In the vision given me June 12, 1868, I
was shown the danger of the people of God in looking to Brother
and Sister White and thinking that they must come to them with
their burdens and seek counsel of them. This ought not so to
be. They are invited by their compassionate, loving Saviour to
come unto Him, when weary and heavy-laden, and He will relieve
them. In Him they will find rest. In taking their perplexities
and trials to Jesus, they will find the promise in
regard to them fulfilled. When in their distress
they feel the relief which is found alone in Jesus they obtain
an experience which is of the highest value to them. Brother
and Sister White are striving for purity of life, striving to
bring forth fruit unto holiness; yet they are only erring mortals.
Many come to us with the inquiry: Shall I do this? Shall I engage
in that enterprise? Or, in regard to dress, Shall I wear this
or that article? I answer them: You profess to be disciples of
Christ. Study your Bibles. Read carefully and prayerfully the
life of our dear Saviour when He dwelt among men upon the earth.
Imitate His life, and you will not be found straying from the
narrow path. We utterly refuse to be conscience for you. If we
tell you just what to do, you will look to us to guide you, instead
of going directly to Jesus for yourselves. Your experience will
be founded in us. You must have an experience for yourselves,
which shall be founded in God. Then can you stand amid the perils
of the last days and be purified and not consumed by the fire
of affliction through which all the saints must pass in order
to have the impurities removed from their character preparatory
to receiving the finishing touch of immortality.
Many of our dear brethren and sisters think
that they cannot have a large gathering unless Brother and Sister
White attend. In many places they realize that something must
be done to move the people to more earnestness and decided action
in the work and cause of truth. They have had ministers to labor
among them, yet they realize that a greater work must be done,
and look to Brother and Sister White to do it. This, I saw, was
not as God would have it. In the first place, there is a deficiency
with some of our ministers. They lack thoroughness. They do not
take on the burden of the work and reach out to lift just where
the people need help. They do not possess discernment to see
and feel just where the people need to be corrected, reproved,
built up, and strengthened. Some
of them labor weeks and months in a place, and there is actually
more to do when they leave than when they commenced. Systematic
benevolence is dragging. It is one part of the minister's labor
to keep up this branch of the work; but, because this is not
agreeable, some neglect their duty. They talk the truth from
the word of God, but do not impress the people with the necessity
of obedience. Therefore many are hearers, but not doers. The
people feel the deficiency. Things are not set in order among
them, and they look to Brother and Sister White to make up the
deficiency.
Some of our ministering brethren have glided
along without settling deep into the work and getting hold of
the hearts of the people. They have excused themselves with the
thought that Brother and Sister White would bring up the things
that were lacking; that they were specially adapted to the work.
These men have labored, but not in the right way. They have not
borne the burden. They have not helped where help was needed.
They have not corrected deficiencies which needed to be corrected.
They have not entered, whole heart, and soul, and energies, into
the wants of the people. Time has passed, and they have nothing
to show for it. The burden of their deficiencies falls back on
us. And they encourage the people to look to us, presenting the
idea that nothing will accomplish the work but our special testimony.
God is not pleased with this. Ministers should take greater responsibilities
and not entertain the thought that they cannot bear that message
which will help the people where they need help. If they cannot
do this, they should tarry in Jerusalem till they are endowed
with power from on high. They should not engage in a work which
they cannot perform. They should go forth weeping, bearing precious
seed, and return from their effort rejoicing, bringing their
sheaves with them.
Ministers should impress upon the people
the necessity of
individual effort. No church can flourish
unless its members are workers. The people must lift where the
ministers lift. I saw that nothing lasting can be accomplished
for churches in different places unless they are aroused to feel
that a responsibility rests upon them. Every member of the body
should feel that the salvation of his own soul depends upon his
own individual effort. Souls cannot be saved without exertion.
The minister cannot save the people. He can be a channel through
which God will impart light to His people; but after the light
is given, it is left with the people to appropriate that light,
and, in their turn, let it shine forth to others. The people
should feel that an individual responsibility rests upon them,
not only to save their own souls, but to earnestly engage in
the salvation of those who remain in darkness. Instead of looking
to Brother and Sister White to help them out of their darkness,
they should be earnestly engaged in helping themselves. If they
should begin to hunt up those worse off than themselves, and
should try to help them, they would help themselves into the
light sooner than in any other way. If the people lean upon Brother
and Sister White, and trust in them, God will humble them among
you or remove them from you. You must look to God and trust in
Him. Lean upon Him, and He will not forsake you. He will not
leave you to perish. Precious is the word of God. "Search
the Scriptures; for in them ye think ye have eternal life."
