Dear Brother and Sister E: It has been
some time since I have taken my pen to write anything except
urgent letters which could not be delayed. I have had a discouraging
weight upon my spirits for months, which has nearly crushed me.
That which discourages me the most is the fear that all I may
write will do no more good than has our earnest, anxious, wearing
labor in ----- the past winter and spring. The hopeless view
I have taken of matters and things at that place has kept my
pen nearly still and my voice nearly silent. My hands have been
weakened and my heart depressed, to see nothing gained by the
protracted effort there. I am nearly hopeless in regard to our
efforts' being successful to awaken the sensibilities of our
Sabbathkeeping people to see the elevated position which God
requires them to occupy. They do not view religious things from
an elevated standpoint. This is just your condition.
The Lord has given me a view of some of the
corruptions everywhere existing. Wickedness, crime, and sensuality
exist even in high places. Even in the churches professing to
keep God's commandments there are sinners and hypocrites. It
is sin, not trial and suffering, which separates God from His
people and renders the soul incapable of enjoying and glorifying
Him. It is sin that is destroying souls. Sin
and vice exist in Sabbathkeeping families. Moral pollution has
done more than every other evil to cause the race to degenerate.
It is practiced to an alarming extent and brings on disease of
almost every description. Even very small children, infants,
being born with natural irritability of the sexual organs, find
momentary relief in handling them, which only increases the irritation,
and leads to a repetition of the act, until a habit is established
which increases with their growth. These children, generally
puny and dwarfed, are prescribed for by physicians and drugged;
but the evil is not removed. The cause still exists.
Parents do not generally suspect that their
children understand anything about this vice. In very many cases
the parents are the real sinners. They have abused their marriage
privileges, and by indulgence have strengthened their animal
passions. And as these have strengthened, the moral and intellectual
faculties have become weak. The spiritual has been overborne
by the brutish. Children are born with the animal propensities
largely developed, the parents' own stamp of character having
been given to them. The unnatural action of the sensitive organs
produces irritation. They are easily excited, and momentary relief
is experienced in exercising them. But the evil constantly increases.
The drain upon the system is sensibly felt. The brain force is
weakened, and memory becomes deficient. Children born to these
parents will almost invariably take naturally to the disgusting
habits of secret vice. The marriage covenant is sacred, but what
an amount of lust and crime it covers! Those who feel at liberty,
because married, to degrade their bodies by beastly indulgence
of the animal passions, will have their degraded course perpetuated
in their children. The sins of the parents will be visited upon
their children because the parents have given them the stamp
of their own lustful propensities.
Those who have become fully established
in this soul-and-body-destroying vice can seldom rest until their
burden of secret evil is imparted to those with whom they associate.
Curiosity is at once aroused, and the knowledge of vice is passed
from youth to youth, from child to child, until there is scarcely
one to be found ignorant of the practice of this degrading sin.
Your children have practiced self-abuse
until the draft upon the brain has been so great, especially
in the case of your eldest son, that their minds have been seriously
injured. The brilliancy of youthful intellect is dimmed. The
moral and intellectual powers have become weakened, while the
baser part of their nature has been gaining the ascendancy. For
this reason your son turns with loathing from religious things.
He has been losing his power of self-restraint, and has less
and less reverence for sacred things, and less respect for anything
of a spiritual character. You have charged this to your surroundings,
but you have not known the real cause. Your son can be said to
bear the impress of the satanic instead of the divine. He loves
sin and evil rather than true goodness, purity, and righteousness.
It is a deplorable picture.
The effect of such debasing habits is not
the same upon all minds. There are some children who have the
moral powers largely developed, who, by associating with children
that practice self-abuse, become initiated into this vice. The
effect upon such will be too frequently to make them melancholy,
irritable, and jealous; yet such may not lose their respect for
religious worship, and may not show special infidelity in regard
to spiritual things. They will at times suffer keenly from feelings
of remorse, and will feel degraded in their own eyes, and lose
their self-respect.
Brother and sister, you are not clear before
God. You have failed to do your duty at home, in your own family.
