Brother M: At Adams Center I was shown
that you greatly lacked an unselfish spirit while at the Institute;
you did not exert the influence that you should. You might have
let your light shine there, but you did not. You often neglected
your duty for amusements. You failed to take care and to bear
responsibility. You do not enjoy active exercise. You love your
ease; you and hard work are at variance. This is selfish. You
allowed the property of the Institute to run down and be destroyed,
when it was your business to see that it was kept up, and that
everything was in order, and preserved with greater interest
and care than if it were your own. You were an unfaithful steward.
Every time you permitted yourself to engage in amusements, playing
croquet or anything of the kind, you were using time for which
you were paid and which did not belong to you. You would be just
as excusable should you take money which you had not earned and
appropriate it to yourself.
Brethren Loughborough, Andrews, Aldrich, and
others did not know you. They estimated you too highly. You could
not fill the place they employed you to fill.
They erred in judgment when they paid you so high a price for
your labor. You did not earn the money that you received. You
were very slow and lacked greatly in energy. You were not enough
interested and awake to see and do, and things were terribly
neglected by you.
My brother, you are far from God; you are
in a state of backsliding. You do not possess noble moral courage.
You yield to your own desires instead of denying self. In seeking
after happiness, you have attended places of amusement which
God does not approve, and in so doing have weakened your own
soul. My brother, you have much to learn. You indulge your appetite
by eating more food than your system can convert into good blood.
It is sin to be intemperate in the quantity of food eaten, even
if the quality is unobjectionable. Many feel that, if they do
not eat meat and the grosser articles of food, they may eat of
simple food until they cannot well eat more. This is a mistake.
Many professed health reformers are nothing less than gluttons.
They lay upon the digestive organs so great a burden that the
vitality of the system is exhausted in the effort to dispose
of it. It also has a depressing influence upon the intellect,
for the brain nerve power is called upon to assist the stomach
in its work. Overeating, even of the simplest food, benumbs the
sensitive nerves of the brain and weakens its vitality. Overeating
has a worse effect upon the system than overworking; the energies
of the soul are more effectually prostrated by intemperate eating
than by intemperate working.
The digestive organs should never be burdened
with a quantity or quality of food which it will tax the system
to appropriate. All that is taken into the stomach above what
the system can use to convert into good blood, clogs the machinery;
for it cannot be made into either flesh or blood, and its
presence burdens the liver and produces a
morbid condition of the system. The stomach is overworked in
its efforts to dispose of it, and then there is a sense of languor,
which is interpreted to mean hunger; and without allowing the
digestive organs time to rest from their severe labor, to recruit
their energies, another immoderate amount is taken into the stomach,
to set the weary machinery again in motion. The system receives
less nourishment from too great a quantity of food, even of the
right quality, than from a moderate quantity taken at regular
periods.
My brother, your brain is benumbed. A man
who disposes of the quantity of food that you do should be a
laboring man. Exercise is important to digestion and to a healthy
condition of body and mind. You need physical exercise. You move
and act as if you were wooden, as though you had no elasticity.
Healthy, active exercise is what you need. This will invigorate
the mind. Neither study nor violent exercise should be engaged
in immediately after a full meal; this would be a violation of
the laws of the system. Immediately after eating there is a strong
draft upon the nervous energy. The brain force is called into
active exercise to assist the stomach; therefore, when the mind
or body is taxed heavily after eating, the process of digestion
is hindered. The vitality of the system, which is needed to carry
on the work in one direction, is called away and set to work
in another.
You need to exercise temperance in all
things. Cultivate the higher powers of the mind, and there will
be less strength of growth of the animal. It is impossible for
you to increase in spiritual strength while your appetite and
passions are not under perfect control. Says the inspired apostle:
"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."
My brother, arouse yourself, I pray you,
and let the work of the Spirit of God reach deeper than the external;
let it reach down to the deep springs of every action. It is
principle that is wanted, firm principle, and vigor of action
in spiritual as well as temporal things. Your efforts lack earnestness.
