Dear Friend F: I was shown that you were
in danger of being under the full control of the great adversary
of souls. Your experience at ----- was not good for you. Your
stay at ----- hurt you; you became proud and vain. Persons were
not wanting who unwisely petted and praised you until you became
vain, pert, and saucy. You have been opposed to restraint, have
been headstrong, willful, and stubborn, and have made your parents
much trouble. They have erred. Your father has unwisely petted
you. You have taken advantage of this and have become deceptive.
You have received approbation which you did not deserve.
You had your own head very much at -----
and took liberties that should not have been allowed for a moment.
When you or your sisters were reproved you felt insulted and
reported the matter to your mother as though you had been abused.
You exaggerated, and she was nervous and easily excited and irritated
if she thought her position and dignity were not respected. She
was displeased that anyone should dictate to her children, and
she did not conceal her displeasure. She spoke improperly to
those who should have commanded her respect. Your mother showed
great lack of wisdom in taking your part and censuring those
whom she should have thanked rather than blamed. She hurt you
and did a work for you that she can never fully repair. You triumphed
because you thought yourself secure from censure, thought that
you could do as you pleased. Your mother's eye was not always
upon you; and if it had been, she could not have discerned your
evil tendencies.
At school you had a good and noble teacher,
yet you felt indignant because you were restrained. You thought
that because you were the daughter of G your teacher should show
a preference for you and should
not take the liberty to correct and reprove you. Your sisters
also partook of the same spirit. You carried your complaints
to your parents; they heard your version of matters and sympathized
with you more or less, and their feelings were stirred by your
exaggerated reports. They injured you. You had not been as strictly
disciplined as you should have been. Yet you were offended because
you could not have your own way, but were compelled to yield
to the decided, thorough manner of Brother H's instructions.
While in school, you were sometimes troublesome, impudent, and
defiant, and greatly lacked modesty and decorum. You were bold,
selfish, and self-exalted, and needed firm discipline at home
as well as at school.
Your mind is impure. You were relieved
from care and labor altogether too long. Household duties would
have been one of the richest blessings that you could have had.
Weariness would not have injured you one tenth as much as have
your lascivious thoughts and conduct. You have received incorrect
ideas in regard to girls' and boys' associating together, and
it has been very congenial to your mind to be in the company
of the boys. You are not pure in heart and mind. You have been
injured by reading love stories and romances, and your mind has
been fascinated by impure thoughts. Your imagination has become
corrupt, until you seem to have no power to control your thoughts.
Satan leads you captive as he pleases. You are not happy. You
do not love God or His people. You have a bitter spirit toward
those who see your true character. You seem to blame them for
the view they take of your case, but you are the one to blame.
Your conduct has been such as to call forth cautions and warnings.
You have only yourself to censure in this.
You are a dangerous associate, and have
done much harm by your influence in -----. You have led instead
of being led You have dishonored
God and are accountable to Him for the work of evil which you
have wrought by your influence. Your conduct has not been chaste,
modest, or becoming. You have not had the fear of God before
your eyes. You have so often dissembled in order to accomplish
your plans that you bear a violated conscience. My dear girl,
unless you stop just where you are, ruin is surely before you.
Cease your daydreaming, your castle-building. Stop your thoughts
from running in the channel of folly and corruption. You cannot
safely associate with the boys. A tide of temptation is roused
and surges in your breast, having a tendency to uproot principle,
female virtue, and true modesty. If you go on in your willful,
headstrong course, what will be your fate?
A new year has dawned upon us. What have
you determined to do? What have you resolved shall be the record
borne up to God by the ministering angels of your work from day
to day? What words that you have uttered will appear in the page
of the book of records? What thoughts will the Searcher of hearts
find cherished by you? He is a discerner of the thoughts, of
the intents and purposes of the heart. You have a fearful record
of the past year, which is laid open to the view of the Majesty
of heaven and the myriads of pure, sinless angels. Your thoughts
and acts, your desperate and unsanctified feelings, may have
been concealed from mortals; but remember, the most trivial acts
of your life are open to the view of God. You have a spotted
record in heaven. The sins you have committed are all registered
there.
God's frown is upon you, and yet you appear
destitute of feeling; you do not realize your lost and undone
condition. At times you do have feelings of remorse; but your
proud, independent spirit soon rises above this, and you stifle
the voice of conscience. You are not happy, yet you imagine that
if you could have your own way unrestrained you would be
happy. Poor child! you occupy a position similar
to that of Eve in Eden. She imagined that she would be highly
exalted if she could only eat of the fruit of the tree which
God had forbidden her even to touch, lest she die. She ate, and
lost all the glories of Eden.
You should control your thoughts. This
will not be an easy task; you cannot accomplish it without close
and even severe effort. Yet God requires this of you; it is a
duty resting upon every accountable being. You are responsible
to God for your thoughts. If you indulge in vain imaginations,
permitting your mind to dwell upon impure subjects, you are,
in a degree, as guilty before God as if your thoughts were carried
into action. All that prevents the action is the lack of opportunity.
Day and night dreaming and castle-building are bad and exceedingly
dangerous habits. When once established, it is next to impossible
to break up such habits, and direct the thoughts to pure, holy,
elevated themes. You will have to become a faithful sentinel
over your eyes, ears, and all your senses if you would control
your mind and prevent vain and corrupt thoughts from staining
your soul. The power of grace alone can accomplish this most
desirable work. You are weak in this direction.
You have become wayward, bold, and daring.