You have not controlled your children. You have greatly failed
to know and do the will of God,
and His blessing has not rested upon your family. Brother E,
you have been selfish. You have had large self-esteem. You have
thought that you possessed a good degree of humility, but you
have not understood yourself. Your ways are not right before
God. Your influence and example have not been in accordance with
your profession. You have much fault to find with others; you
see deviations from the right in them, but you are blind to the
same in yourself.
Sister E has been far from God. Her heart
has not been subdued by grace. Her love of the world, and of
the things that are in the world, has closed her heart to the
love of God. The love of dress and appearance has kept her from
good, and led her to place her mind and affections upon these
frivolous things. Unbelief has been strengthening in her heart,
and she has had less and less love for the truth, and could see
but little attraction in the simplicity of true godliness. She
has not encouraged a growth of Christian graces. She has not
loved humility or devotion. She has taken the errors of those
who professed to be devoted to the truth, and made their lack
of spirituality, their errors, and their sins an excuse for her
world-loving disposition. She has watched the course of those
who were connected with the -----, and who were forward to take
upon them the burdens of the church, and has offset her failures
to their wrongs, saying that she was no worse than they. Such
and such individuals in good standing did this or that, and she
had as good a right as they. Such and such ones did not live
the health reform any better than she; they purchased and ate
meat, and they were in high standing in the church, and she was
excusable, of course, with such an example, if she did the same.
This is not the only case where neglect
to follow the light which the Lord has given has been shielded
behind the faults of others. It is to the shame of men and women
of intelligence that they have
no higher standard than that of imperfect human beings. The course
of those around them, however imperfect, is considered by some
a sufficient excuse for them to follow in the same path. Many
will be swayed by the influence of some leading brother. If he
departs from the counsel of God his example is at once gladly
seized by the unconsecrated, who now feel that they are free
from restraint. They now have an excuse; and their unconsecrated
hearts glory in the opportunity of indulging their desires and
taking a step nearer the fellowship with the spirit of the world,
where they can enjoy its pleasures and gratify their appetite.
They therefore place upon their tables those things which are
not the most healthful, and from which they have been taught
to abstain, that they may preserve to themselves a better condition
of health.
There has been a war in the hearts of some
ever since the health reform was first introduced. They have
felt the same rebellion as did the children of Israel when their
appetites were restricted on their journey from Egypt to Canaan.
Professed followers of Christ, who have all their lives consulted
their own pleasure and their own interests, their own ease and
their own appetites, are not prepared to change their course
of action and live for the glory of God, imitating the self-sacrificing
life of their unerring Pattern. A perfect example has been given
for Christians to imitate. The words and works of Christ's followers
are the channel through which the pure principles of truth and
holiness are conveyed to the world. His followers are the salt
of the earth, the light of the world.
Sister E, you cannot realize the many blessings
you have lost by making the failings of others a balm to soothe
your conscience for a neglect of your duty. You have been measuring
yourself by others. Their crooked paths, their failings, have
been your textbook. But their errors, their follies and
sins, do not make your disobedience to God
less sinful. We regret that those who should be a strength to
you in your efforts to overcome your love of self, your pride
of heart, your vanity and love of the approbation of worldlings,
have been only a hindrance by their own lack of spirituality
and true godliness. We cannot tell you how much we regret that
those who should be self-denying Christians are so far from coming
up to the standard. Those who should be steadfast, abounding
in the work of God, are weakened by Satan because they remain
at such a distance from God. They fail to obtain the power of
His grace, through which they might overcome the infirmities
of their nature, and, by obtaining signal victories in God, show
those of weaker faith the way, the truth, and the life.
