October 25, 1868, your case was again presented
before me. I was shown that evil thoughts and unlawful desires
have led to improper acts and to a violation of the commandments
of God. You have dishonored yourself, your wife, and the cause
of God. You could have exerted an influence for good in the cause
of God. But the pursuance of a wrong course in matters that you
thought were of little consequence has led to greater evils.
Brother R, you are now in danger of making
total shipwreck of your faith. You have sinned greatly. But your
sin in seeking to cover up, and blind the eyes of those who have
suspected you of wrong, has been tenfold greater. All have not
acted as prudently and with as much love and care as the Lord
would have been pleased to have them, in order to redeem you.
But when you tried to put on an air of injured innocence, did
you think that God could not see your wrong course? Did you think
that He who made man out of the dust of the ground, and breathed
into his nostrils the breath of life, could not discern the intents
and purposes of the heart? You have thought that if you should
confess your sin you would lose your honor--your life, as it
were. You thought that your brethren would have no confidence
in you. You have not viewed matters in the right light. It is
a shame to sin, but always an honor to confess sin.
Angels of God have kept a faithful record
of every act, however secret you may have thought you were in
its committal. God discerns the purposes of man and all his works.
Every man will be rewarded according as his works have been,
whether good or evil. That which a man sows will he also reap.
There will be no failure in the crop. The harvest is sure
and plentiful. You have tried to blind your
brethren in regard to your course. How could you do so, when
you knew that you were guilty in the sight of God? If you value
your soul's salvation, make thorough work for eternity.
You will have to make a clean track behind
you by thorough confession. You need a thorough conversion--a
transformation of self by the renewing of your mind. Your self-esteem
must be overcome. You must learn to esteem others better than
yourself. Your exalted opinion of your own acquirements must
be given up, and you must obtain a meek and quiet spirit, which
is in the sight of God of great price.
You have possessed a spirit which has led
you from the path of rectitude, and now you are troubled. Doubts,
and fears, and despair seize you. There is but one way out, and
that is by the way of confession. Your only hope is in falling
on the Rock and being broken to pieces; if you do not, it will
surely fall upon you and grind you to powder. You can now right
your wrongs; you can now redeem the past. By a life of goodness
and true humility you can yet walk with acceptance before God
in your family. May the Lord help you, in view of the judgment,
to work as for your life. Dear brother, I feel deeply interested
for you. You have been walking in darkness for some time. You
have not arrived at your present state of darkness all at once.
You have been leaving the light gradually. You first became exalted,
and then, as you felt sufficient in your own strength, the Lord
removed His strength from you.
You have been interested in music. This
has given incautious, unwise women opportunity, and they have
confided their troubles to you. This has gratified your pride,
but it has been a snare to you. It has opened a door for the
suggestions of Satan. You have not done as you should. You had
no right to hear in families that which has been spoken to you.
These communications have corrupted
your mind, increased your self-esteem, and led to evil thoughts.
You have permitted yourself to be a confessor to some sentimental
women who desired sympathy and wished to lean upon others. Had
they possessed sound judgment and stood self-reliant, having
an aim in life, loving to do others good, they would not have
been in a condition where they needed to come to anyone for sympathy.
You know not the deceptions of the human
heart. You know not the devices of Satan. Some who have drawn
largely upon your sympathy have a sickly, diseased imagination,
are lovesick, sentimental, ever eager to create a sensation and
make a great ado. Some are dissatisfied with their married life.
There is not enough romance in it. Novel reading has perverted
all the good sense they ever had. They live in an imaginary world.
Their imagination creates a husband for themselves such as exists
only in romances found in novels. They talk of unrequited love.
They are never contented or happy, because their imagination
pictures to them a life that is unreal. When they face the reality,
come down to the simplicity of real life, and take up life's
burdens in their families, as is woman's lot, then they will
find contentment and happiness.
You have cherished thoughts that were not
right. These thoughts have borne fruit. "Out of the abundance
of the heart the mouth speaketh." Your words are not always
chaste, pure, and elevated. "Let no corrupt communication
proceed out of your mouth." Guile is too often found in
your mouth-- low expressions that proceed from a heart cherishing
corrupt thoughts and evil desires.
For some time your feet have been turned
from the path of rectitude and purity. You know that your course
has been displeasing to God, that you are transgressing His holy
law; you know that these things
cannot be hid. God will not permit His people to be deceived
in your case. Your great sin is in enlisting the sympathies of
those who do not understand your crooked course, and by thus
doing dividing the judgment of the people who profess the truth.
We pity you. My heart aches for you. I see nothing before you
but perdition, nothing but utter shipwreck of faith.
Will you cover your sins and brave the
matter out? God says you shall not prosper. But he that confesseth
and forsaketh his sins shall find mercy. Will you choose death?
Will you shut the kingdom of heaven against yourself because
you will not yield your wicked pride? Your only hope is in confessing
your backslidings. God has let light shine upon your pathway.
Will you choose your own course of corruption? Will you cast
the truth behind you because it will not sustain you in a course
of iniquity? Oh, be entreated to "rend your heart, and not
your garments." Make thorough work for eternity. God will
be merciful to you. He will be entreated in your behalf. He will
not despise a broken and contrite spirit. Will you turn? Will
you live? Your soul is worth saving; it is precious. We wish
to help you.
I saw that you are not happy. You are not
at rest. You feel distressed, and yet you refuse to take the
only course that will bring you relief and hope. He that confesseth
and forsaketh his sins shall find mercy. Your condition is deplorable,
and you are greatly injuring the cause of God. Your influence
will destroy others besides yourself.
