Dear Brother P: I have several times attempted
to write to you, but have as often been hindered. I will delay
no longer. I have felt for a few days past especially anxious
in regard to you. Last June some things were shown me in regard
to you. I was carried back in the past and shown your unsettled,
roving life. You were without God. Yours has been a hard, reckless
life. Yet I saw that God had in mercy spared your life many times
when it seemed that no human power or wisdom could preserve it.
You now stand a miracle of mercy. When your life has been in
imminent peril, Christ, your Advocate, has pleaded in your behalf:
"Father, spare his life a little longer. He has been an
unfruitful tree, which has cumbered the ground; yet cut it not
down. I will patiently wait a little longer, and see if it will
not bear fruit. I will impress his heart with the truth. I will
convict him of sin."
I was shown that the Lord opened the way
for you to obey and serve Him. Your steps were directed West,
where your surroundings would be more favorable to a growth in
grace, and where it would be less difficult for you to form a
character for heaven. You came into our family and were received
into our hearts. This was all ordered of the Lord. You had not
the experience which was necessary in order to live a life that
God would approve. You were situated where in a few short months
you could obtain more light and a more correct knowledge of present
truth than you could have obtained in years if you had remained
East.
Our compassionate High Priest was acquainted
with your weakness and your errors and did not leave you in your
inexperience to battle with the great foe amid unfavorable surroundings.
Had you remained in ----- you would not have retained the truth. The opposition you would have
received would have raised your combativeness, and you would
have dishonored the truth by a hasty spirit; and then, as obstacles
arose in your Christian journey, you would have become discouraged
and yielded the truth. You have much to be thankful for. Your
heart should be filled with gratitude to your loving Saviour
for His mercy to you, to you who have so long abused His love.
I was shown that you were a rough stone
from the quarry, which needed much hewing, squaring, and polishing
before it could fill a place in the heavenly building. Some of
this work has been done for you; but, oh, there is a much greater
work yet to be done! You have had a very unhappy spirit. You
have seen the rough side of life. You have not had much happiness;
but you were the one who stood in your own light, debarring yourself
from good. In your youth you encouraged a spirit of discontent;
you would not be ruled; you chose to walk in your own way, irrespective
of others' judgment or counsel. You would not submit to be controlled
by your stepfather, because you wanted to follow your own way.
He did not understand the best way to manage you, and you were
determined not to respect his authority. As soon as he would
speak to you, you would place yourself upon the defensive. Your
combativeness was large, and you would battle everything and
everybody that crossed your plans. Even when suggestions were
made of a better course to pursue in your plans and labors, you
would fly in an instant. You thought you were censured, thought
you were blamed, and felt grieved with those who were your true
friends. Your imagination was diseased. You thought that everybody
was against you and that your lot was exceedingly hard. It has
been hard, but you have made it so.
Your course toward your stepfather was
unbecoming. He did not deserve to be treated by you as he was.
He had faults and had committed
errors, but while you were awake to see these in an aggravated
light you did not see your own errors. In the providence of God
your wife was prostrated by disease. She was a proud-spirited
woman; but she repented of her sins, and her repentance was accepted
of God.
Your way has been hedged up, on the right
hand and on the left, to hinder your progress to perdition. The
Lord has brought your unruly, untamable spirit to submit to Him.
By a mixture of judgment and mercy you have been brought to repentance.
Like Jonah, you fled from present duty to sea. God hedged up
your way by the visitations of His providence. You could not
prosper or be happy, because you could not leave yourself behind.
You took self and sin with you. You cherished a discontented,
restless spirit and would not do the duties in your path. You
wanted a change, some larger work. You became roving in disposition.
The eye of the dear Saviour has been upon
you, or you would have been left in your unsettled state, and
in your sins, to become abandoned in character and miserable
in circumstances. While in the land of strangers and in the hour
of sickness, you have sadly felt your forlorn, desolate condition.
You have passed long nights and weary days of restlessness and
pain, away from your mother and sisters, with none but stranger
hands to do a kindly office for you, and no Christian hope to
sustain you.