That which has caused us the greatest discouragement
has been to see those in ----- who have had years of experience
in the cause and work of God, shorn of their strength by their
own unfaithfulness. They are outgeneraled by the enemy in nearly
every attack. God would have made these persons strong, like
faithful sentinels at their post, to guard the fort, had they
walked in the light He had given them and remained steadfast
to duty, seeking to know and do the whole will of God. Satan
will, no doubt, through his delusions deceive these delinquent
souls, and make them believe that they are about right after
all. They have committed no grievous, outbreaking sins, and they
must, after all, be on the true foundation, and God will accept
their works. They see no special sins to repent of, no sins which
call for special humiliation, humble confession, and rending
of heart. The delusion upon such is strong indeed when they mistake
the form of godliness for the power thereof, and flatter themselves
that they are rich and have need of nothing. The curse of Meroz
rests upon them: "Curse ye Meroz, said the angel of the
Lord, curse ye bitterly the inhabitants thereof; because they
came not to the help of the Lord,
to the help of the Lord against the mighty."
My sister, excuse not your defects because
others are wrong. In the day of God you will not dare to plead
as an excuse for your neglect to form a character for heaven,
that others did not manifest devotion and spirituality. The same
lack which you discovered in others was in yourself. And the
fact that others were sinners makes your sins nonetheless grievous.
Both they and you, if you continue in your present state of unfitness,
will be separated from Christ, and will with Satan and his angels
be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of
the Lord and from the glory of His power.
The Lord made ample provision for you,
that if you would seek Him, and follow the light He would give
you, you should not fall by the way. The word of God was given
to you as a lamp to your feet, a light to your path. If you stumble,
it will be because you have not consulted your guide, the word
of God, and made that precious word the rule of your life. God
has not given you as a pattern the life of any human being, however
good and apparently blameless his life may be. If you do as others
do, and act as others act, you will at last be left outside the
Holy City, with a vast multitude who have done just as you have
done, followed a pattern the Lord did not leave them, and who
are lost just as you will be lost.
That which others have done, or may do
in the future, will not lessen your responsibility or guilt.
A pattern has been given you, a faultless life characterized
by self-denial and disinterested benevolence. If you turn from
this correct, this perfect pattern, and take an incorrect one,
which has been clearly represented in the word of God as one
that you should shun, your course of action will receive its
merited reward; your life will be a failure.
One of the greatest reasons for the declension
of the church at ----- is their measuring themselves by themselves
and comparing themselves among
themselves. There are but few who have the living principle in
the soul and who serve God with an eye single to His glory. Many
at ----- will not consent to be saved in God's appointed way.
They will not take the trouble to work out their own salvation
with fear and trembling. The latter they do not experience; and,
rather than be at the trouble of obtaining an experience through
individual effort, they will run the risk of leaning upon others
and trusting in their experience. They cannot consent to watch
and pray, to live for God and Him only. It is more pleasant to
live in obedience to self.
The church at ----- are filled with their
own backslidings, and they need not dream of prosperity until
those who name the name of Christ are careful to depart from
all iniquity, until they learn to refuse the evil and choose
the good. We are required to watch and pray without ceasing;
for a snare is set in our path, and we shall find some device
of Satan when and where we least expect it. If at that particular
time we are not watching unto prayer we shall be taken by the
enemy and meet with decided loss.
What a responsibility has rested upon you
as parents! How little have you felt the weight of this burden!
Pride of heart, love of show, and the indulgence of appetite
have occupied your minds. These things have been first with you,
and the incoming of the foe has not been perceived. He has planted
his standard in your house and stamped his detestable image upon
the characters of your children. But you were so blinded by the
god of this world, so deadened to spiritual and divine things,
that you could not discern the advantage which Satan had gained
nor his workings right in your family.
You have brought children into the world
who have had no voice in regard to their existence. You have
made yourselves responsible in a great measure for their future
happiness, their eternal well-being.
The burden is upon you, whether you are sensible of it or not,
to train these children for God, to watch with jealous care the
first approach of the wily foe and be prepared to raise a standard
against him. Build a fortification of prayer and faith about
your children, and exercise diligent watching thereunto. You
are not secure a moment against the attacks of Satan. You have
no time to rest from watchful, earnest labor. You should not
sleep a moment at your post. This is a most important warfare.
