The fanaticism which raged in years past
has left its desolating effects in the East. I saw that God tested
His people upon time in 1844, but that no time which has since
been set has borne the special marks of His hand. He has not
tested His people upon any particular time since 1844. We have
been, and still are, in the patient waiting time. Considerable
excitement was created by the 1854 time, and many have settled
it that that movement was in the order of God because it was
quite extensive and some were apparently converted by it. But
such conclusions are not necessary. There was much preached in
connection with the time in 1854 that was reasonable and right.
Some who were honest took truth and error together, and sacrificed
much of what they possessed to carry out the error, and after
their disappointment they gave up both truth and error, and are
now where it is very difficult for the truth to reach them. Some
who endured the disappointment have seen the evidences of present
truth, and have embraced the third angel's message, and are striving
to carry it out in their lives. But where there is one who has
been benefited by believing the 1854 time, there are ten who
have been injured by it; and many of these are placed where they
will not be convinced of the truth, though it be presented before
them ever so clearly.
The proclamation of the 1854 time was attended
with a spirit which was not of God. It was a noisy, rough, careless,
excitable spirit. Noise was considered by many the essential
of true religion, and there was a tendency
to bring all down upon a low level. Many regarded this as humility;
but when opposed in their peculiar views, they would become excited
in a moment, manifest an overbearing spirit, and accuse those
who did not agree with them of being proud and of resisting the
truth and the power of God.
Holy angels have been displeased and disgusted
with the irreverent manner in which many have used the name of
God, the great Jehovah. Angels mention that sacred name with
the greatest awe, ever veiling their faces when they speak the
name of God; and the name of Christ is so sacred to them that
they speak it with the greatest reverence. But how opposite the
spirit and influence attending the 1854 time movement. Some who
are still under the same influence speak of God as they would
of a horse or of any other commonplace thing. In their prayers
they use the words God Almighty in a very common and irreverent
manner. Those who do this have no sense of the exalted character
of God, of Christ, or of heavenly things.
I was shown that when God sent His angels
anciently to minister or communicate to individuals, and these
persons learned that they had seen and talked with an angel,
they were struck with awe and were afraid that they should die.
They had so exalted views of the terrible majesty and power of
God that they thought it would destroy them to be brought into
close connection with one direct from His holy presence. I was
referred to Judges 13:21, 22: "Then Manoah knew that he
was an angel of the Lord. And Manoah said unto his wife, We shall
surely die, because we have seen God." Judges 6:22, 23:
"And when Gideon perceived that he was an angel of the Lord,
Gideon said, Alas, O Lord God! for because I have seen an angel
of the Lord face to face. And the Lord said unto him, Peace be
unto thee; fear not: thou shalt not die." Joshua 5:13-15:
"And it came to pass, when Joshua was by Jericho, that he lifted up his eyes and looked,
and, behold, there stood a man over against him with his sword
drawn in his hand: and Joshua went unto him, and said unto him,
Art thou for us, or for our adversaries? And he said, Nay; but
as captain of the host of the Lord am I now come. And Joshua
fell on his face to the earth, and did worship, and said unto
him, What saith my Lord unto his servant? And the captain of
the Lord's host said unto Joshua, Loose thy shoe from off thy
foot; for the place whereon thou standest is holy. And Joshua
did so." If angels were thus feared and honored because
they came from the presence of God, with how much greater reverence
should God Himself be regarded.
Many who were converted through the influence
of the 1854 movement need to be converted anew. And now tenfold
more labor is required to correct the wrong, distracting views
which they have received from their teachers, and to lead them
to receive the truth unmixed with error, than would have been
necessary to bring them out in the first place upon the third
angel's message. This class must unlearn before they can learn
aright, else the poisonous weeds of error would grow rank and
root out the precious seeds of truth. Error must first be rooted
up, then the soil is prepared for the good seed to spring up
and bear fruit to the glory of God.