You were seeking after happiness, but did
not obtain it. You had neglected the advice of your mother and
her entreaties not to violate the commands of God. At times this
neglect has caused you bitterness of spirit. But I cannot enter
into every particular, for I am not strong. I will dwell upon
the most essential things shown me.
I saw that a work is before you which you
do not comprehend. It is to die to self, to crucify self. You
have a quick, impetuous temper,
which you must subdue. You possess noble traits of character,
which will secure you friends if your hasty spirit does not wound.
You have a strong attachment for those who manifest an interest
for you. When you comprehend things aright you are conscientious;
but you often move from impulse, without stopping to reflect.
You pass your judgment upon individuals,
and comment upon their ways and manners, when you do not understand
their position or their work. You view things from your standpoint
and then are ready to question or condemn the course they pursue,
without candidly viewing matters on all sides. You have no knowledge
of the duties of others and should not feel responsible for their
acts, but do your duty, leaving others with the Lord. Possess
your spirit in patience, preserve peace and calmness of mind,
and be thankful.
I saw that the Lord had given you light
and experience, that you might see the sinfulness of a hasty
spirit and control your passions. So surely as you fail to do
this, just so surely you will fail of everlasting life. You must
overcome this disease of the imagination. You are extremely sensitive,
and if a word is spoken favoring an opposite course from that
which you have been pursuing, you are hurt. You feel that you
are blamed, and that you must defend yourself, save your life;
and in your earnest effort to save your life, you lose it. You
have a work to do to die to self and to cultivate a spirit of
forbearance and patience. Get over the idea that you are not
used right, that you are wronged, that somebody wants to crowd
or harm you. You see through false eyes. Satan leads you to take
these distorted views of things.
Dear Brother P, at Adams Center your case
was again shown me. I saw that you had ever failed to exercise
true self-government. You have made efforts; but these efforts
have only reached the external, they have not touched the spring
of action. Your hasty temper often causes
you sincere and painful regret and self-condemnation. This passionate
spirit, unless subdued, will increase to a peevish, faultfinding
spirit; indeed, this is already upon you in a degree. You will
be ready to resent everything. If jostled upon the sidewalk,
you will be offended, and a word of complaint will spring to
your lips. When driving in the street, if full half the road
is not given you, you will feel stirred in a moment. If asked
to put yourself out of your course to accommodate others, you
will chafe and fret, and feel that your dignity is imposed upon.
You will show to all your besetting sin. Your very countenance
will indicate an impatient spirit, and your mouth will seem always
ready to utter an angry word. In this habit, as in tobacco using,
total abstinence is the only sure remedy. An entire change must
take place in you. You frequently feel that you must be more
guarded. You resolutely say, "I will be more calm and patient;"
but in doing this you only touch the evil on the outside; you
consent to retain the lion and watch him. You must go further
than this. Strength of principle alone can dislodge this destroying
foe and bring peace and happiness.
You have repeatedly said: "I can't
keep my temper." "I have to speak." You lack a
meek, humble spirit. Self is all alive, and you stand guard continually
to preserve it from mortification or insult. Says the apostle:
"For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God."
Those who are dead to self will not feel so readily and will
not be prepared to resist everything which may irritate. Dead
men cannot feel. You are not dead. If you were, and your life
were hid in Christ, a thousand things which you now notice, and
which afflict you, would be passed by as unworthy of notice;
you would then be grasping the eternal and would be above the
petty trials of this life.
"The tongue is a fire, a world of
iniquity." "The discretion of a man deferreth his anger;
and it is his glory to pass over a transgression." "He
that is slow to wrath is of great understanding: but he that
is hasty of spirit exalteth folly." "He that is slow
to anger is better than the mighty; and he that ruleth his spirit
than he that taketh a city." "Wherefore, my beloved
brethren, let every man be swift to hear, slow to speak, slow
to wrath: for the wrath of man worketh not the righteousness
of God." "He that hath knowledge spareth his words:
and a man of understanding is of an excellent spirit." Margin,
"a cool spirit."