Eternal consequences are involved. It is life or death with you
and your family. Your only safety is to break your hearts before
God and seek the kingdom of heaven as little children. You cannot
be victors in this warfare if you continue to pursue the course
you have pursued. You are not very near the kingdom of heaven.
Some who have not professed Christ are
nearer the kingdom of God than are very many professed Sabbathkeepers
in -----. You have not kept yourselves in the love of God and
taught your children the fear of the Lord. You have not taught
them the truth diligently, when you rose up, and when you sat
down, when you went out, and when you came in. You have not restrained
them. You look to other children and solace yourselves by saying:
"My children are no worse than they." This may be true,
but does the neglect of others to do their duty lessen the force
of the requirements which God has especially enjoined upon you
as parents? He has placed upon you the responsibility to bring
these children up for Him, and their salvation depends in a great
degree upon the education they receive in their childhood. This
responsibility others cannot take; it is yours, solely yours,
as parents. You may bring to your aid all the helps you can to
assist in the solemn and important work; but after you have done
this, there is a power above every human agency, that will work
with you through the means which
it is your privilege to use. God will come to your aid, and upon
His power you can rely. This power is infinite. Human agencies
may not prove successful, but God can make them fruitful by working
in and through them.
You have a work to do to set your house
in order. Pure, sinless angels cannot delight to come into a
dwelling where so much iniquity is practiced. You are asleep
at your post. Things of minor importance have occupied your minds
to the exclusion of more weighty matters. It should be the first
business of your life to seek the kingdom of heaven and its righteousness;
then you have the promise that all things shall be added. Here
is where you have failed in your family. Had you been agonizing
that you and yours might enter in at the strait gate, you would
have earnestly gathered every ray of light that the Lord has
permitted to shine upon your pathway, and would have cherished
and walked in it.
You have not regarded the light that the
Lord has graciously given you upon the health reform. You have
felt to rise up against it. You have seen no importance in it,
no reason why you should receive it. You have not felt willing
to restrict your appetite. You could not see the wisdom of God
in giving light in regard to the restriction of appetite. All
that you could discern was the inconvenience attending the denial
of the taste. The Lord has let His light shine upon us in these
last days, that the gloom and darkness which have been gathering
in past generations because of sinful indulgences might in some
degree be dispelled, and that the train of evils which have resulted
because of intemperate eating and drinking might be lessened.
The Lord in wisdom designed to bring His
people into a position where they would be separate from the
world in spirit and practice, that their children might not so
readily be led into idolatry and become tainted with the prevailing
corruptions of this age. It is God's design
that believing parents and their children should stand forth
as living representatives of Christ, candidates for everlasting
life. All who are partakers of the divine nature will escape
the corruption that is in the world through lust. It is impossible
for those who indulge the appetite to attain to Christian perfection.
You cannot arouse the moral sensibilities of your children while
you are not careful in the selection of their food. The tables
that parents usually prepare for their children are a snare to
them. Their diet is not simple, and is not prepared in a healthful
manner. The food is frequently rich and fever-producing, having
a tendency to irritate and excite the tender coats of the stomach.
The animal propensities are strengthened and bear sway, while
the moral and intellectual powers are weakened and become servants
to the baser passions. You should study to prepare a simple yet
nutritious diet. Flesh meats, and rich cakes and pies prepared
with spices of any kind, are not the most healthful and nourishing
diet. Eggs should not be placed upon your table. [SEE APPENDIX.]
They are an injury to your children. Fruits and grains, prepared
in the most simple form, are the most healthful, and will impart
the greatest amount of nourishment to the body, and, at the same
time, not impair the intellect.
Regularity in eating is very important
for health of body and serenity of mind. Your children should
eat only at the regular mealtime. They should not be allowed
to digress from this established rule. When you, Sister E, absent
yourself from home, you cannot control these important matters.
Already your eldest son has enervated his entire system and laid
the foundation for permanent disease. Your second child is fast
following in his steps, and not one of your children is safe
from this evil.
You may be unable to obtain the truth from
your children in regard to their
habits. Those who practice secret vice will lie and deceive.