The grace of God has no place in your heart. In the strength
of God alone can you bring yourself where you can be a recipient
of His grace, an instrument of righteousness. Not only does God
require you to control your thoughts, but also your passions
and affections. Your salvation depends upon your governing yourself
in these things. Passion and affection are powerful agents. If
misapplied, if set in operation through wrong motives, if misplaced,
they are powerful to accomplish your ruin and leave you a miserable
wreck, without God and without hope.
The imagination must be positively and
persistently controlled if the passions and affections are made
subject to reason, conscience, and character. You are in danger,
for you are just upon the point of sacrificing your eternal interests
at the altar of passion. Passion is obtaining positive control
of your entire being--passion of what quality? of a base, destructive
nature. By yielding to it, you will embitter the lives of your
parents, bring sadness and shame to your sisters, sacrifice your
own character, and forfeit heaven and a glorious immortal life.
Are you ready to do this? I appeal to you to stop where you are.
Advance not another step in your headstrong, wanton course; for
before you are misery and death Unless you exercise self-control
in regard to your passions and affections, you will surely bring
yourself into disrepute with all around you, and will bring upon
your character disgrace which will last while you live.
You are disobedient to your parents, pert,
unthankful, and unholy. These miserable traits are the fruits
of a corrupt tree. You are forward. You love the boys, and love
to make them the theme of your conversation. "Out of the
abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh." Habits have
become powerful to control you; and you have learned to deceive
in order to carry out your purposes and accomplish your desires.
I do not consider your case hopeless; if
I did, my pen would not be tracing these lines. In the strength
of God you can redeem the past. Your name is already a byword
in -----; but you can change this by using the powers which God
has given you. You may even now gain a moral excellence so that
your name may be associated with things pure and holy. You can
be elevated. God has provided for you the necessary helps. He
has invited you to come to Him, and has promised to bear your
burdens and give you rest of soul. "Learn of Me," says
the divine Teacher, "for I am meek and lowly in heart: and
ye shall find rest unto your souls." You have long been
above this lowliness and meekness.
You will have to learn this important lesson of the divine Teacher
before you can find the rest promised. You have thought so much
of yourself, of your own smartness, that it has led you to such
affectation and vanity as to make you almost a fool. You have
a deceitful tongue, which has indulged in misrepresentation and
falsehood. Oh, my dear girl, if you could only arouse, if your
slumbering, deadened conscience could be awakened, and you could
cherish a habitual impression of the presence of God, and keep
yourself subject to the control of an enlightened, wakeful conscience,
you would be happy yourself and a blessing to your parents, whose
hearts you now wound. You could be an instrument of righteousness
to your associates. You need a thorough conversion, and without
it you are in the gall of bitterness and in the bonds of iniquity.
You may imagine yourself free when following the lead of your
own wayward, pernicious mind; but you are in the most degrading
bondage. Without the principles of religion, you may consider
yourself an object of envy; but all who are good and virtuous
will regard your character with pity and your course with abhorrence.
You can become a partaker of the divine nature if you will escape
the corruption that is in the world through lust; or by being
a partaker of it, you may sink down in this corruption and bear
the impress of the satanic.
You have younger sisters whom you can bless
with your influence. You can reflect a sweet, precious light
in your father's family and make his heart glad; or you can be
a dark shadow, a cloud, a storm which shall desolate. Your passion
for reading is of such a character that if indulged it will pervert
the imagination and will prove your ruin. Unless you restrain
your thoughts, your reading, and your words, your imagination
will become hopelessly diseased. Read your Bible attentively,
prayerfully, and be guided by its teachings. This is your safety.
Keep clear of the boys. In their society
your temptations become earnest and powerful. Put marriage out
of your girl's head. You are in no sense fit for this. You need
years of experience before you can be qualified to understand
the duties, and take up the burdens, of married life. Positively
guard your thoughts, your passions, and your affections. Do not
degrade these to minister to lust. Elevate them to purity, devote
them to God.
You may become a prudent, modest, virtuous
girl, but not without earnest effort. You must watch, you must
pray, you must meditate, you must investigate your motives and
your actions. Closely analyze your feelings and your acts. Would
you, in the presence of your father, perform an impure action?
No, indeed. But you do this in the presence of your heavenly
Father, who is so much more exalted, so holy, so pure. Yes; you
corrupt your own body in the presence of the pure, sinless angels,
and in the presence of Christ; and you continue to do this irrespective
of conscience, irrespective of the light and warnings given you.
Remember, a record is made of all
your acts. You must meet again the most secret things of your
life. You will be judged according to the deeds done in the body.
Are you prepared for this? You are injuring yourself physically
and morally. God has enjoined upon you to preserve your body
holy. "Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy
Ghost, . . . and ye are not your own? For ye are bought with
a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit,
which are God's." Will not God judge you for debasing to
lust the passions and affections when He claims the wealth of
your affections and your entire being to be devoted to His service?
Again I warn you as one who must meet these
lines in that day when the case of everyone shall be decided.
Yield yourself to Christ without
delay; He alone, by the power of His grace, can redeem you from
ruin. He alone can bring your moral and mental powers into a
state of health. Your heart may be warm with the love of God;
your understanding, clear and mature; your conscience, illuminated,
quick, and pure; your will, upright and sanctified, subject to
the control of the Spirit of God. You can make yourself what
you choose. If you will now face rightabout, cease to do evil
and learn to do well, then you will be happy indeed; you will
be successful in the battles of life, and rise to glory and honor
in the better life than this. "Choose you this day whom
ye will serve."