Our great Exemplar was exalted to be equal
with God. He was high commander in heaven. All the holy angels
delighted to bow before Him. "And again, when He bringeth
in the First-begotten into the world, He saith, And let all the
angels of God worship Him." Jesus took upon Himself our
nature, laid aside His glory, majesty, and riches to perform
his mission, to save that which was lost. He came not to be ministered
unto, but to minister unto others. Jesus, when reviled, abused,
and insulted, did not retaliate. "Who, when He was reviled,
reviled not again." When the cruelty of man caused Him to
suffer painful stripes and wounds, He threatened not, but committed
Himself to Him who judgeth righteously. The apostle Paul exhorted
his Philippian brethren: "Let this mind be in you, which
was also in Christ Jesus: who, being in the form of God, thought
it not robbery to be equal with God: but made Himself of no reputation,
and took upon Him the form of a servant, and was made in the
likeness of men." Is the servant greater than his master?
Christ has given us His life as a pattern, and we dishonor Him
when we become jealous of every slight, and are ready to resent
every injury, supposed or real. It is not an evidence of a noble
mind to be prepared to defend self, to preserve our own dignity.
We would better suffer wrongfully
a hundred times than wound the soul by a spirit of retaliation,
or by giving vent to wrath. There is strength to be obtained
of God. He can help. He can give grace and heavenly wisdom. If
you ask in faith, you will receive; but you must watch unto prayer.
Watch, pray, work, should be your watchword.
Your wife might be a blessing if she would
only take upon her the responsibility that it is her duty to
take. But she has shunned responsibility all her life, and now
is in danger of being influenced, instead of influencing you.
Instead of having a softening, elevating influence upon you,
there is danger of her thinking as you think, and acting as you
act, without reaching down deep to be guided by principle in
all her actions. You sympathize with each other, and, unfortunately,
help each other to view matters incorrectly. She can exert an
influence for good, but she possesses a spirit which savors of
spiritual indolence and sloth. She is reluctant to engage in
any good work if it is not pleasant and agreeable. What was the
sin of Meroz? Doing nothing. It was not because of great crimes
that they were condemned, but because they did not come up to
the help of the Lord.
I was shown that your wife does not understand
herself. She shunned caretaking in her youth and is not disposed
to engage in it even now. She is inclined to lean upon others,
rather than upon her own powers. She has not encouraged a noble
independence. She should, for years back, have been educating
herself to bear burdens. She is not in health. She is predisposed
to torpidity of the liver and is not inclined to exercise. She
has not the faculty of setting herself to work unless she sees
that she must. She eats nearly double the amount which she ought
to eat. All that she takes into her stomach, above that which
her system can convert into good blood, becomes waste matter,
to burden nature in the disposal of it. Her
system is clogged with a mass of matter which hinders her in
her work, clogs the machinery, and weakens the life forces.
Taking more food into the system than it
can convert into good blood causes a depraved quality of blood
and taxes the vitality to a much greater degree than labor or
physical exercise. This overeating causes a dull stupor. The
brain nerves are called upon to aid the digestive organs, and
are thus constantly overtaxed, weakened, and benumbed. This leaves
a sense of dullness in the head, and makes your wife liable to
a shock of paralysis any day. What she requires is not encouragement
to cease exercise. There would be nothing so dangerous for her
as to remain where her physical powers would not be called into
active exercise. Physical exercise is very essential. This will
strengthen her body and mind. When she awakes to the responsibility
of her position, and sees the benefit which will result from
her seeking to have an aim in life, she will not be so disposed
to sink down in indolence and to shun hardships. She does not
put her heart into what she does; therefore she moves about too
much like a machine, feeling that labor is a burden. She cannot,
while she feels thus, realize that new life and vigor which it
is her privilege to have. She lacks spirit and energy. She is
too much inclined to be lost in dullness and leaden insensibility.