Oh, how many are low in the scale of spirituality because they
will not deny their appetite! The brain nerve energy is benumbed
and almost paralyzed by overeating. When such go to the house
of God upon the Sabbath, they cannot hold their eyes open. The
most earnest appeals fail to arouse their leaden, insensible
intellects. The truth may be presented with deep feeling, but
it does not awaken the moral sensibilities or enlighten the understanding.
Have such studied to glorify God in all things?
It is impossible to have clear conceptions
of eternal things unless the mind is trained to dwell upon elevated
themes. All the passions must be brought under perfect subjection
to the moral powers. When men and women profess strong faith
and earnest spirituality, I know that their profession is false
if they have not brought all their passions under control. God
requires this. The reason why such spiritual darkness prevails
is that the mind is content to take a low level and is not directed
upward in a pure, holy, and heavenly channel.
I saw in regard to your family, Brother
M, that you were not happy. Your wife has been disappointed,
and you have been disappointed. Your wife expected to find in
you a person of more noble, refined organization. She has been
very unhappy. She has a large amount of pride. Her family connections
upon her mother's side are naturally conscientious, yet proud
and aristocratic. She partakes largely of these traits of character.
She is not demonstrative. It is not natural for her to make advances
and manifest affection. She looks upon the manifestation of affection
between husband and wife as weak and childish. She has felt that
if she encouraged affection, it would
not be answered by fine, elevated love, but by the lower order
of passions; that these would be strengthened, but not pure,
deep, holy love.
Your wife should make strong efforts to
come out of her retired, dignified reserve, and cultivate simplicity
in all her actions. And when the higher order of faculties is
aroused in you, and strengthened by exercise, you will better
understand the wants of women; you will understand that the soul
craves love of a higher, purer order than exists in the low order
of animal passions. These passions have been strengthened in
you by encouragement and exercise. If now in the fear of God
you keep your body under, and seek to meet your wife with pure,
elevated love, the wants of her nature will be met. Take her
to your heart; esteem her highly.
You have been exalted and have taken a
position above your wife. You have not understood yourself. You
have had a high appreciation of your religious experience and
advancement in the divine life. These things have hindered, instead
of helping, your wife. She feared for you, feared that you did
not really understand yourself, and that you would go too fast.
Your union has not been happy. You have been unsuited to each
other. Your wife has a timid, fearful, shrinking nature. You
have utterly failed to understand her. She hesitates and fears
to move out because she is afraid of going too fast. She needs
confidence in herself and should encourage independence.
Brother M, you fail to encourage the confidence
of your wife. You are lacking in courteousness and in constant,
kindly regard for her. You sometimes manifest love, but it is
a selfish love. It is not principle with you, reaching down deep
and underlying all your actions. It is not an unselfish love,
which prompts a continual forethought for her and a care to have
her in your society, showing her that you prefer her company
above all others. You have sought for your
own amusement, leaving her at home lonely and often sad. You
pursued this course before moving to this place and have continued
to do so since in a less degree for want of opportunity or excuse.
Your wife would scorn to let you know that
she marked the deficiencies in you. She has a fear of you. Had
you possessed genuine love, which such a nature as hers requires,
you would have found an answering chord in her heart. You are
too cold and stiff. You have at times manifested affection, but
it has not awakened love in return because you have not been
courteous and attentive, and manifested a kind regard for your
wife by consulting her happiness. You have too many times felt
at liberty to saunter off in pursuit of your own pleasure without
consulting her pleasure or happiness at all.
True, pure love is precious. It is heavenly
in its influence. It is deep and abiding. It is not spasmodic
in its manifestations. It is not a selfish passion. It bears
fruit. It will lead to a constant effort to make your wife happy.
If you have this love, it will come natural to make this effort.
