In Minnesota I was again burdened in regard
to the course of our ministers, by seeing Brother B and talking
with him in regard to his defects which stood right in the way
of his work for the salvation of souls. His course in caring
for the things of this life again
brought your case so distinctly before me that, had I been as
well as usual, I should have written to you before I left the
campground. We had no period of rest, but came directly to Wisconsin.
I was sick, yet God strengthened me to do my duty before the
people. As I stood before the public I recognized countenances
that I had no knowledge of ever having seen before. Again your
case, in connection with others, came distinctly before me. This
was the vicinity where your influence had been a blighting curse
rather than a blessing. It was also a place where much good might
have been accomplished, even by you. Had you been consecrated
to God, and unselfishly working for the salvation of souls for
whom Christ died, your labors would have been wholly successful.
You understood the arguments of our position. The reasons of
our faith, brought before the minds of those who have not been
enlightened in regard to them, make a decided impression if minds
are not filled with prejudice so that they will not receive the
evidences given. I saw some of the very best material to make
excellent Sabbathkeeping Christians in the vicinity of -----
and -----; but while some were charmed with the beautiful chain
of truth, and were about ready to decide upon it, you left the
field without completing the work you had undertaken. This was
worse than if you had never entered it. That interest can never
be raised again.
For years light has been given upon this
point, showing the necessity of following up an interest that
has been raised, and in no case leaving it until all have decided
that lean toward the truth and have experienced the conversion
necessary for baptism and united with some church or formed one
themselves. There are no circumstances of sufficient importance
to call a minister from an interest created by the presentation
of truth. Even sickness and death are of less consequence than
the salvation of souls for whom Christ made so immense a sacrifice. Those who feel the importance
of the truth, and the value of souls for whom Christ died, will
not leave an interest among the people for any consideration.
They will say: Let the dead bury their dead. Home interests,
lands and houses, should not have the least power to attract
from the field of labor. If ministers allow these temporal things
to divert them from the work, the only course for them to pursue
is to leave all, possess no lands or temporal interests which
will have an influence to draw them from the solemn work of these
last days. One soul is of more value than the entire world. How
can men who profess to have given themselves to the sacred work
of saving souls, allow their small temporal possessions to engross
their minds and hearts, and keep them from the high calling they
profess to have received from God?
I saw, Brother A, that your influence in
the vicinity of ----- and ----- has done great injury to the
cause of God. I knew what that influence was while you were at
Battle Creek last. As I have been writing out important matter
for ministers, your case has been brought before me, and I intended
ere this to have written you; but it was impossible. For three
nights I have slept but little. Your case has been upon my mind
almost constantly. I was mentally writing to you in my sleep,
and also when awake. When I recognized in the congregation the
very individuals that had been injured by your influence, I should
have brought the matter out, had you been present. Not one word
from any mortal was intimated to me in regard to your course.
I felt compelled to speak to one or two in reference to the matter,
stating to them that I recollected their countenances in connection
with some things shown me in regard to you. Then, very reluctantly,
facts were related to me confirming all I had stated to them.
I have said only what I believed I should say in the fear of
God, discharging my duty as His servant.
Two years ago I saw that you and your wife
were both very selfish, grasping persons. Your own selfish interests
were dearer to you than souls for whom Christ died. I was shown
that you were not generally successful in your labors. You have
the ability to present the truth; you have an investigating mind;
and if it were not for the many defects in your Christian character,
you could accomplish good. But, for many reasons, you have not
made the preaching of the truth a success. One of the greatest
curses of your life, Brother A, has been your supreme selfishness.
You have been figuring for your own advantage. You both have
made yourselves the center of sympathy and attention. When you
go to a place and enter a family, you throw your whole weight
upon them, let them cook for you and wait upon you; and neither
of you seeks to do as much work as you make. The family may be
toiling hard, bearing their own burdens and yours; but you are
both so selfish that you cannot see that they are worn and that
you are both physically better able than they to perform the
labor which they do for you. Brother A, you are too indolent
to please God. When wood or water is needed, you do not know
it, and you let these be brought by those who are already overworked,
and frequently by females, when these little errands, these courtesies
of life, are what you need to perform for the benefit of your
health. You are full of flesh and blood, and do not exercise
half enough for your own good. The indolence you manifest, and
the disposition to grasp everything whereby you may be advantaged,
has been a reproach to the truth and a stumbling block to unbelievers.