The heavy torpor she feels can only be overcome by a spare diet,
perfect control over her appetite and all her passions, and by
calling her will to aid her in taking exercise. She wants the
will to electrify the nerve power so that she may resist indolence.
Sister P, you never can be of use in the
world unless your purposes are strong enough to enable you to
overcome this unwillingness to take care and bear burdens. As
you daily exercise the forces within you, the task will grow
less difficult, until it will become second nature for you to
do duty, to be careful and diligent. You can accustom yourself
to think, when you lay less burden
upon your stomach. This burden taxes the brain.
You should also have an aim, a purpose,
in life. Where there is no purpose, there is a disposition to
indolence, but where there is a sufficiently important object
in view, all the powers of the mind will come into spontaneous
activity. In order to make life a success, the thoughts must
be steadily fixed upon the object of life, and not left to wander
off and be occupied with unimportant things, or to be satisfied
with idle musing, which is the fruit of shunning responsibility.
Castle-building depraves the mind.
Take up present duty. Do it with a will,
with all the heart. You should resolve to do something which
will require an effort of the mental as well as the physical
powers. Your heart should be in your present labor. The duty
now before you is the very work which Heaven wishes you to do.
To dream of a work far off, and imagine and plan in regard to
the future, will prove unprofitable, and will unfit you for the
work, small though it may be, which Heaven now places before
you. It should not be your study to do some great work, but to
do cheerfully and well the work which you see to do today. Talents
are entrusted to your care, to be doubled. You are responsible
for their proper use or their abuse. You are not to aspire after
great things in order to do great service, but to do your little
work. Improve your talents, even though they are few, and let
a sense of your responsibility to God for their right use rest
upon you.
You need not expect to avoid pain and weariness
in the toils and trials of life. The Son of God was partaker
of the human frame. He was frequently wearied in body and spirit.
Said He: "I must work the works of Him that sent Me, while
it is day: the night cometh, when no man can work." You
should cease your far-off dreaming, and bring your mind to present
duties, and cheerfully perform them.
This world is not the Christian's heaven.
It is merely the fitting-up place. It is the scene of our life
battles, our conflicts and sorrows; and it is important that
we all have a firm grasp of the better world, where will be found,
when the warfare is ended, peace, joy, and bliss, to be enjoyed
forever. I saw that you would both be in greater danger of making
shipwreck of faith were you united, because you would look upon
matters in a false light. You both have a great work to do for
yourselves, but you are in danger of blinding your eyes to each
other's faults.
Sister P should be guarded so as not to
stir up the hasty spirit of her husband by relating her supposed
grievances to him to obtain sympathy. He views things in a strong
light and feels deeply over matters which are not worthy of notice.
She will have to learn this and understand that it is wisdom
to be silent. She needs the power of endurance. It is much easier
to throw a thing into the mind than to get it out when once it
is there. It is easier to dwell upon a supposed wrong than to
pacify or control the feelings when once aroused.
Brother P has qualities which would be
excellent if they were refined by the elevating influences of
pure religion. He can be useful. Sincere piety alone can qualify
him to perform his duties well in this world and give him a fitness
for heaven. A heavenly character must be acquired upon earth,
my brother, or you will never possess it; therefore you should
engage at once in the work which you have to do. You should labor
earnestly to obtain a fitness for heaven. Live for heaven. Live
by faith.
Brother P, you are a rough stone; but the
hand of a skillful workman is upon you. Will you let Him hew
and square you, and polish you for that building which is coming
together without the sound of ax or hammer? Not a blow is to
be struck after probation closes. You must now, in the hours
of probation, overcome your impetuous
temper, or be separated from God at last.
Jesus loves you both and will save you if
you will be saved in His own appointed way. You may have experimental
religion if you really hunger and thirst for it. Go to God in
faith and humility, and ask, and you will receive; but remember
that the disciple is not above his Master nor the servant greater
than his Lord. You need to cherish that humility and humbleness
of mind which dwelt in Christ.
Battle Creek, Michigan, Feb. 9, 1869.