Your children may deceive you, for you are not in a condition
where you can know if they attempt to lead you astray. You have
so long been blinded by the enemy that you have scarcely a ray
of light to discern darkness. There is a great, a solemn, and
an important work for you to do at once, to set your own hearts
and house in order. Your only safe course is to take right hold
of this work. Do not deceive yourselves into the belief that,
after all, this matter is placed before you in an exaggerated
light. I have not colored the picture. I have stated facts which
will bear the test of the judgment. Awake! awake! I beseech you,
before it shall be too late for wrongs to be righted, and you
and your children perish in the general ruin. Take hold of the
solemn work, and bring to your aid every ray of light you can
gather that has shone upon your pathway and that you have not
cherished, and, together with the aid of the light now shining,
commence an investigation of your life and character as if you
were before the tribunal of God. "Abstain from fleshly lusts,
which war against the soul," is the exhortation of the apostle.
Vice and corruption abound on every hand, and unless you have
more than human strength to rely upon to stand against so powerful
a current of evil, you will be overcome and borne down with the
current to perdition. Without holiness no man shall see God.
The Lord is proving and testing His people.
Angels of God are watching the development of character and weighing
moral worth. Probation is almost ended, and you are unready.
Oh, that the word of warning might burn into your souls! Get
ready! get ready! Work while the day lasts, for the night cometh
when no man can work. The mandate will go forth: He that is holy,
let him be holy still; and he that is filthy, let him be filthy
still. The destiny of all will be decided. A few,
yes, only a few, of the vast number who people
the earth will be saved unto life eternal, while the masses who
have not perfected their souls in obeying the truth will be appointed
to the second death. O Saviour, save the purchase of Thy blood!
is the cry of my anguished heart.
I greatly fear for you and for many who
profess to believe the truth in -----. Oh, search, search diligently
your own hearts, and make thorough work for the judgment! I am
pained at heart when I call to mind how many children of Sabbathkeeping
parents are ruining soul and body with secret vice. Near you
is a family who reveal their evil habits in their bodies as well
as their minds. These children are on the direct road to perdition.
They are debased themselves, and have instructed many others
in this vice. The eldest boy is dwarfed, physically and mentally,
by indulging in its practice. What little intellect he has left
is of a low order. If he continues in this vicious practice he
will eventually become idiotic. Every indulgence of children
who have attained their growth is a terrible evil and will produce
terrible results, enervating the system and weakening the intellect.
But in those who indulge this corrupting vice before attaining
their growth, the evil effects are more plainly marked, and recovery
from its effects is more nearly hopeless. The frame is weak and
stunted; the muscles are flabby; the eyes become small, and appear
at times swollen; the memory is treacherous, and becomes sievelike;
and inability to concentrate the thoughts upon study increases.
To the parents of these children I would
say: You have brought children into the world to be only a curse
to society. They are unruly, passionate, quarrelsome, and vicious.
Their influence upon others is corrupting. They bear the stamp
of the father's character, of his base passions. His hasty, violent
temper is reflected in them. These parents should long ago have
removed to the country, thus separating themselves and
children from the society of those whom they
could not benefit, but would only harm. Steady industry upon
a farm would have proved a blessing to these children, and constant
employment, as their strength could bear, would have given them
less opportunity to corrupt their own bodies by self-abuse, and
would have prevented them from instructing a large number in
this hellish practice. Labor is a great blessing to all children,
especially to that class whose minds are naturally inclined to
vice and depravity.
These children have communicated more knowledge
of vice in-----than all the united efforts of ministers and people
professing godliness can counteract. Many who have learned of
your children will go to perdition rather than control their
passions and cease the indulgence of this sin. One corrupt mind
can sow more evil seed in a short period of time than many can
root out in a whole lifetime. Your children are a byword in the
mouths of blasphemers of the truth. These are the children of
Sabbathkeepers, but they are worse than the children of worldlings
in general. They possess less refinement, less self-respect.