Your wife, as well as you, loves her ease.
Your time has been spent in bed when you were able to be up actively
showing a special interest in the family you were burdening.
You have thought that, because you were a minister, they should
consider your presence a favor, and should wait upon you, and
favor you, while you had nothing to do but to care for your
own selfish interests. The impressions which
you have given have been very bad. You both have been considered
representatives of ministers and their wives who are engaged
in presenting to the world the Sabbath and the soon coming of
our Lord.
Those who are acquainted with your course
will say that your profession, your teachings, and your life
do not agree. They see that your fruits are not good, and decide
that you do not believe the things you teach to others. They
conclude that all ministers are like yourself, and that sacred
and eternal truths are, after all, a deception. Who will be responsible
for such impressions and such deplorable results? May you see
the heavy weight that rests upon you in consequence of your selfishness,
which is a curse to yourself and to all around you.
Again, Brother A, you are troubled with
feelings and impressions which are the natural fruit of selfishness.
You imagine that others do not appreciate your labors. You think
yourself capable of accomplishing a large work, but excuse your
failure to do it, because others do not give you room and credit
according to your ability. You are jealous of others and have
hindered the progress of the cause in Illinois and Wisconsin,
doing but little yourself, and hindering those who would work
if you were out of their way. Your sensitiveness and jealousy
have weakened the hands of those who would set things in order
and bring up these conferences. If any improvement is seen in
these states, you incline to think that it is attributable in
a great measure to yourself, when it is a fact that if things
were left to your dictation, they would speedily go into the
ground. In your preaching you are generally too dry and formal.
You do not weave in the practical with the doctrinal. You talk
too long and weary the people. Instead of dwelling only upon
that portion of your subject that you can fully make plain to
the understanding of all, you go way around
and come down to minute particulars that do not help the subject
and might as well be passed over. When so much matter not really
necessary is brought in, the hearer loses the chain of the argument
and cannot keep the subject in mind. When a minister gets the
ears of the people, he should go from point to point, as far
as possible leaving these points unincumbered with a mass of
words and petty details. He should leave his ideas before the
people as distinct as mileposts. To cover over the important,
vital points with an array of words, dragging in everything which
has some distant relationship to the subject, destroys the force
of it and obscures the beautiful, connected chain of truth. You
are slow and tedious in your preaching, as well as in everything
else you undertake. You need, if ever a man did, to be energized
by the Spirit of truth. You need Christ formed within you the
hope of glory. You need religion, the genuine article.
I was referred to the following words of
inspiration: "Who is a wise man and endued with knowledge
among you? let him show out of a good conversation his works
with meekness of wisdom." "But the wisdom that is from
above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, and easy to be entreated,
full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and without
hypocrisy. And the fruit of righteousness is sown in peace of
them that make peace." Men whom God has called to the work
of saving souls will feel a burden for the people. Selfish interests
will be swallowed up in their deep concern for the salvation
of souls for whom Christ died. They will feel the force of the
exhortation of Peter: "The elders which are among you I
exhort, who am also an elder, and a witness of the sufferings
of Christ, and also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed:
Feed the flock of God which is among you, taking the oversight
thereof, not by constraint, but willingly; not for filthy lucre,
but of a ready mind; neither as being lords over God's heritage,
but being ensamples to the flock. And when the Chief Shepherd shall appear, ye shall receive a crown
of glory that fadeth not away."