The only remedy for the East is thorough
discipline and organization. A spirit of fanaticism has ruled
a certain class of Sabbathkeepers there; they have sipped but
lightly at the fountain of truth and are unacquainted with the
spirit of the message of the third angel. Nothing can be done
for this class until their fanatical views are corrected. Some
who were in the 1854 movement have brought along with them erroneous
views, such as the nonresurrection of the wicked, and the future
age, and they are seeking to unite these views and their past
experience with the message of the third angel. They cannot do
this; there is no concord between Christ and Belial. The nonresurrection of the wicked and their
peculiar views of the age to come are gross errors which Satan
has worked in among the last-day heresies to serve his own purpose
to ruin souls. These errors can have no harmony with the message
of heavenly origin.
Some of these persons have exercises which
they call gifts and say that the Lord has placed them in the
church. They have an unmeaning gibberish which they call the
unknown tongue, which is unknown not only by man but by the Lord
and all heaven. Such gifts are manufactured by men and women,
aided by the great deceiver. Fanaticism, false excitement, false
talking in tongues, and noisy exercises have been considered
gifts which God has placed in the church. Some have been deceived
here. The fruits of all this have not been good. "Ye shall
know them by their fruits." Fanaticism and noise have been
considered special evidences of faith. Some are not satisfied
with a meeting unless they have a powerful and happy time. They
work for this and get up an excitement of feeling. But the influence
of such meetings is not beneficial. When the happy flight of
feeling is gone, they sink lower than before the meeting because
their happiness did not come from the right source. The most
profitable meetings for spiritual advancement are those which
are characterized with solemnity and deep searching of heart;
each seeking to know himself, and earnestly, and in deep humility,
seeking to learn of Christ.
Brother Lunt of Portland, Maine, has suffered
much in his feelings. He has felt that the spirit which often
ruled in their meetings was not in harmony with the message of
the third angel. He has had an experience in the fanaticism which
has left desolation in the East, and this leads him to look with
suspicion upon everything which appears like fanaticism. He has
the past before him as a warning and has felt like keeping aloof
from, and speaking plainly with, those who had any
degree of fanaticism, for he felt that both
they and the cause of God were in danger. He has looked upon
things in about the right light.
There are many restless spirits who will
not submit to discipline, system, and order. They think that
their liberties would be abridged were they to lay aside their
own judgment and submit to the judgment of those of experience.
The work of God will not progress unless there is a disposition
to submit to order and expel the reckless, disorderly spirit
of fanaticism from their meetings. Impressions and feelings are
no sure evidence that a person is led by the Lord. Satan will,
if he is unsuspected, give feelings and impressions. These are
not safe guides. All should thoroughly acquaint themselves with
the evidences of our faith, and the great study should be how
they can adorn their profession and bear fruit to the glory of
God. None should take a course to make themselves disgusting
to unbelievers. We should be chaste, modest, and elevated in
conversation, and blameless in life. A trifling, joking, reckless
spirit should be rebuked. It is no evidence of the grace of God
upon the heart for persons to talk and pray with talent in meeting,
and then give up to a rough, careless manner of talking and acting
when out of meeting. Such are miserable representatives of our
faith; they are a reproach to the cause of God.
There is a strange mixture of views among
professed Sabbathkeepers in -----. Some are not in harmony with
the body, and while they continue to occupy the position they
now do, they will be subject to the temptations of Satan and
will be affected with fanaticism and the spirit of error. Some
have fanciful views which blind their eyes to important, vital
points of truth, leading them to place their own fanciful inferences
upon a level with vital truth. The appearance of such, and the
spirit which attends them, makes the Sabbath which they profess
very objectionable to the sensible unbeliever. It would be
far better for the progress and success of
the third angel's message if such persons would leave the truth.
According to the light which God has given
me, there will yet be a large company raised up in the East to
consistently obey the truth. Those who follow in the distracted
course they have chosen will be left to embrace errors which
will finally cause their overthrow; but they will for a time
be stumbling blocks to those who would receive the truth. Ministers
who labor in word and doctrine should be thorough workmen, and
should present the truth in its purity, yet with simplicity.
They should feed the flock with clean provender, thoroughly winnowed.