Brother F has been no honor to the cause of God. His impetuous
temper and general influence have not had a tendency to elevate,
but to bring down to a low level. The cause of God has been brought
into disrepute by his lack of judgment and refinement. It would
have been far better for the cause of truth had this family removed
long ago to a less important post, where they would have been
more secluded and their influence less felt. Their children have
lived in the light of truth and have had privileges that but
few children have had; yet all this time they have not been benefited,
but have been growing more and more hardened in depravity. Their
removal would be a blessing to the church and to society, and
to the entire family. Steady employment upon land would be a
blessing to father and children if they would profit by the advantages
of farm life.
I saw that the family of Brother G need
a great work done for them. H and I have gone to great lengths
in this crime of self-abuse; especially is this true of H, who
has gone so far in the practice of this sin that his intellect
is affected, his eye-sight is weakened, and disease is fastening
itself upon him. Satan has almost full control of this poor boy's
mind, but his parents are not awake to see the evil and its results.
His mind is debased, his conscience hardened, his moral sensibilities
benumbed, and he will be a ready victim for evil associates to
lead into sin and crime. Brother and Sister G, arouse yourselves,
I beg of you. You have not received the light of health reform
and acted upon it. If you had restricted your appetites you would
have been saved much extra labor and expense; and, what is of
vastly more consequence, you would have preserved to yourselves
a better condition of physical health and a greater degree of
intellectual strength to appreciate eternal truths; you would
have a clearer brain to weigh the evidences of truth and would
be better prepared to give to others a reason of the hope that
is in you. Your food is not of that simple, healthful quality
which will make the best kind of blood. Foul blood will surely
becloud the moral and intellectual powers, and arouse and strengthen
the baser passions of your nature. Neither of you can afford
a feverish diet, for it is at the expense of the health of the
body and the prosperity of your own souls and the souls of your
children.
You place upon your table food which taxes
the digestive organs, excites the animal passions, and weakens
the moral and intellectual faculties. Rich food and flesh meats
are no benefit to you. Could you know just the nature of the
meat you eat, could you see the animals when living from which
the flesh is taken when dead, you would turn with loathing from
your flesh meats. The very animals whose flesh you eat are frequently
so diseased that, if left alone, they would die of
themselves; but while the breath of life is
in them, they are killed and brought to market. You take directly
into your system humors and poison of the worst kind, and yet
you realize it not. You love to indulge appetite. You have this
lesson to learn: Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever
ye do, do all to the glory of God."
I entreat you, for Christ's sake, to set
your house and hearts in order. Let the truth of heavenly origin
elevate and sanctify you, soul, body, and spirit. "Abstain
from fleshly lusts, which war against the soul." Brother
G, your eating has a tendency to strengthen the baser passions.
You do not control your body as it is your duty to do in order
to perfect holiness in the fear of God. Temperance in eating
must be practiced before you can be a patient man. Remember that
you have given to your children, in a great degree, the stamp
of your own character. You should guard yourself, and not be
harsh, severe, or impatient. Deal with them decidedly, yet patiently,
lovingly, pityingly, as Jesus has dealt with you. Be careful
how you censure. Bear with your children, yet restrain them.
This you have neglected too much. You have not corrected them
in the right manner, not having perfect control of your own spirit.
A great work must be done for you both.
Brother G, if you had gone on from strength
to strength, following in the light the Lord has given, He would
now have chosen you as an instrument of righteousness. You have
talents; you have ability; you can work for God's glory; but
you have not made an entire surrender of yourself to God. Oh,
that you would even now seek meekness, seek the righteousness
of Christ, that you might be hid in the day of the Lord's fierce
anger!
My dear brother and sister, you should
take hold unitedly and perseveringly to right your mismanagement
of your children. Sister G has been too indulgent; yet unitedly
and in love you can do much, even
now, to bind your children to your hearts and instruct them in
the good and right way. You have a work to do in setting your
own hearts and house in order. You should cultivate harmonious
action. The transforming influence of the Spirit of God can do
a great work for you both, and will unite your hearts and efforts
in the work of reform in your own family. All repining, murmuring,
and hasty irritability should cease. Its effects are to weaken
you both and to destroy the influence you must exert if you succeed
in training your children for heaven.
