Israel of God must arise
and renew their strength in God by renewing and keeping their
covenant with Him. Covetousness, selfishness, love of money,
and love of the world, are all through the ranks of Sabbathkeepers.
These evils are destroying the spirit of sacrifice among God's
people. Those that have this covetousness in their hearts are
not aware of it. It has gained upon them imperceptibly, and unless
it is rooted out, their destruction will be as sure as was Achan's.
Many have taken the sacrifice from God's altar. They love the
world, love its gain and increase, and, unless there is an entire
change in them, they will perish with the world. God has lent
them means; it is not their own, but God has made them His stewards.
And because of this, they call it their own and hoard it up.
But, oh, how quick, when the prospering hand of God is removed
from them, it is all snatched away in a moment! There must be
a sacrificing for God, a denying of self for the truth's sake.
Oh, how weak and frail is man! How puny his arm! I saw that soon
the loftiness of man is to be brought down, and the pride of
man humbled. Kings and nobles, rich and poor, alike shall bow,
and the withering plagues of God shall fall upon them.