If you refuse to come to God and confess
your backslidings that He may heal you, there is nothing to be
hoped for you or your poor family in the future. Misery will
follow upon the steps of sin. God's hand will be against you,
and He will leave you to be controlled by Satan, to be led captive
by him at his will. You know not to what lengths you may go.
You will be like a man at sea without
an anchor. The truth of God is an anchor. You are breaking away
from that anchor. Your eternal interests are being sacrificed
to the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride
of life. You are on the point of breaking the bonds which would
save you from utter destruction. In seeking to save your life
by concealing your wrongs, you are losing it. If you now humble
yourself before God, confess your wrongs, and return to Him with
full purpose of heart, yours can yet be a happy family. If you
will not do this, but choose your own way, your happiness is
at an end.
You have a great work to do. You have been
too slack in your deportment. Your words have not been elevated,
chaste, and pure. You have been separating from the divine, and
cultivating the baser passions. The intellectual and noble powers
of your mind have been brought into subjection to the animal
passions. You have not pursued a right course for some time.
You have not abstained from every appearance of evil. It is not
safe for you to pursue this course any longer.
You have not loved your wife as you should.
She is a good woman. She has seen, in a small measure, your danger.
But you have closed your ears to her cautions. You have thought
her jealous, but this is not her nature. She loves you, and will
bear with you, and forgive and love you, notwithstanding the
deep wrong you have done her, if you will only press to the light
and make clean work of the past. You must have a thorough conversion.
Unless you do, all your past efforts to obey the truth will not
save you nor cover up your past wrongs. Jesus requires of you
a thorough reformation; then He will help, and bless, and love
you, and blot out your sins with His own most precious blood.
You can redeem the past. You can correct your ways and yet be
an honor to the cause of God. You can do good when you take hold
of the strength of God and in His
name work--work for your own salvation and for the good of others.
Yours can yet be a happy family. Your wife
needs your help. She is like a clinging vine; she wants to lean
upon your strength. You can help her and lead her along. You
should never censure her. Never reprove her if her efforts are
not what you think they should be. Rather encourage her by words
of tenderness and love. You can help your wife to preserve her
dignity and self-respect. Never praise the work or acts of others
before her to make her feel her deficiencies. You have been harsh
and unfeeling in this respect. You have shown greater courtesy
to your hired help than to her and have placed them ahead of
her in the house.
God loves your wife. She has suffered,
but He has noticed all, marked all, and will not hold you guiltless
for the wounds you have caused. It is neither wealth nor intellect
that gives happiness. It is moral worth. True goodness is accounted
of Heaven as true greatness. The condition of the moral affections
determines the worth of the man. A person may have property and
intellect, and yet be valueless, because the glowing fire of
goodness has never burned upon the altar of his heart, because
his conscience has been seared, blackened, and crisped with selfishness
and sin. When the lust of the flesh controls the man, and the
evil passions of the carnal nature are permitted to rule, skepticism
in regard to the realities of the Christian religion is encouraged,
and doubts are expressed as though it were a special virtue to
doubt.
The life of Solomon might have been remarkable
until its close if virtue had been preserved. But he surrendered
this special grace to lustful passion. In his youth he looked
to God for guidance and trusted in Him, and God chose for him
and gave him wisdom that astonished the world. His power and
wisdom were extolled throughout the land.
But his love of women was his sin. This passion he did not control
in his manhood, and it proved a snare to him. His wives led him
into idolatry, and when he began to descend the declivity of
life, the wisdom that God had given him was removed; he lost
his firmness of character and became more like the giddy youth,
wavering between right and wrong. Yielding his principles, he
placed himself in the current of evil, and thus separated himself
from God, the foundation and source of his strength. He had moved
from principle. Wisdom had been more precious to him than the
gold of Ophir. But, alas! lustful passions gained the victory.
He was deceived and ruined by women. What a lesson for watchfulness!
What a testimony to the need of strength from God to the very
last!
In the battle with inward corruptions and
outward temptations, even the wise and powerful Solomon was vanquished.
It is not safe to permit the least departure from the strictest
integrity. "Abstain from all appearance of evil." When
a woman relates her family troubles, or complains of her husband,
to another man, she violates her marriage vows; she dishonors
her husband and breaks down the wall erected to preserve the
sanctity of the marriage relation; she throws wide open the door
and invites Satan to enter with his insidious temptations. This
is just as Satan would have it. If a woman comes to a Christian
brother with a tale of her woes, her disappointments and trials,
he should ever advise her, if she must confide her troubles to
someone, to select sisters for her confidants, and then there
will be no appearance of evil whereby the cause of God may suffer
reproach.
Remember Solomon. Among many nations there
was no king like him, beloved of his God. But he fell. He was
led from God and became corrupt through the indulgence of lustful
passions. This is the prevailing sin of this age, and its
progress is fearful. Professed Sabbathkeepers
are not clean. There are those who profess to believe the truth
who are corrupt at heart. God will prove them, and their folly
and sin shall be made manifest. None but the pure and lowly can
dwell in His presence. "Who shall ascend into the hill of
the Lord? or who shall stand in His holy place? He that hath
clean hands, and a pure heart; who hath not lifted up his soul
unto vanity, nor sworn deceitfully." "Lord, who shall
abide in Thy tabernacle? who shall dwell in Thy holy hill? He
that walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and speaketh
the truth in his heart. He that backbiteth not with his tongue,
nor doeth evil to his neighbor, nor taketh up a reproach against
his neighbor. In whose eyes a vile person is contemned; but he
honoreth them that fear the Lord. He that sweareth to his own
hurt, and changeth not. He that putteth not out his money to
usury, nor taketh reward against the innocent. He that doeth
these things shall never be moved."