It will not appear to be forced. If you go out for a walk or
to attend a meeting, it will be as natural as your breath to
choose your wife to accompany you and to seek to make her happy
in your society. You regard her spiritual attainments as inferior
to your own, but I saw that God was better pleased with her spirit
than with that possessed by yourself. You are not worthy of your
wife. She is too good for you. She is a frail, sensitive plant;
she needs to be cared for tenderly. She earnestly desires to
do the will of God. But she has a proud spirit, and is timid,
shrinking from reproach. It is as death to her to be the subject
of observation or remark. Let your wife be loved, honored, and
cherished, in fulfillment of the marriage vow, and she will come
out of that reticent, diffident position which is natural to
her.
Only let a woman realize that she is appreciated
by her
husband and is precious to him, not merely
because she is useful and convenient in his house, but because
she is a part of himself, and she will respond to his affection
and reflect the love bestowed upon her. Let your wife be the
object of your special and hearty attention. When you feel as
God would have you, you will feel lost without the society of
your wife. You think her faith not worth having, yet it will
bring answers sooner than the faith which you possess.
Brother M, you fail to understand the heart
of a woman. You do not reason from cause to effect. You know
that your wife is not so cheerful and happy as you wish to see
her, but you do not investigate the cause. You do not analyze
your deportment to see if the difficulty does not exist in yourself.
Love your wife. She is hungering for deep, true, elevating love.
Let her have tangible proof that her care and interest for you,
shown in her attention to your comfort, is appreciated and returned.
Seek her opinion and approval in whatever you engage in. Respect
her judgment. Do not feel that you know all that is worth knowing.
A house with love in it, where love is
expressed in words and looks and deeds, is a place where angels
love to manifest their presence, and hallow the scene by rays
of light from glory. There the humble household duties have a
charm in them. None of life's duties will be unpleasant to your
wife under such circumstances. She will perform them with cheerfulness
of spirit and will be like a sunbeam to all around her, and she
will be making melody in her heart to the Lord. At present she
feels that she has not your heart's affections. You have given
her occasion to feel thus. You perform the necessary duties devolving
upon you as head of the family, but there is a lack. There is
a serious lack of love's precious influence which leads to kindly
attentions. Love should be seen in the looks and manners, and
heard in the tones of the voice.
Your wife does not venture to open her
heart to you; for as soon as she utters a sentiment differing
from you, you repel it. You talk so strong that she has no courage
to say another word. You are not one in heart. You take a position
above her and maintain a bearing as though her judgment and opinion
were of no account. You consider your spiritual attainments far
in advance of hers. My brother, you do not know yourself. God
looks at the heart, not at the words or profession. The externals
do not weigh with God as with men. A humble heart and a contrite
spirit God values. Our Saviour is acquainted with the life conflicts
of every soul. He judgeth not according to appearances, but righteously.
Your spirit is strong. When you take a
position you do not weigh the matter well and consider what must
be the effect of your maintaining your views and in an independent
manner weaving them into your prayers and conversation, when
you know that your wife does not hold the same views that you
do. Instead of respecting the feelings of your wife, and kindly
avoiding, as a gentleman would, those subjects upon which you
know you differ, you have been forward to dwell upon objectionable
points, and have manifested a persistency in expressing your
views regardless of any around you. You have felt that others
had no right to see matters differently from yourself. These
fruits do not grow upon the Christian tree.
In the case of Sister N, you did not view
things in their true light. If she had been healed in answer
to the prayers of yourself and others, it would have proved the
ruin of more than two or three of you. A wise God had oversight
of this matter. He could read the motives and purposes of the
heart.
Your wife has just as much right to her
opinion as you have to yours. Her marriage relation does not
destroy her identity. She has an individual responsibility. You
will not feel clear till you take
things out of her way and manifest toward her a more charitable,
Christlike spirit of forbearance, and regard others in the light
in which you wish to be regarded. You have yet to learn to "let
nothing be done through strife or vainglory; but in lowliness
of mind let each esteem other better than themselves." "Be
kindly affectioned one to another with brotherly love; in honor
preferring one another; not slothful in business; fervent in
spirit; serving the Lord."