Satan now has the field. Your poor children
are his captives; he has control of their minds and causes them
to take a low turn. Their moral sensibilities seem paralyzed.
They have practiced self-abuse and gloried in their iniquities.
Such boys are capable of poisoning an entire neighborhood or
community, and their pernicious influence will endanger all who
are brought in contact with them in school capacity. Your children
are corrupt in body and in mind. Vice has placed its marks upon
your elder children. They are tainted, deeply tainted, with sin.
The animal propensities predominate, while the moral and intellectual
faculties are very weak. The baser passions have gained strength
by exercise, while conscience has become hardened and seared.
This is the influence which vice will have upon the mental powers.
Those who give themselves up to work the ruin of their own bodies
and minds do not stop here. Eventually they will be found ready
for crime in almost any form, for their consciences are seared.
Parents have not been half aroused to realize their responsibility
in becoming parents. They are remiss in their duty. They do not
teach their children the sinfulness of these dangerous, virtue-destroying
habits. Until parents arouse, there is no hope for their children.
I might mention the cases of many others,
but will forbear, except in a few
instances. J is a dangerous associate. He is a subject of this
vice. His influence is bad. The grace of God has no influence
upon his heart. He has a good intellect, and his father has trusted
much to this to balance him; but mental power alone is not a
guarantee of virtuous superiority. The absence of religious principle
makes him corrupt at heart and sly in his wrongdoing. His influence
is pernicious everywhere. He is infidel in his principles and
glories in his skepticism. When with those of his own age, or
those younger than himself, he talks knowingly of religious things
and jests and sneers at truth and the Bible. This pretended knowledge
has an influence to corrupt minds and lead young men to feel
ashamed of the truth. Such companions should be wholly avoided,
for this is the only sure course of safety. Young girls are enamored
with the society of this young man; even some who profess to
be Christians prefer such society.
K is a boy who can be molded if surrounded
by correct influences. He needs a right example. If the young
who profess Christ would honor Him in their lives, they could
exert an influence which would counteract the pernicious influence
of such youth as J. But the young generally have no more religion
than those who have never named the name of Christ. They do not
depart from iniquity. A smart, intelligent boy, like J, can have
a powerful influence for evil. If this intelligence were controlled
by virtue and rectitude, it would be powerful for good; but if
it is swayed by depravity, its evil influence upon his associates
cannot be estimated, and it will assuredly sink him in perdition.
A good intellect corrupted makes a very bad heart. A brilliant
intellect sanctified by the Spirit of God exerts a hidden power
and diffuses light and purity upon all with whom the happy possessor
associates.
If a boy of such mental abilities as J
would surrender his heart to Christ, it would be his salvation.
By means of pure religion his intellect
would be brought into a healthy channel; his mental and moral
powers would become vigorous and harmonious; the conscience,
illuminated by divine grace, would be quick and pure, controlling
the will and desires, and leading to frankness and uprightness
in every act of life. Without the principles of religion, this
boy will be cunning, artful, sly, in an evil course, and will
poison all with whom he associates. I warn all the youth to beware
of this young man if he continues to slight religion and the
Bible. You cannot be too guarded in his society
By associating with those boys who do not
exert a right influence, L is also being corrupted. J and K are
not profitable associates for him, for he is easily influenced
in the wrong direction. ----- is not the best place for him.
His habits are not pure; self-abuse is practiced by him. Because
of this and his love for the company of evil associates, those
desires which help to form a virtuous character and to secure
heaven at last will be weakened. The young who desire immortality
must stop where they are and not allow an impure thought or act.
Impure thoughts lead to impure actions. If Christ be the theme
of contemplation, the thoughts will be widely separated from
every subject which will lead to impure acts. The mind will strengthen
by dwelling upon elevating subjects. If trained to run in the
channel of purity and holiness, it will become healthy and vigorous.
