Dear Brother P: While at ----- one year
ago, we labored for your interest. I had been shown your dangers,
and we were desirous of saving you; but we see you have not had
strength to carry out the resolutions there made. I am troubled
over the matter, and fear that I was not as faithful as I should
have been in bringing before you all I knew of your case. Some
things I withheld from you. While in Battle Creek in June, I
was again shown that you were not making any advance, and that
the reason you were not is that you have not made a clean track
behind you. You do not enjoy religion. You have departed from
God and righteousness. You have been seeking happiness in the
wrong way, in forbidden pleasures; and you have not moral courage
to confess and forsake your sins that you may find mercy.
You did not view sin as heinous in the
sight of God, and put it away; you failed to make thorough work;
and when the enemy came in with his temptations, you did not
resist him. Had you seen how offensive sin was in the sight of
God, you would not have so readily yielded to temptation. You
were not so thoroughly converted as to abhor your life of sin
and folly. Sin yet seemed pleasant to you, and you were loath
to yield up its delusive pleasures. Your inmost soul was not
converted, and you soon lost that which you had gained.
Personal vanity in your case, as well as
in that of many others, has been a special hindrance to you.
You have ever had a love of praise. This has been a snare to
you. Your professed friends have shown a special pleasure in
your society, and this has gratified
you. Weak-minded, sympathetic women have praised you and appeared
charmed with your society; and you have felt a fascinating power
upon you in their company. You did not realize, while spending
in pleasure seeking those hours which belonged to your family,
that Satan was weaving his net about your feet.
Satan has temptations laid for every step
of your life. You have not been as economical of means as you
should have been. You hate stinginess. This is all right; but
you go to the opposite extreme, and your course has been marked
with prodigality. Christ taught His disciples a lesson in feeding
the five thousand. He wrought a great miracle and fed that vast
multitude with five loaves and two small fishes. After all had
been satisfied, He did not then regard the fragments indifferently,
as if it were beneath His dignity to notice them. He who had
power to work so notable a miracle, and to give food to so large
a company, said to His disciples: "Gather up the fragments
that remain, that nothing be lost." This is a lesson to
us all, and one which we should not disregard.
You have a great work before you, and you
cannot afford to waste another moment without taking hold of
it. Brother P, I am alarmed for you; but I know that God loves
you still, although your course has been wayward. If He did not
have a special love for you He would not present your dangers
before me as He has. You have engaged in jesting and sporting
with men and women who have not the fear of God before them.
Weak-headed and unprincipled women have retained you in their
presence, and you were like a charmed bird. You seemed fascinated
by these superficial persons. Angels of God were upon your track
and have faithfully recorded every wrong act, every instance
of departure from virtue's path.
Yes, every act, however secret you may
have thought you were in its committal, has been open to God,
to Christ, and to the holy angels.
A book is written of all the doings of the children of men. Not
an item of this record can be concealed. There is only one provision
made for the transgressor. Faithful repentance and confession
of sin, and faith in the cleansing blood of Christ, will bring
forgiveness, and pardon will be written against his name.
O my brother, had you made thorough work
one year ago, the past precious year need not have been to you
worse than a blank. You knew your Master's will, but did it not.
You are in a perilous condition. Your sensibilities have been
blunted to spiritual things; you have a violated conscience.
Your influence is not to gather, but to scatter. You have no
special interest in religious exercises. You are not a happy
man. Your wife would unite her interest with the people of God
if you would get out of her way. She needs your help. Will you
take hold of this work together?
Last June I saw that your only hope of
breaking the chain of your bondage was a removal from your associates.
You had yielded to Satan's temptations until you were a weak
man. You were a lover of pleasure more than a lover of God, and
were fast traveling the downward path. I have been disappointed
that you have continued in the same indifferent state in which
you have been for years. You have known and experienced the love
of God; and it has been your delight to do His will. You have
delighted in the study of the word of God. You have been punctual
at the prayer meetings. Your testimony has been from a heart
which felt the quickening influences of the love of Christ. But
you have lost your first love.
God now calls upon you to repent, to be
zealous in the work. Your eternal happiness will be determined
by the course you now pursue. Can you reject the invitations
of mercy now offered? Can you choose your own way? Will you cherish
pride and vanity, and lose your soul at last? The word of God
plainly tells us that few will be saved, and
that the greater number of those, even, who are called will prove
themselves unworthy of everlasting life. They will have no part
in heaven, but will have their portion with Satan, and experience
the second death.