There are wandering stars professing to be ministers sent of
God who are preaching the Sabbath from place to place, but who
have truth mixed up with error and are throwing out their mass
of discordant views to the people. Satan has pushed them in to
disgust intelligent and sensible unbelievers. Some of these have
much to say upon the gifts and are often especially exercised.
They give themselves up to wild, excitable feelings and make
unintelligible sounds which they call the gift of tongues, and
a certain class seem to be charmed with these strange manifestations.
A strange spirit rules with this class, which would bear down
and run over anyone who would reprove them. God's Spirit is not
in the work and does not attend such workmen. They have another
spirit. Still, such preachers have success among a certain class.
But this will greatly increase the labor of those servants whom
God shall send, who are qualified to present before the people
the Sabbath and the gifts in their proper light, and whose influence
and example are worthy of imitation.
The truth should be presented in a manner
which will make it attractive to the intelligent mind. We are
not understood as a people, but are looked upon as poor, weak-minded,
low, and degraded. Then how important for all who teach, and
all who believe the truth, to be so affected by its sanctifying
influence that their consistent, elevated
lives shall show unbelievers that they have been deceived in
this people. How important that the cause of truth be stripped
of everything like a false and fanatical excitement, that the
truth may stand upon its own merits, revealing its native purity
and exalted character.
I saw that it is highly important for those
who preach the truth to be refined in their manners, to shun
oddities and eccentricities, and present the truth in its purity
and clearness. I was referred to Titus 1:9: "Holding fast
the faithful word as he hath been taught, that he may be able
by sound doctrine both to exhort and to convince the gainsayers."
In verse 16 Paul speaks of a class who profess that they know
God, but in works deny him, being "unto every good work
reprobate." He then exhorts Titus: "But speak thou
the things which become sound doctrine: that the aged men be
sober, grave, temperate, sound in faith, in charity, in patience.
. . . Young men likewise exhort to be sober-minded. In all things
showing thyself a pattern of good works: in doctrine showing
uncorruptness, gravity, sincerity, sound speech, that cannot
be condemned; that he that is of the contrary part may be ashamed,
having no evil thing to say of you." This instruction is
written for the benefit of all whom God has called to preach
the word, and also for the benefit of His people who hear the
word.
The truth of God will never degrade, but
will elevate the receiver, refine his taste, sanctify his judgment,
and perfect him for the company of the pure and holy angels in
the kingdom of God. There are some whom the truth finds coarse,
rough, odd, boastful, who take advantage of their neighbors if
they can, in order to benefit themselves; they err in many ways,
yet when the truth is believed by them from the heart, it will
work an entire change in their lives. They will immediately commence
the work of reformation. The pure influence of truth will elevate the whole man. In his business
deal with his fellow men he will have the fear of God before
him, and will love his neighbor as himself, and will deal just
as he would wish to be dealt by. His conversation will be truthful,
chaste, and of so elevating a character that unbelievers cannot
take advantage of it, or say evil of him justly, and are not
disgusted with his uncourteous ways and unbecoming speech. He
will carry the sanctifying influence of the truth into his family
and let his light so shine before them that they by seeing his
good works may glorify God. He will in all the walks of life
exemplify the life of Christ.
The law of God will be satisfied with nothing
short of perfection, of perfect and entire obedience to all its
claims. To come halfway to its requirements, and not render perfect
and thorough obedience, will avail nothing. The worldling and
the infidel admire consistency and have ever been powerfully
convicted that God was of a truth with His people when their
works correspond with their faith. "By their fruits ye shall
know them." Every tree is known by its own fruits. Our words,
our actions, are the fruit we bear. There are many who hear the
sayings of Christ, but do them not. They make a profession, but
their fruits are such as to disgust unbelievers. They are boastful,
and pray and talk in a self-righteous manner, exalting themselves,
recounting their good deeds, and, like the Pharisee, virtually
thanking God that they are not as other men. Yet these very ones
are crafty, and overreach in business deal. Their fruits are
not good. Their words and acts are wrong, and yet they seem to
be blinded to their destitute, wretched condition.