These are the words of Christ. The words of inspiration, carefully
and prayerfully studied and practically obeyed, will thoroughly
furnish you unto all good works. Ministers and people must look
to God.
We are living in an evil age. The perils
of the last days thicken around us. Because iniquity abounds,
the love of many waxes cold. Enoch walked with God three hundred
years. Now the shortness of time seems to be urged as a motive
to seek righteousness. Should it be necessary that the
terrors of the day of God be held before us
in order to compel us to right action? Enoch's case is before
us. Hundreds of years he walked with God. He lived in a corrupt
age, when moral pollution was teeming all around him; yet he
trained his mind to devotion, to love purity. His conversation
was upon heavenly things. He educated his mind to run in this
channel, and he bore the impress of the divine. His countenance
was lighted up with the light which shineth in the face of Jesus.
Enoch had temptations as well as we. He was surrounded with society
no more friendly to righteousness than is that which surrounds
us. The atmosphere he breathed was tainted with sin and corruption,
the same as ours; yet he lived a life of holiness. He was unsullied
with the prevailing sins of the age in which he lived. So may
we remain pure and uncorrupted. He was a representative of the
saints who live amid the perils and corruptions of the last days.
For his faithful obedience to God he was translated. So, also,
the faithful, who are alive and remain, will be translated. They
will be removed from a sinful and corrupt world to the pure joys
of heaven.
The course of God's people should be upward
and onward to victory. A greater than Joshua is leading on the
armies of Israel. One is in our midst, even the Captain of our
salvation, who has said for our encouragement: "Lo, I am
with you alway, even unto the end of the world." "Be
of good cheer; I have overcome the world." He will lead
us on to certain victory. What God promises, He is able at any
time to perform. And the work He gives His people to do, He is
able to accomplish by them. If we live a life of perfect obedience,
His promises will be fulfilled toward us.
God requires His people to shine as lights
in the world. It is not merely the ministers who are required
to do this, but every disciple of Christ. Their conversation
should be heavenly. And while they
enjoy communion with God they will wish to have intercourse with
their fellow men in order to express by their words and acts
the love of God which animates their hearts. In this way they
will be lights in the world, and the light transmitted through
them will not go out or be taken away. It will indeed become
darkness to those who will not walk in it, but it will shine
with increasing brightness on the path of those who will obey
and walk in the light.
The spirit, wisdom, and goodness of God,
revealed in His word, are to be exemplified by the disciples
of Christ, and are thus to condemn the world. God requires of
His people according to the grace and truth given them. All His
righteous demands must be fully met. Accountable beings must
walk in the light that shines upon them. If they fail to do this,
their light becomes darkness, and their darkness is great in
the same degree as their light was abundant. Accumulated light
has shone upon God's people; but many have neglected to follow
the light, and for this reason they are in a state of great spiritual
weakness.
It is not for lack of knowledge that God's
people are now perishing. They will not be condemned because
they do not know the way, the truth, and the life. The truth
that has reached their understanding, the light which has shone
on the soul, but which has been neglected or refused, will condemn
them. Those who never had the light to reject will not be in
condemnation. What more could have been done for God's vineyard
than has been done? Light, precious light, shines upon God's
people; but it will not save them unless they consent to be saved
by it, fully live up to it, and transmit it to others in darkness.
God calls upon His people to act. It is an individual work of
confessing and forsaking sins and returning unto the Lord that
is needed. One cannot do this work for another. Religious knowledge
has accumulated, and this has increased
corresponding obligations. Great light has been shining upon
the church, and by it they are condemned because they refuse
to walk in it. If they were blind they would be without sin.
But they have seen light and have heard much truth, yet are not
wise and holy. Many have for years made no advancement in knowledge
and true holiness. They are spiritual dwarfs. Instead of going
forward to perfection, they are going back to the darkness and
bondage of Egypt. Their minds are not exercised unto godliness
and true holiness.
Will the Israel of God awake? Will all
who profess godliness seek to put away every wrong, to confess
to God every secret sin, and afflict the soul before Him? Will
they, with great humility, investigate the motives of every action,
and know that the eye of God reads all, searches out every hidden
thing? Let the work be thorough, the consecration to God entire.
He calls for a full surrender of all that we have and are. Ministers
and people need a new conversion, a transformation of the mind,
without which we are not savors of life unto life, but of death
unto death. Great privileges belong to the people of God. Great
light has been given them, that they may attain to their high
calling in Christ Jesus; yet they are not what God would have
them to be and what He designs they shall be.