Inquiries are often made in regard to our
duty to the poor who embrace the third message; and we ourselves
have long been anxious to know how to manage with discretion
the cases of poor families who embrace the Sabbath. But while
at Roosevelt, New York, August 3, 1861, I was shown some things
in regard to the poor.
God does not require our brethren to take
charge of every poor family that shall embrace this message.
If they should do this, the ministers must cease to enter new
fields, for the funds would be exhausted. Many are poor from
their own lack of diligence and economy; they know not how to
use means aright. If they should be helped, it would hurt them.
Some will always be poor. If they should have the very best advantages,
their cases would not be helped. They have not good calculation
and would use all the means they could obtain, were it much or
little. Some know nothing of denying self and economizing to
keep out of debt and to get a little
ahead for a time of need. If the church should help such individuals
instead of leaving them to rely upon their own resources, it
would injure them in the end, for they look to the church and
expect to receive help from them and do not practice self-denial
and economy when they are well provided for. And if they do not
receive help every time, Satan tempts them, and they become jealous
and very conscientious for their brethren, fearing they will
fail to do all their duty to them. The mistake is on their own
part. They are deceived. They are not the Lord's poor.
The instructions given in the word of God
in regard to helping the poor do not touch such cases, but are
for the unfortunate and afflicted. God in His providence has
afflicted individuals to test and prove others. Widows and invalids
are in the church to prove a blessing to the church. They are
a part of the means which God has chosen to develop the true
character of Christ's professed followers and to call into exercise
the precious traits of character manifested by our compassionate
Redeemer.
Many who can but barely live when they
are single, choose to marry and raise a family when they know
they have nothing with which to support them. And worse than
this, they have no family government. Their whole course in their
family is marked with their loose, slack habits. They have but
little control over themselves, and are passionate, impatient,
and fretful. When such embrace the message, they feel that they
are entitled to assistance from their more wealthy brethren;
and if their expectations are not met, they complain of the church
and accuse them of not living out their faith. Who must be the
sufferers in this case? Must the cause of God be sapped, and
the treasury in different places exhausted, to take care of these
large families of poor? No. The parents must be the sufferers.
They will not, as a general thing, suffer any greater lack after
they embrace the Sabbath than they did before.
There is an evil among some of the poor
which will certainly prove their ruin unless they overcome it.
They have embraced the truth with their coarse, rough, uncultivated
habits, and it takes some time for them to see and realize their
coarseness, and that it is not in accordance with the character
of Christ. They look upon others who are more orderly and refined
as being proud, and you may hear them say: "The truth brings
us all down upon a level." But it is an entire mistake to
think that the truth brings the receiver down. It brings him
up, refines his taste, sanctifies his judgment, and, if lived
out, is continually fitting him for the society of holy angels
in the City of God. The truth is designed to bring us all up
upon a level.
The more able should ever act a noble,
generous part in their deal with their poorer brethren, and should
also give them good advice, and then leave them to fight life's
battles through. But I was shown that a most solemn duty rests
upon the church to have an especial care for the destitute widows,
orphans, and invalids.