Men and women may escape this doom if they
will. It is true that Satan is the great originator of sin; yet
this does not excuse any man for sinning; for he cannot force
men to do evil. He tempts them to it, and makes sin look enticing
and pleasant; but he has to leave it to their own wills whether
they will do it or not. He does not force men to become intoxicated,
neither does he force them to remain away from religious meetings;
but he presents temptations in a manner to allure to evil, and
man is a free moral agent to accept or refuse.
Conversion is a work that most do not appreciate.
It is not a small matter to transform an earthly, sin-loving
mind and bring it to understand the unspeakable love of Christ,
the charms of His grace, and the excellency of God, so that the
soul shall be imbued with divine love and captivated with the
heavenly mysteries. When he understands these things, his former
life appears disgusting and hateful. He hates sin, and, breaking
his heart before God, he embraces Christ as the life and joy
of the soul. He renounces his former pleasures. He has a new
mind, new affections, new interest, new will; his sorrows, and
desires, and love are all new. The lust of the flesh, the lust
of the eye, and the pride of life, which have heretofore been
preferred before Christ, are now turned from, and Christ is the
charm of his life, the crown of his rejoicing. Heaven, which
once possessed no charms, is now viewed in its riches and glory;
and he contemplates it as his future home, where he shall see,
love, and praise the One who hath redeemed him by His precious
blood.
The works of holiness, which appeared wearisome,
are now his delight. The word of
God, which was dull and uninteresting, is now chosen as his study,
the man of his counsel. It is as a letter written to him from
God, bearing the inscription of the Eternal. His thoughts, his
words, and his deeds are brought to this rule and tested. He
trembles at the commands and threatenings which it contains,
while he firmly grasps its promises and strengthens his soul
by appropriating them to himself. The society of the most godly
is now chosen by him, and the wicked, whose company he once loved,
he no longer delights in. He weeps over those sins in them at
which he once laughed. Self-love and vanity are renounced, and
he lives unto God, and is rich in good works. This is the sanctification
which God requires. Nothing short of this will He accept.
I beg of you, my brother, to search your
heart diligently and inquire: "What road am I traveling,
and where will it end?" You have reason to rejoice that
your life has not been cut off while you have no certain hope
of eternal life. God forbid that you should longer neglect this
work, and so perish in your sins. Do not flatter your soul with
false hopes. You see no way to get hold again but one so humble
that you cannot consent to accept it. Christ presents to you,
even to you, my erring brother, a message of mercy: "Come;
for all things are now ready." God is ready to accept you
and to pardon all your transgressions, if you will but come.
Though you have been a prodigal, and have separated from God
and stayed away from Him so long, He will meet you even now.
Yes; the Majesty of heaven invites you to come to Him, that you
may have life. Christ is ready to cleanse you from sin when you
lay hold upon Him. What profit have you found in serving sin?
what profit in serving the flesh and the devil? Is it not poor
wages you receive? Oh! turn ye, turn ye; for why will ye die?
You have had many convictions, many pangs
of conscience. You have had so many purposes and made so many
promises, and yet you linger and will not come to Christ that
you may have life. Oh, that your heart may be impressed with
a sense of this time, that you may now turn and live! Cannot
you hear the voice of the True Shepherd in this message? How
can you disobey? Trifle not with God, lest He leave you to your
own crooked ways. It is life or death with you. Which will you
choose? It is a fearful thing to contend with God and resist
His pleadings. You may have the love of God burning upon the
altar of your heart as you once felt it. You may commune with
God as you have done in times past. If you will make a clean
track behind you you may again experience the riches of His grace,
and your countenance again express His love.
It is not required of you to confess to
those who know not your sin and errors. It is not your duty to
publish a confession which will lead unbelievers to triumph;
but to those to whom it is proper, who will take no advantage
of your wrong, confess according to the word of God, and let
them pray for you, and God will accept your work, and will heal
you. For your soul's sake, be entreated to make thorough work
for eternity. Lay aside your pride, your vanity, and make straight
work. Come back again to the fold. The Shepherd is waiting to
receive you. Repent, and do your first works, and again come
into favor with God.