Dear Brother D: I have been designing to
write to you for some time, but our labors have been so constant
and wearing that I have had no time nor strength to do so. In
my last vision your case was shown me. You were in a
critical condition. You knew the truth, you
understood your duty, and you had rejoiced in the light of the
truth; but because it interfered with your worldly pursuits,
you were about to sacrifice truth and duty to your own convenience.
You were looking at your own present pecuniary advantage and
losing sight of the eternal weight of glory. You were about to
make an immense sacrifice for the flattering prospect of present
gain. You were just upon the point of selling your birthright
for a mess of pottage. Had you turned from the truth for earthly
gain, it would not have been a sin of ignorance on your part,
but a willful transgression.
Esau lusted for a favorite dish, and sacrificed
his birthright to gratify appetite. After his lustful appetite
had been gratified he saw his folly, but found no space for repentance
though he sought it carefully and with tears. There are very
many who are like Esau. He represents a class who have a special,
valuable blessing within their reach,--the immortal inheritance,
life that is as enduring as the life of God, the Creator of the
universe, happiness immeasurable, and an eternal weight of glory,--but
who have so long indulged their appetites, passions, and inclinations,
that their power to discern and appreciate the value of eternal
things is weakened.
Esau had a special, strong desire for a
particular article of food, and he had so long gratified self
that he did not feel the necessity of turning from the tempting,
coveted dish. He thought upon it, making no special effort to
restrain his appetite, until the power of appetite bore down
every other consideration and controlled him, and he imagined
that he would suffer great inconvenience, and even death, if
he could not have that particular dish. The more he thought upon
it, the more his desire strengthened, until his birthright, which
was sacred, lost its value and its sacredness. He thought, If
I now sell it, I can easily buy it back. He bartered it away
for a favorite dish, flattering himself that
he could dispose of it at will and buy it back at pleasure. But
when he sought to buy it back, even at a great sacrifice on his
part, he was not able to do so. He then bitterly repented his
rashness, his folly, his madness. He looked the matter over on
every side. He sought for repentance carefully and with tears,
but it was all in vain. He had despised the blessing, and the
Lord removed it from him forever. You have thought that if you
should sacrifice the truth now, and go on in a course of open
transgression and disobedience, you would not break over all
restraint and become reckless, and if you should be disappointed
in your hopes and expectations of worldly gain you could again
interest yourself in the truth and become a candidate for everlasting
life. But you have deceived yourself in this matter. Had you
sacrificed the truth for worldly gain, it would have been at
the expense of life everlasting.
Under the parable of a great supper, our
Saviour shows that many will choose the world above Himself,
and will, as the result, lose heaven. The gracious invitation
of our Saviour was slighted. He had been to the trouble and expense
to make great preparation at an immense sacrifice. Then he sent
his invitation; but "they all with one consent began to
make excuse. The first said unto him, I have bought a piece of
ground, and I must needs go and see it: I pray thee have me excused.
And another said, I have bought five yoke of oxen, and I go to
prove them: I pray thee have me excused. And another said, I
have married a wife, and therefore I cannot come." The lord
then turns from the wealthy and world-loving, whose lands and
oxen and wives were of so great value in their estimation as
to outweigh the advantages they would gain by accepting the gracious
invitation he had given them to eat of his supper. The master
of the house is angry, and turns from those who have thus insulted
his bounty offered them, and he
invites a class who are not full, who are not in possession of
lands and houses, but who are poor and hungry, who are maimed
and halt and blind, and who will appreciate the bounties provided,
and in return will render the master sincere gratitude, unfeigned
love and devotion.
Still there is room. The command is then
given: "Go out into the highways and hedges, and compel
them to come in, that my house may be filled. For I say unto
you, that none of those men which were bidden shall taste of
my supper." Here is a class rejected of God because they
despised the invitation of the Master. The Lord declared to Eli:
"Them that honor Me I will honor, and they that despise
Me shall be lightly esteemed." Says Christ: "If any
man serve Me, let him follow Me; and where I am, there shall
also My servant be: if any man serve Me, him will My Father honor."
God will not be trifled with. If those who have the light reject
it, or neglect to follow it out, it will become darkness to them.
An immense sacrifice was made on the part
of God's dear Son, that He might have power to rescue fallen
man and exalt him to His own right hand, make him an heir of
the world and a possessor of the eternal weight of glory. Language
fails to express the value of the immortal inheritance. The glory,
riches, and honor offered by the Son of God are of such infinite
value that it is beyond the power of men or even angels to give
any just idea of their worth, their excellence, their magnificence.
