Dear Brother and Sister K: In my last vision
I was shown some things in regard to your family. The Lord has
thoughts of mercy concerning you and will not forsake you unless
you forsake Him. L and M are in a lukewarm condition. They must
arouse and make efforts for salvation, or they will fail of everlasting
life. They must feel an individual responsibility and have an
experience for themselves. They need a work wrought in their
hearts by the Holy Spirit of God, which will lead them to love
and choose the society of God's people above any other, and to
be separate from those who have no love for spiritual things.
Jesus demands a whole sacrifice, an entire consecration. L and
M, you have not realized that God requires your undivided affections.
You have made a holy profession, yet have sunk down to the dead
level of ordinary professors. You love the society of the young
who have no regard for the sacred truths which you profess. You
have appeared like your associates, and have been contented with
as much religion as would render you agreeable to all, without
incurring the censure of any.
Christ demands all. If He required less,
His sacrifice was too dear, too great to make to bring us up
to such a level. Our holy faith cries out, Separation. We should
not be conformed to the world, or to dead, heartless professors.
"Be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind." This
is a self-denying way. And when you think that the way is too
strait, that there is too much self-denial in this narrow path;
when you say, How hard to give up all, ask yourselves the question,
What did Christ give up for me? This question puts anything that
we may call self-denial in the shade. Behold Him in the garden,
sweating great drops of blood. A solitary angel is sent from
heaven to strengthen the Son of God. Follow Him on His way to
the judgment hall, while He is derided, mocked, and insulted
by that infuriated mob. Behold
Him clothed in that old purple kingly robe. Hear the coarse jest
and cruel mocking. See them place upon that noble brow the crown
of thorns, and then smite Him with a reed, causing the thorns
to penetrate His temples, and the blood to flow from that holy
brow. Hear that murderous throng eagerly crying for the blood
of the Son of God. He is delivered into their hands, and they
lead the noble sufferer away, pale, weak, and fainting, to His
crucifixion. He is stretched upon the wooden cross, and the nails
are driven through His tender hands and feet. Behold Him hanging
upon the cross those dreadful hours of agony until the angels
veil their faces from the horrid scene, and the sun hides its
light, refusing to behold. Think of these things, and then ask,
Is the way too strait? No, no.
In a divided, halfhearted life, you will
find doubt and darkness. You cannot enjoy the consolations of
religion, neither the peace which the world gives. Do not sit
down in Satan's easy chair of do-little, but arise, and aim at
the elevated standard which it is your privilege to attain. It
is a blessed privilege to give up all for Christ. Look not at
the lives of others and imitate them and rise no higher. You
have only one true, unerring Pattern. It is safe to follow Jesus
only. Determine that if others act on the principle of the spiritual
sluggard you will leave them and march forward toward the elevation
of Christian character. Form a character for heaven. Sleep not
at your post. Deal faithfully and truly with your own soul.
You are indulging an evil which threatens
to destroy your spirituality. It will eclipse all the beauty
and interest of the sacred pages. It is love for storybooks,
tales, and other reading which does not have an influence for
good upon the mind that is in any way dedicated to the service
of God. It produces a false, unhealthy excitement, fevers the
imagination, unfits the mind for usefulness, and disqualifies
it for any spiritual exercise.
It weans the soul from prayer and love of spiritual things. Reading
that will throw light upon the sacred volume, and quicken your
desire and diligence to study it, is not dangerous, but beneficial.
You were represented to me with your eyes turned from the Sacred
Book and intently fixed upon exciting books, which are death
to religion. The oftener and more diligently you peruse the Scriptures,
the more beautiful will they appear, and the less relish will
you have for light reading. The daily study of the Scriptures
will have a sanctifying influence upon the mind. You will breathe
a heavenly atmosphere. Bind this precious volume to your hearts.
It will prove to you a friend and guide in perplexity.
You have had objects in view in your life,
and how steadily and perseveringly have you labored to attain
those objects! You have calculated and planned until your anticipations
were realized. There is an object before you now worthy of a
persevering, untiring, lifelong effort. It is the salvation of
your soul--everlasting life. And this demands self-denial, sacrifice,
and close study. You must be purified and refined. You lack the
saving influence of the Spirit of God. You mingle with your associates
and forget that you have named the name of Christ. You act and
dress like them.
Sister K, I saw that you have a work to
do. You must die to pride and let your whole interest be in the
truth. Your eternal interest depends upon the course you now
pursue. If you obtain eternal life, you must live for it and
deny self. Come out from the world, and be separate. Your life
must be marked with sobriety, watchfulness, and prayer. Angels
are watching the development of character and weighing moral
worth. All our words and acts are passing in review before God.
It is a fearful, solemn time. The hope of eternal life is not
to be taken up upon slight grounds; it must be settled between
God and your own soul. Some will lean upon others' judgment and
experience rather than be at the trouble
of a close examination of their own hearts, and will pass along
for months and years with no witness of the Spirit of God, or
evidence of their acceptance. They deceive themselves. They have
a supposed hope, but lack the essential qualifications of a Christian.
First there must be a thorough heart work, then their manners
will take that elevated, noble character which marks the true
followers of Christ. It requires effort and moral courage to
live out our faith.
God's people are peculiar. Their spirit
cannot mingle with the spirit and influence of the world. You
do not wish to bear the Christian name and yet be unworthy of
it. You do not desire to meet Jesus with a profession only. You
do not wish to be deceived in so important a matter. Thoroughly
examine the grounds of your hope. Deal truly with your own soul.
A supposed hope will never save you. Have you counted the cost?
I fear not. Now decide whether you will follow Christ, cost what
it will. You cannot do this and yet enjoy the society of those
who pay no heed to divine things. Your spirits cannot mingle
any more than oil and water.
It is a great thing to be a child of God,
and a joint-heir with Christ. If this is your privilege, you
will know the fellowship of Christ's sufferings. God looketh
upon the heart. I saw that you must seek Him earnestly, and raise
your standard of piety higher, or you will certainly fail of
everlasting life. You may ask the question: Did Sister White
see this? Yes; and I have tried to place it before you and give
you the impressions which were given me. May the Lord help you
to take heed.
Dear brother and sister, watch your children
with jealous care. The spirit and influence of the world are
destroying all desire in them to be true Christians. Let your
influence be to draw them from young companions who have no interest
in divine things. They must make a sacrifice if they win heaven
at last.