You are naturally stubborn. Jealousy and
stubbornness are the natural fruits of selfishness. You have
made some improvement; but I saw so much yet to be done, I saw
so clearly the wretched influence of your selfish, unconsecrated
life, that I fear you will never see just how hateful these traits
of character are before God. I fear that you will not realize
this sufficiently to put them away and become like your self-denying
Redeemer, pure and unselfish, your life characterized by disinterested
benevolence. Your influence and example are such as to cause
some who love the truth and work of God, and who value our faith,
to lose their spirit of self-sacrifice and their interest in
the cause of present truth. Your selfish, covetous course begets
the same spirit in them; and your disposition to grasp and advantage
yourself, while professing to be a minister of righteousness,
has closed the hearts of very many against giving of their means
to advance the cause of truth. If ministers set the people an
example of selfishness, that example will tell upon the cause
of God with tenfold greater power than all their preaching can.
God has been dishonored by your littleness.
Your deal has savored of dishonesty. You have not made a clean
track behind you, and until there is an entire transformation
in your life, you will be a living curse to any church where
you reside. You work for wages, and would not kindle a fire upon
the altar of God, or shut the doors, for nought. When you set
the people an example of self-sacrifice and of devotion to the
cause of God, making the truth and the salvation of the soul
primary, then your influence will bring others into the same
position of self-sacrifice and devotion, to make the kingdom
of heaven and the righteousness of Christ first. You feel authorized
to advantage yourself from the cause. Your brethren, from the
liberality of their souls, favor and help you in various
ways, and you receive it as a matter of course,
as your due. And if any are not perfectly free with you, and
do not favor you, you are jealous, and do not scruple to let
them understand that you are not appreciated, and that they are
selfish. You frequently refer to others who have done thus and
so by you, as examples that they should imitate. These who have
especially favored you have gone beyond their duty. You have
not earned their confidence or their liberalities. You have had
no heavy burdens to bear in this cause, and you have cast on
others many more burdens than you have lifted; yet you have been
gaining in property, and obtaining the good things of this life,
and you regard it all as your right. Though you have received
your weekly wages, you have not always been satisfied. Notwithstanding
the pay you received, you have been managing continually to advantage
yourself. The cause of God has paid you, whether you had much
or little to show for your labor. You have not earned the means
you have received.
Your wife has been petted by her parents
and by her husband until she is of but very little use. You have
both seen others burdened with care and have not lifted the burdens
with them. Your wife has lain as a helpless weight upon families,
greatly to her own injury and to theirs, when, in point of health,
she was better able to do than some who were bearing her burdens
and yours. Yet she did not think of this. Neither of you could
see the facts in the case and feel for others. Some from whom
you have received help in care for yourselves and your child
were not able, financially, to do what they did; but they thought
they were ministering to self-sacrificing servants of Christ;
therefore they denied themselves and endured inconvenience and
trouble, to bear burdens that you were better able to bear for
yourselves than they were to bear them for you.
Your wife has been reluctant to take
up her life burdens. She wants a higher calling, and neglects
the duties of today. Neither of
you obeys the commandment of God: Love thy neighbor as thyself.
Self and selfishness shut out the needs of your neighbors from
you. Your small, mercenary spirit is contagious. Your example
has done more to encourage love of the world, and a close, penurious
spirit, than anything else which has occurred in Wisconsin and
Illinois. Had you done nothing but attend to your temporal interests,
the cause of God in these two states would have been in a far
better condition than it is in today. The success you have had
does not come up to the injury you have done. The cause of God
is prostrated. Your sensitiveness and jealousy have been an example
for others. We met this spirit in Illinois and in Wisconsin.
The state of the churches in ----- and vicinity has been deplorable.
The lack of love and union, the surmising, jealousy, and stubbornness,
apparent in these churches, have been shaped very much by your
traits of character. The position which you occupied after the
fanaticism at -----, standing back upon your dignity, splitting
hairs, dividing the matter with the fanatical and with those
whom God had sent with a special message, stood directly in the
way of others' seeing and correcting their wrongs. Your course
at that time, in failing to take hold and work on the right side
to correct that blasting fanaticism, gave shape to the discouraging
state of things which has grown out of that dark reign of fanaticism.
Brethren C and D, and the entire church at -----, and the people
at -----, were not brought out upon correct positions, as they
might have been had you been humble and teachable, working in
union with the servants of God.