If men, plunged in sin and degradation, refuse these heavenly
benefits, refuse a life of obedience, trample upon the gracious
invitations of mercy, and choose the paltry things of earth because
they are seen, and it is convenient for their present enjoyment
to pursue a course of sin, Jesus will carry out the figure in
the parable; such shall not taste of His glory, but the invitation
will be extended to another class.
Those who choose to make excuses and continue
in sin and conformity to the world will be left to their idols.
There will be a day when they will not beg to be excused, when
not one will wish to be excused. When Christ shall come in His
glory and the glory of His Father, with all the heavenly angels
surrounding Him, escorting Him on His way with voices of triumph,
while strains of the most enchanting music fall upon the ear,
all will then be interested; there will not be one indifferent
spectator. Speculations will not then engross the soul. The miser's
piles of gold, which have feasted his eyes, are no more attractive.
The palaces which the proud men of earth have erected, and which
have been their idols, are turned from with loathing and disgust.
No one pleads his lands, his oxen, his wife that he has just
married, as a reason why he should be excused from sharing the
glory that bursts upon his astonished vision. All want a share,
but know that it is not for them.
In earnest, agonizing prayer they call
for God to pass them not by. The kings, the mighty men, the lofty,
the proud, the mean man, alike bow together under a pressure
of woe, desolation, misery inexpressible; heart-anguished prayers
are wrung from their lips. Mercy! mercy! Save us from the wrath
of an offended God! A voice answers them with terrible distinctness,
sternness, and majesty: "Because I have called, and ye refused;
I have stretched out My hand, and no man regarded; but ye have
set at nought all My counsel, and would none of My reproof: I
also will laugh at your calamity; I will mock when your fear
cometh."
Then kings and nobles, the mighty man,
and the poor man, and the mean man, alike, cry there most bitterly.
They who in the days of their prosperity despised Christ and
the humble ones who followed in His footsteps, men who would
not humble their dignity to bow to Christ, who hated His despised
cross, are now prostrate in the mire of the earth.
Their greatness has all at once left them,
and they do not hesitate to bow to the earth at the feet of the
saints. They then realize with terrible bitterness that they
are eating the fruit of their own way, and are filled with their
own devices. In their supposed wisdom they turned away from the
high, eternal reward, rejected the heavenly inducement, for earthly
gain. The glitter and tinsel of earth fascinated them, and in
their supposed wisdom they became fools. They exulted in their
worldly prosperity as though their worldly advantages were so
great that they could through them be recommended to God, and
thus secure heaven.
Money was power among the foolish of earth,
and money was their god; but their very prosperity has destroyed
them. They became fools in the eyes of God and His heavenly angels,
while men of worldly ambition thought them wise. Now their supposed
wisdom is all foolishness, and their prosperity their destruction.
Again ring forth shrieks of fearful, heart-rending anguish: "Rocks
and mountains, fall on us, and hide us from the face of Him that
sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb; for the
great day of His wrath is come, and who shall be able to stand?"
To the caves of the earth they flee as a covert, but these fail
to be such then.
Dear brother, life or death is before you.
Do you know why your steps have faltered? why you did not persevere
with courage and firmness? You have a violated conscience. Your
business career has not been straightforward. You have something
to do here. Your father did not look upon business principles
in the correct light. You regard them as do worldlings in general,
but not as God regards them. "Thou shalt love thy neighbor
as thyself." Have you done this? "Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with
all thy strength, and with all thy mind." If this commandment
is obeyed, it prepares the heart to obey the second, which is like unto it: "Love thy
neighbor as thyself." All the Ten Commandments are embodied
in the two specified. The first includes the first four commandments,
which show the duty of man to his Creator. The second embraces
the last six, which show the duty of man to his fellow man. On
these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets. They
are two great arms sustaining all ten of the commandments, the
first four and the last six. These must be strictly obeyed.
"If thou wilt enter into life, keep
the commandments." Very many who profess to be Christ's
disciples will apparently pass along smoothly in this world,
and will be regarded as upright, godly men, when they have a
plague spot at the core, which taints their whole character and
corrupts their religious experience. "Thou shalt love thy
neighbor as thyself." This forbids us to take advantage
of our fellow men in order to advantage ourselves. We are forbidden
to wrong our neighbor in anything. We should not view the matter
from the worldling's standpoint. To deal with our fellow men
in every instance just as we should wish them to deal with us
is a rule which we should apply to ourselves practically. God's
laws are to be obeyed to the letter. In all our intercourse and
deal with our fellow men, whether believers or unbelievers, this
rule is to be applied: "Love thy neighbor as thyself."
Here many who profess to be Christians
will not bear the measurement of God; when weighed in the balances
of the sanctuary, they will be found wanting. Dear brother, "come
out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and
touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you, and will
be a Father unto you, and ye shall be My sons and daughters,
saith the Lord Almighty." What a promise is this! But we
are not to lose sight of the fact that it is based upon obedience
to the command. God calls you to separate from the world. You
are not to follow their practices, nor conform
to them in your course of action in any respect. "But be
ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove
what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God."