If trained to dwell upon spiritual themes, it will naturally
take that turn. But this attraction of the thoughts to heavenly
things cannot be gained without the exercise of faith in God
and an earnest, humble reliance upon Him for that strength and
grace which will be sufficient for every emergency.
Purity of life and a character molded after
the divine Pattern are not obtained without earnest effort and
fixed principles. A vacillating person will not succeed in attaining
Christian perfection. Such will be weighed
in the balances and found wanting. Like a roaring lion, Satan
is seeking for his prey. He tries his wiles upon every unsuspecting
youth; there is safety only in Christ. It is through His grace
alone that Satan can be successfully repulsed. Satan tells the
young that there is time enough yet, that they may indulge in
sin and vice this once and never again; but that one indulgence
will poison their whole life. Do not once venture on forbidden
ground. In this perilous day of evil, when allurements to vice
and corruption are on every hand, let the earnest, heartfelt
cry of the young be raised to heaven: "Wherewithal shall
a young man cleanse his way?" And may his ears be open and
his heart inclined to obey the instruction given in the answer:
"By taking heed thereto according to Thy word." The
only safety for the youth in this age of pollution is to make
God their trust. Without divine help they will be unable to control
human passions and appetites. In Christ is the very help needed,
but how few will come to Him for that help. Said Jesus when upon
the earth: "Ye will not come to Me, that ye might have life."
In Christ all can conquer. You can say with the apostle: "Nay,
in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him that
loved us." Again: "But I keep under my body, and bring
it into subjection."
I have written out quite fully the case
of Brother E and family because this one illustrates the true
state of many families, and God would have these families take
this as though written specially for their benefit. There are
many more cases I might designate, but I have named enough already.
Young girls are not as a general thing clear of the crime of
self-abuse. They practice it, and, as the result, their constitutions
are being ruined. Some who are just entering womanhood are in
danger of paralysis of the brain. Already the moral and intellectual
powers are weakened and benumbed, while the animal
passions are gaining the ascendancy and corrupting
body and soul. The youth, whether male or female, cannot be Christians
unless they entirely cease to practice this hellish, soul-and-body-destroying
vice.
Many of the young are eager for books.
They read everything they can obtain. Exciting love stories and
impure pictures have a corrupting influence. Novels are eagerly
perused by many, and, as the result, their imagination becomes
defiled. In the cars, photographs of females in a state of nudity
are frequently circulated for sale. These disgusting pictures
are also found in daguerrean saloons, and are hung upon the walls
of those who deal in engravings. This is an age when corruption
is teeming everywhere. The lust of the eye and corrupt passions
are aroused by beholding and by reading. The heart is corrupted
through the imagination. The mind takes pleasure in contemplating
scenes which awaken the lower and baser passions. These vile
images, seen through defiled imagination, corrupt the morals
and prepare the deluded, infatuated beings to give loose rein
to lustful passions. Then follow sins and crimes which drag beings
formed in the image of God down to a level with the beasts, sinking
them at last in perdition. Avoid reading and seeing things which
will suggest impure thoughts. Cultivate the moral and intellectual
powers. Let not these noble powers become enfeebled and perverted
by much reading of even storybooks. I know of strong minds that
have been unbalanced and partially benumbed, or paralyzed, by
intemperance in reading.
I appeal to parents to control the reading
of their children. Much reading does them only harm. Especially
do not permit upon your tables the magazines and newspapers wherein
are found love stories. It is impossible for the youth to possess
a healthy tone of mind and correct religious principles unless
they enjoy the perusal of the word of God. This book
contains the most interesting history, points
out the way of salvation through Christ, and is their guide to
a higher and better life. They would all pronounce it the most
interesting book they ever perused, if their imagination had
not become perverted by exciting stories of a fictitious character.
You who are looking for your Lord to come the second time to
change your mortal bodies, and to fashion them like unto His
most glorious body, must come up upon a higher plane of action.
You must work from a higher standpoint than you have hitherto
done, or you will not be of that number who will receive the
finishing touch of immortality.