When a man who professes to be a teacher,
a leader, ventures in the course which you have pursued because
of your stubbornness, he will have a heavy weight of responsibility
to bear for the souls who have stumbled over him to perdition.
A minister cannot be too careful of his influence. Stubbornness,
jealousy, and selfishness should have no part in his being;
for if they are indulged, he will ruin more
souls than he can save. If he does not overcome these dangerous
elements in his character, it would be better for him to have
nothing to do with the cause of God. The indulgence of these
traits, which may not appear very bad to him, will place souls
beyond his reach and beyond the reach of others. If such ministers
would let things entirely alone, the souls susceptible to the
influence of the Spirit of God might be reached by those who
can give them an example worthy of imitation, in accordance with
the truth they teach. By a consistent life the minister will
retain the confidence of the seekers after truth, until he can
help them to fasten their grasp firmly upon the Rock of Ages;
and afterward, if they are tempted, that influence will enable
him to warn, exhort, reprove, and counsel them with success.
Above all other men, ministers of Christ,
bearing the solemn truth for these last days, should be free
from selfishness. Benevolence should dwell naturally with them.
They should be ashamed of acts toward their brethren which bear
the marks of selfishness. They should be patterns of piety, living
epistles, known and read of all men. Their fruits should be unto
holiness. The spirit which they possess should be the opposite
of that manifested by worldlings. By accepting divine truth they
become servants of God, and are no more children of darkness
and servants of the world. Christ has chosen them out of the
world. The worldling understands not the mystery of godliness,
therefore he is unacquainted with the motives which actuate them.
Yet the spirit and life which is in them, which is manifested
in their heavenly conversation, their self-denying, self-sacrificing,
blameless life, has a convincing power that will lead unbelievers
into all truth, lead them to obedience to Christ. They are living
examples because they are like Christ. They are the light of
the world, the salt of the earth, and their influence upon others
is saving. They are Christ's representatives
upon the earth. Their objects and desires are not inspired by
earthly things, neither can they labor for gain nor enjoy a selfish
love for it. Eternal considerations are sufficient to overbalance
every earthly attraction. A genuine Christian will labor only
to please God, having an eye single to His glory and enjoying
the reward of doing His will.
Ministers especially should know the character
and works of Christ, that they may imitate Him; for the character
and works of a true Christian are like His. He laid aside His
glory, His dominion, His riches, and sought after those who were
perishing in sin. He humbled Himself to our necessities, that
He might exalt us to heaven. Sacrifice, self-denial, and disinterested
benevolence characterized His life. He is our pattern. Have you,
Brother A, imitated the Pattern? I answer: No. He is a perfect
and holy example, given for us to imitate. We cannot equal the
pattern; but we shall not be approved of God if we do not copy
it and, according to the ability which God has given, resemble
it. Love for souls for whom Christ died will lead to a denial
of self and a willingness to make any sacrifice in order to be
co-workers with Christ in the salvation of souls.
The work of God's chosen servants will
be fruitful if wrought in Him. Their words and works are the
channels through which the pure principles of truth and holiness
are conveyed to the world. Their exemplary lives make them the
light of the world and the salt of the earth. The servants of
God should, with the hand of faith, lay hold of the mighty arm
and gather the divine rays of light from above, while, with the
hand of love, they reach after perishing souls. Diligence is
necessary for this work. Indolence will permit souls who might
be saved, to drift beyond reach. God wants in His service ministers
who are awake, who are energetic and persevering, who are faithful
watchmen upon Zion's walls, listening
to hear the words from the divine Teacher
and faithfully proclaiming the same to the people.
You are very much like Meroz. You are quite
diligent when that which you do will bring some advantage to
yourself, but there is no motive for special diligence unless
you are to be benefited. You are decidedly a lazy man. You can
eat your rations regularly, but you have no special love for
physical labor. No man can fill his position as a minister unless
he is industrious, diligent in business, and faithful in the
performance of all the social and public duties of life. God
has chosen us, as His servants, to His work, which requires persevering
energy. We are not to become pets and shun toil, hardship, and
conflicts.