God calls for separation from the world.
Will you obey? Will you come out from among them, and remain
separate and distinct from them? "For what fellowship hath
righteousness with unrighteousness? and what communion hath light
with darkness?" You cannot mingle with worldlings, and partake
of their spirit, and follow their example, and be at the same
time a child of God. The Creator of the universe addresses you
as an affectionate Father. If you separate from the world in
your affections, and remain free from its contamination, escaping
the corruption that is in the world through lust, God will be
your Father, He will adopt you into His family, and you will
be His heir. In place of the world, He will give you, for a life
of obedience, the kingdom under the whole heavens. He will give
you an eternal weight of glory and a life that is as enduring
as eternity.
Your heavenly Father proposes to make you
a member of the royal family, that through His exceeding great
and precious promises you may be a partaker of the divine nature,
having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust.
The more you partake of the character of the pure, sinless angels,
and of Christ your Redeemer, the more vividly will you bear the
impress of the divine, and the more faint will be the resemblance
to the world. The world and Christ are at variance, because the
world will not be in union with Christ. The world will also be
at variance with Christ's followers. In the prayer of our Saviour
to His Father, He says: "I have given them Thy word; and
the world hath hated them, because they are not of the world,
even as I am not of the world."
Your calling is a high, an elevated one,
to glorify God in your body and spirit, which are His. You are
not to measure yourself by others. The word of God has presented
you an unerring pattern, a faultless example. You have dreaded
the cross. It is an inconvenient instrument to lift, and because
it is covered with reproach and shame, you have shunned it. You
need to carry out the health reform in your life; to deny yourself,
and eat and drink to the glory of God. Abstain from fleshly lusts
which war against the soul. You need to practice temperance in
all things. Here is a cross which you have shunned. To confine
yourself to a simple diet, which will preserve you in the best
condition of health, is a task to you. Had you lived up to the
light which Heaven has permitted to shine upon your pathway,
much suffering might have been saved your family. Your own course
of action has brought the sure result. While you continue in
this course, God will not come into your family and especially
bless you and work a miracle to save your family from suffering.
A plain diet, free from spices and flesh meats and grease of
all kinds, would prove a blessing to you and would save your
wife a great amount of suffering, grief, and despondency.
You have not pursued a course which would
assure to you the blessing of God. If you would have His blessing
attend you, and His presence abide in your family, you must obey
Him, doing His will irrespective of losses or gains or your own
pleasure. You are not to consult your desires, nor the approbation
of worldlings who know not God and seek not to glorify Him. If
you walk contrary unto God, He will walk contrary unto you. If
you have other gods before the Lord, your heart will be turned
away from serving the only true and living God, who requires
the whole heart, the undivided affections. All the heart, all
the soul, all the mind, and all the strength, does God require.
He will accept of nothing short
of this. No separation is allowed here; no half-hearted work
will be accepted.
In order to render to God perfect service,
you must have clear conceptions of His requirements. You should
use the most simple food, prepared in the most simple manner,
that the fine nerves of the brain be not weakened, benumbed,
or paralyzed, making it impossible for you to discern sacred
things, and to value the atonement, the cleansing blood of Christ,
as of priceless worth. "Know ye not that they which run
in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize? So run, that
ye may obtain. And every man that striveth for the mastery is
temperate in all things. Now they do it to obtain a corruptible
crown; but we an incorruptible. I therefore so run, not as uncertainly;
so fight I, not as one that beateth the air: but I keep under
my body, and bring it into subjection: lest that by any means,
when I have preached to others, I myself should be a castaway."
If men, for no higher object than a wreath
or perishable crown as a reward of their ambition, subjected
themselves to temperance in all things, how much more should
those be willing to practice self-denial who profess to be seeking,
not only a crown of immortal glory, but a life which is to endure
as long as the throne of Jehovah, and riches that are eternal,
honors which are imperishable, an eternal weight of glory. Will
not the inducements presented before those who are running in
the Christian race lead them to practice self-denial and temperance
in all things, that they may keep their animal propensities in
subjection, keep under the body, and control the appetite and
lustful passions? Then can they be partakers of the divine nature,
having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust.
If the exceeding precious and glorious
reward promised will not lead us to welcome greater privations
and endure greater self-denial than are cheerfully borne by worldly
men who are seeking merely a bauble
of earth, a perishable laurel which brings honors from a few
of the worldly, and hate from more, we are unworthy of everlasting
life. In the earnestness and intensity of our zeal, perseverance,
courage, energy, self-denial, and sacrifice we should as much
excel those who are engaged in any other enterprise as the object
we are seeking to attain is of higher value than theirs. The
treasure we are seeking is imperishable, eternal, immortal, all
overglorious; while that of which the worldling is in pursuit,
endures but a day; it is fading, perishable, fleeting as the
morning cloud.