I was shown that the following scripture
is applicable to those who are under such a deception: "Not
everyone that saith unto Me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the
kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of My Father which
is in heaven. Many will say to Me in that day, Lord, Lord, have
not we prophesied in Thy name? and in Thy name have cast
out devils? and in Thy name done many wonderful
works? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart
from Me, ye that work iniquity."
Here is the greatest deception that can
affect the human mind; these persons believe that they are right
when they are wrong. They think that they are doing a great work
in their religious life, but Jesus finally tears off their self-righteous
covering and vividly presents before them the true picture of
themselves in all their wrongs and deformity of religious character.
They are found wanting when it is forever too late to have their
wants supplied. God has provided means to correct the erring:
yet if those who err, choose to follow their own judgment, and
despise the means which He has ordained to correct them and unite
them upon the truth, they will be brought into the position described
by the words of our Lord quoted above.
God is bringing out a people and preparing
them to stand as one, united, to speak the same things, and thus
carry out the prayer of Christ for His disciples. "Neither
pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe
on Me through their word; that they all may be one; as Thou,
Father, art in Me, and I in Thee, that they also may be one in
Us: that the world may believe that Thou hast sent Me."
There are little companies continually
rising who believe that God is only with the very few, the very
scattered, and their influence is to tear down and scatter that
which God's servants build up. Restless minds who want to be
seeing and believing something new continually are constantly
rising, some in one place and some in another, all doing a special
work for the enemy, yet claiming to have the truth. They stand
separate from the people whom God is leading out and prospering,
and through whom He is to do His great work. They are continually
expressing their fears that the body of Sabbathkeepers are becoming
like the world, but there are scarcely two of these whose views
are in harmony. They are scattered
and confused, and yet deceive themselves so much as to think
that God is especially with them. Some of these profess to have
the gifts among them; but are led by the influence and teachings
of these gifts to hold in doubt those upon whom God has laid
the special burden of His work, and to lead off a class from
the body. The people, who, in accordance with God's word, are
putting forth every effort to be one, who are established in
the message of the third angel, are looked upon with suspicion
for the reason that they are extending their labor and are gathering
souls into the truth. They are considered worldly because they
have an influence in the world, and their acts testify that they
expect God yet to do a special and great work upon the earth,
to bring out a people and fit them for Christ's appearing.
This class do not know what they really
believe, or the reasons for their belief. They are ever learning,
and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth. One man
arises with wild, erroneous views, and claims that God has sent
him with new and glorious light, and all must believe what he
brings. Some who have no established faith, who are not subject
to the body, but are drifting about without an anchor to hold
them, receive that wind of doctrine. His light shines in such
a manner as to cause the world to turn from him in disgust and
to hate him. Then he blasphemously places himself by the side
of Christ and claims that the world hate him for the same reason
that they hated Christ. Another rises, claiming to be led of
God, and advocates the heresy of the nonresurrection of the wicked,
which is one of Satan's great masterpieces of error. Another
cherishes erroneous views in regard to the future age. Another
zealously urges the American costume. They all want full religious
liberty, and each acts independent of the others, and yet they
claim that God is especially at work among them.
Some rejoice and exult that they have the
gifts, which
others have not. May God deliver His people
from such gifts. What do these gifts do for them? Are they through
the exercise of these gifts, brought into the unity of the faith?
And do they convince the unbeliever that God is with them of
a truth? When these discordant ones, holding their different
views, come together and there is considerable excitement and
the unknown tongue, they let their light so shine that unbelievers
would say: These people are not sane; they are carried away with
a false excitement, and we know that they do not have the truth.
Such stand directly in the way of sinners; their influence is
effectual to keep others from accepting the Sabbath. Such will
be rewarded according to their works. Would to God they would
be reformed or give up the Sabbath! They would not then stand
in the way of unbelievers.
God has led out men who have toiled for
years, who have been willing to make any sacrifice, who have
suffered privation, and endured trials to bring the truth before
the world, and by their consistent course remove the reproach
that fanatics have brought upon the cause of God. They have met
opposition in every form. They have toiled night and day in searching
the evidences of our faith that they might bring out the truth
in its clearness, in a connected form, that it might withstand
all opposition. Incessant labor and mental trials in connection
with this great work have worn down more than one constitution
and prematurely sprinkled heads with gray hairs. They have not
worn out in vain. God has marked their earnest, tearful, agonizing
prayers that they might have light and truth, and that the truth
might shine in its clearness to others. He has marked their self-sacrificing
efforts, and He will reward them as their works have been.