I was referred to the following words of
inspiration: "For we preach not ourselves, but Christ Jesus
the Lord; and ourselves your servants for Jesus' sake. For God,
who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined
in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory
of God in the face of Jesus Christ. But we have this treasure
in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of
God, and not of us. We are troubled on every side, yet not distressed;
we are perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken;
cast down, but not destroyed; always bearing about in the body
the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life also of Jesus might
be made manifest in our body." The sufficiency of the apostle
was not in himself, but in the presence and power of the Holy
Spirit, whose gracious influences filled his soul, bringing every
thought into subjection and obedience to Christ. His ministry
was fruitful.
The first great commandment is: "Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart." "And
the second is like, namely this, Thou shalt love thy neighbor
as thyself." On these two commandments the whole interest
and duty of moral beings hang.
Those who do their duty to others as they would that others should
do to them are brought into a position where God can reveal Himself
to them. They will be approved of Him. They are made perfect
in love, and their labors and prayers will not be in vain. They
are continually receiving grace and truth from the Fountainhead,
and as freely transmitting to others the divine light and salvation
they receive. In them is fulfilled the language of the Scripture:
"Ye have your fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting
life."
Selfishness is abomination in the sight
of God and holy angels. Because of this sin many fail to attain
the good which they are capable of enjoying. They look with selfish
eyes on their own things, and do not love and seek the interest
of others as they do their own. They reverse God's order. Instead
of doing for others what they wish others to do for them, they
do for themselves what they desire others to do for them, and
do to others what they are most unwilling to have returned to
them. Here is where you need to learn. Love is of God. You have
not the love which dwelt in the bosom of Christ. The unconsecrated
heart cannot originate, or produce, this plant of heavenly origin,
which, in order to flourish, must be watered constantly with
the dew of heaven. It can flourish only in the heart where Christ
reigns. This love cannot live and flourish without action; and
it cannot act without increasing in fervency, and extending and
diffusing its nature to others. This principle you have greatly
lacked, and thus all has been dark where its presence would have
made all light.
My brother, you need an entire transformation,
a thorough conversion. Without this you are only a blind leader.
Your influence does not increase the love and union of those
with whom you are. Instead of building up, you have a scattering
influence. You have cursed the West with your deficiencies. While
you are so deficient in the grace of God, and so given
to selfishness, you cannot bring up the church
to the position which God requires them to occupy. "Whereof
I am made a minister, according to the dispensation of God which
is given to me for you, to fulfill the word of God; even the
mystery which hath been hid from ages and from generations, but
now is made manifest to His saints: to whom God would make known
what is the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles;
which is Christ in you, the hope of glory: whom we preach, warning
every man, and teaching every man in all wisdom; that we may
present every man perfect in Christ Jesus: whereunto I also labor,
striving according to His working, which worketh in me mightily."
God's ministers must have the truth in
their hearts in order to successfully present it to others. They
must be sanctified by the truths they preach or they will be
only stumbling blocks to sinners. Those who are called of God
to minister in holy things are called to be pure in heart and
holy in life. "Be ye clean, that bear the vessels of the
Lord." If God pronounces a woe upon those who are called
to preach the truth and refuse to obey, a heavier woe rests upon
those who take upon them this sacred work without clean hands
and pure hearts. As there are woes for those who preach the truth
while they are unsanctified in heart and life, so there are woes
for those who receive and maintain the unsanctified in the position
which they cannot fill. If the Spirit of God has not sanctified
and made pure and clean the hands and heart of those who minister
in sacred things, they will speak according to their own imperfect,
deficient experience, and their counsels will lead astray from
God those who look to them and trust in their judgment and experience.
May God help ministers to heed the exhortation of Paul to the
Corinthians: "Examine yourselves, whether ye be in the faith;
prove your own selves. Know ye not your own selves, how that
Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates?" There
is a work for you to do, my brother, if
you gain eternal life. May God help you to do this work thoroughly,
that you may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing.
Chicago, Illinois,
Massasoit House, July 6, 1870.