The cross, the cross; lift it, Brother
D, and in the act of raising it you will be astonished to find
that it raises you, it supports you. In adversity, privation,
and sorrow it will be a strength and a staff to you. You will
find it all hung with mercy, compassion, sympathy, and inexpressible
love. It will prove to you a pledge of immortality. May you be
able to say with Paul: "God forbid that I should glory,
save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world
is crucified unto me, and I unto the world."
The Spirit of the Lord has been striving
with your wife for some time. If you would yield all to God,
she would have strength to take her position to seek to live
out the truth. If you choose to turn from the truth, you will
not go down alone; you will not only lose your own soul, but
will be the means of turning others out of the way, and the blood
of souls will be on your garments. Had you maintained your integrity,
your mother, your brother E, and one who now hovers over the
brink of the grave, might now be enjoying the consolation of
the Spirit of God and have a good experience in the truth. Ever
bear in mind that we are accountable for the influence we exert.
Our influence gathers with Christ or scatters abroad. We are
either helping souls in the narrow path of holiness or we are
a hindrance, a stumbling block to them,
turning them out of the way. You, my much-esteemed brother, have
no time to lose. Be in earnest to redeem the time, because the
days are evil. Your associates, those whose company you have
chosen, have been a hindrance to you. Come out from among them,
and be separate. Draw near to God, and come into closer union
with His people. Let your interest and your affections center
in Christ and His followers. Love those best who love Christ
most. Sever the links which have bound you to those who love
not God and the truth. What communion hath light with darkness?
or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel?
You are in imminent danger of making shipwreck
of faith. You need all the strength which you can obtain from
the people of God, those who possess hope, courage, and faith.
But do not neglect prayer, secret prayer. Be instant in prayer;
encourage a spirit of true devotion. In your business career
you have a work to do. Just what, I am unable to tell you; but
something is wrong. Search carefully. We are doing up work for
eternity. All our acts, all our words, are to be weighed in the
balances of the sanctuary. A just and impartial God is to determine
all our cases, every event of our life history. "He that
is faithful in that which is least is faithful also in much:
and he that is unjust in the least is unjust also in much."
Let nothing obstruct your progress in the
way to everlasting life. Your eternal interest is at stake. There
must be a thorough work wrought in you. You must be fully converted,
or you will fail of heaven. But Jesus invites you to make Him
your strength, your support. He will be to you a present help
in every time of need. He will be to you as the shadow of a great
rock in a weary land. Let it not be your great anxiety to succeed
in this world, but let the burden of your soul be: How shall
I secure the better world? what have I to do to be saved?
In saving your own soul, you save others.
In lifting yourself, you lift others. In fastening your grasp
upon the truth and upon the throne of God, you aid others to
fix their trembling faith upon His promises and His eternal throne.
The position you must come into is to value salvation dearer
than earthly gain, to count everything but loss that you may
win Christ. The consecration on your part must be entire. God
will admit of no reserve, of no divided sacrifice; you can cherish
no idol. You must die to self and to the world. Renew your consecration
to God daily. Everlasting life is worth a lifelong, persevering,
untiring effort.
I was shown that your brother had been
convinced of the truth for some time, but influences had held
him back. His wife had hindered him from obeying his convictions.
But in her affliction she sought the Lord, and He was found of
her. Then she felt an anxiety that her husband should embrace
the truth; she repented that she had opposed him, that her pride
and love of the world had so long kept him from receiving the
truth. Like a weary child in search of rest but unable to obtain
it, she at length complied with the gracious invitation: "Come
unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy-laden, and I will give
you rest." Her weary, burdened soul sought her Lord, and
with repentance, humiliation, and earnest prayer she cast her
burden upon the great Burden Bearer, and in Him found rest; she
received the evidence that her humiliation and earnest repentance
were accepted of God, and that for Christ's sake He had forgiven
her sins.
I was shown, Brother D, that you have but
a short time to work. Do up your work thoroughly, redeem the
time. In your business transactions let not a blot tarnish your
Christian character. Keep your garments unspotted from the world.
Watch and pray, lest you enter into temptation. Temptations may
be all around you, but you are not compelled to enter
into them. You may obtain strength from Christ
to stand unsullied amid the pollutions of this corrupt age. "Whereby
are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises: that
by these ye might be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped
the corruption that is in the world through lust." Keep
the eye steadily fixed upon Christ, upon the divine image. Imitate
His spotless life, and you will be a partaker of His glory, and
with Him inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation
of the world.