On the other hand, those who have not toiled
to bring out these precious truths have come up and received
some points, like the Sabbath truth, which are all prepared to
their hand, and then all the gratitude they manifest for that
which cost them nothing, but others
so much, is to rise up like Korah, Dathan, and Abiram, and reproach
those upon whom God has laid the burden of His work. They would
say: "Ye take too much upon you, seeing all the congregation
are holy, every one of them, and the Lord is among them."
They are strangers to gratitude. They possess a strong spirit
which will not yield to reason and which will lead them on to
their own destruction.
God has blessed His people who have moved
forward following His opening providence. He has brought out
a people from every class upon the great platform of truth. Infidels
have been convinced that God was with His people and have humbled
their hearts to obey the truth. The work of God moves steadily
on. Yet notwithstanding all the evidences that God has been leading
the body, there are, and will continue to be, those who profess
the Sabbath, who will move independent of the body, and believe
and act as they choose. Their views are confused. Their scattered
state is a standing testimony that God is not with them. By the
world the Sabbath and their errors are placed upon a level and
thrown away together. God is angry with those who pursue a course
to make the world hate them. If a Christian is hated because
of his good works and for following Christ, he will have a reward;
but if he is hated because he does not take a course to be loved,
hated because of his uncultivated manners and because he makes
the truth a matter of quarrel with his neighbors, and takes a
course to make the Sabbath as annoying as possible to them, he
is a stumbling block to sinners, a reproach to the sacred truth,
and unless he repents it were better for him that a millstone
were hung about his neck and he were cast into the sea.
No occasion should be given to unbelievers
to reproach our faith. We are considered odd and singular, and
should not take a course to lead unbelievers to think us more
so than our faith requires us to be.
Some who believe the truth may think that
it would be more healthful for the sisters to adopt the American
costume, yet if that mode of dress would cripple our influence
among unbelievers so that we could not so readily gain access
to them, we should by no means adopt it, though we suffered much
in consequence. But some are deceived in thinking there is so
much benefit to be received from this costume. While it may prove
a benefit to some, it is an injury to others. [SEE APPENDIX.]
I saw that God's order has been reversed,
and His special directions disregarded, by those who adopt the
American costume. I was referred to Deuteronomy 22:5: "The
woman shall not wear that which pertaineth unto a man, neither
shall a man put on a woman's garment: for all that do so are
abomination unto the Lord thy God." God would not have His
people adopt the so-called reform dress. It is immodest apparel,
wholly unfitted for the modest, humble followers of Christ.
There is an increasing tendency to have
women in their dress and appearance as near like the other sex
as possible, and to fashion their dress very much like that of
men, but God pronounces it abomination. "In like manner
also, that women adorn themselves in modest apparel, with shamefacedness
and sobriety." 1 Timothy 2:9.
Those who feel called out to join the movement
in favor of woman's rights and the so-called dress reform might
as well sever all connection with the third angel's message.
The spirit which attends the one cannot be in harmony with the
other. The Scriptures are plain upon the relations and rights
of men and women. Spiritualists have, to quite an extent, adopted
this singular mode of dress. Seventh-day Adventists, who believe
in the restoration of the gifts, are often branded as spiritualists.
Let them adopt this costume, and their influence is dead. The
people would place them on a level with spiritualists and would
refuse to listen to them.
With the so-called dress reform there goes
a spirit of levity and boldness just in keeping with the dress.
Modesty and reserve seem to depart from many as they adopt that
style of dress. I was shown that God would have us take a course
consistent and explainable. Let the sisters adopt the American
costume and they would destroy their own influence and that of
their husbands. They would become a byword and a derision. Our
Saviour says: "Ye are the light of the world." "Let
your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works,
and glorify your Father which is in heaven." There is a
great work for us to do in the world, and God would not have
us take a course to lessen or destroy our influence with the
world.