For years previous to my husband's dangerous
and protracted illness he performed more labor than two men should
have done in the same time. He saw no time when he could be relieved
from the pressure of care and obtain mental and physical rest.
Through the testimonies he was warned of his danger. I was shown
that he was doing too much brain labor. I will here copy a written
testimony, given as far back as August 26, 1855:
"While at Paris, Maine, I was shown
that my husband's health was in a critical condition, that his
anxiety of mind had been too much for his strength. When the
present truth was first published, he put forth great exertion
and labored with but little encouragement or help from his brethren.
From the first he has taken burdens upon him which were too taxing
for his physical strength.
"These burdens, if equally shared,
need not have been so wearing. While my husband took much responsibility,
some of his brethren in the ministry were not willing to take
any. And those who shunned burdens and responsibilities did not
realize his burdens, and were not as interested in the advancement
of the work and cause of God as they should have been.
My husband felt this lack and laid his shoulder
under burdens that were too heavy and which nearly crushed him.
As the result of these extra efforts more souls will be saved,
but it is these efforts that have told upon his constitution
and deprived him of strength. I have been shown that he should
in a great measure lay aside his anxiety; God is willing that
he should be released from such wearing labor, and that he should
spend more time in the study of the Scriptures and in the society
of his children, seeking to cultivate their minds
"I saw that it is not our duty to
perplex ourselves with individual trials. Such mental labor endured
for others' wrongs should be avoided. My husband can continue
to labor with all his energies, as he has done, and as the result
go down into the grave, and his labors be lost to the cause of
God; or he can now be released, while he has some strength left,
and last longer, and his labors be more efficient."
I will now copy from a testimony given
in 1859: "In my last vision I was shown that the Lord would
have my husband give himself more to the study of the Scriptures,
that he may be qualified to labor more effectually in word and
doctrine, both in speaking and in writing. I saw that in the
past we had exhausted our energies through much anxiety and care
to bring the church into a right position. Such wearing labor
in various places, bearing the burdens of the church, is not
required; for the church should bear their own burdens. Our work
is to instruct them in God's word, to urge upon them the necessity
of experimental religion, and to define as clearly as possible
the correct position in regard to the truth. God would have us
raise our voices in the great congregation upon points of present
truth which are of vital importance. These should be presented
with clearness and with decision, and should also be written
out, that the silent messengers may bring them before the people
everywhere. A more thorough consecration to the essential work
is required on our part; we must be earnest to live in the light
of God's countenance. If our minds were less occupied with the
trials of the church they would be more
free to be exercised upon Bible subjects; and a closer application
to Bible truth would accustom the mind to run in that channel,
and we would thus be better qualified for the important work
devolving upon us.
"I was shown that God did not lay
upon us such heavy burdens as we have borne in the past. It is
our duty to talk to the church and show them the necessity of
working for themselves. They have been carried too much. The
reason why we should not be required to take upon ourselves heavy
burdens and engage in perplexing labor is that the Lord has work
of another character for us to perform. He would not have us
exhaust our physical and mental energies, but hold them in reserve,
that upon special occasions, whenever help is actually needed,
our voices may be heard.
"I saw that important moves would
be made, in which our influence would be demanded to lead out;
that influences would arise, and errors would occasionally be
brought into the church, and that then our influence would be
required. But if exhausted by previous labors, we would not possess
that calm judgment, discretion, and self-control necessary for
the important occasion in which God would have us act a prominent
part.
"Satan has crippled our efforts by
so affecting the church as to call forth from us almost double
labor to cut our way through the darkness and unbelief. These
efforts to set things in order in the churches have exhausted
our strength, and lassitude and debility have followed. I saw
that we have a work to do, but the adversary of souls will resist
every effort that we attempt to make. The people may be in a
state of backsliding, so that God cannot bless them, and this
will be disheartening; but we should not be discouraged. We should
do our duty in presenting the light, and leave the responsibility
with the people."
I will here copy from another testimony,
written June 6, 1863: "I was shown that our testimony is
still needed in the church, that we should labor to save ourselves
trials and cares, and that we should
preserve a devotional frame of mind. It is the duty of those
in the office to tax their brains more, and of my husband to
tax his less. Much time is spent by him upon various matters
which confuse and weary his mind, and unfit him for study or
for writing, and thus prevent his light from shining in the Review
as it should.
"My husband's mind should not be crowded
and overtaxed. It must have rest, and he must be left free to
write and attend to matters which others cannot do. Those engaged
in the office could lift from him a great weight of care if they
would dedicate themselves to God and feel a deep interest in
the work. No selfish feelings should exist among those who labor
in the office. It is the work of God in which they are engaged,
and they are accountable to Him for their motives and the manner
in which this branch of His work is performed. They are required
to discipline their minds. Many feel that no blame should be
attached to forgetfulness. This is a great mistake. Forgetfulness
is sin. It leads to many blunders and to much disorder and many
wrongs. Things that should be done ought not to be forgotten.
The mind must be tasked; it must be disciplined until it will
remember.
"My husband has had much care, and
has done many things which others ought to have done, but which
he feared to have them do, lest, in their heedlessness, they
should make mistakes not easily remedied, and thus involve losses.
This has been a great perplexity to his mind. Those who labor
in the office should learn. They should study, and practice,
and exercise their own brains; for they have this branch of business
alone, while my husband has the responsibility of many departments
of the work. If a workman makes a failure, he should feel that
it rests upon him to repair damages from his own purse, and should
not allow the office to suffer loss through his carelessness.
He should not cease to bear responsibilities, but should try
again, avoiding former mistakes. In this way he will learn to
take that care which the word of God ever requires, and then
he will do no more than his duty.
"My husband should take time to do
those things which his judgment tells him would preserve his
health. He has thought that he must throw off the burdens and
responsibilities which were upon him, and leave the office, or
his mind would become a wreck. I was shown that when the Lord
released him from his position, he would give him just as clear
evidence of his release as he gave him when He laid the burden
of the work upon him. But he has borne too many burdens, and
those laboring with him at the office, and also his ministering
brethren, have been too willing that he should bear them. They
have, as a general thing, stood back from bearing burdens, and
have sympathized with those who were murmuring against him, and
left him to stand alone while he was bowed down beneath censure,
until God has vindicated His own cause. If they had taken their
share of the burdens, my husband would have been relieved.
"I saw that God now requires us to
take special care of the health He has given us, for our work
is not yet done. Our testimony must still be borne, and will
have influence. We should preserve our strength to labor in the
cause of God when our labor is needed. We should be careful not
to take upon ourselves burdens that others can and should bear.
We should encourage a cheerful, hopeful, peaceful frame of mind;
for our health depends upon our so doing. The work that God requires
us to do will not prevent our caring for our health, that we
may recover from the effect of overtaxing labor. The more perfect
our health, the more perfect will be our labor. When we overtax
our strength, and become exhausted, we are liable to take cold,
and at such times there is danger of disease assuming a dangerous
form. We must not leave the care of ourselves with God, when
He has placed that responsibility upon us."
October 25, 1869, while at Adams Center,
New York, I was shown that some ministers among us fail to bear
all the responsibility that God would have them. This lack throws
extra labor upon those who are burden bearers, especially
upon my husband. Some ministers fail to move
out and venture something in the cause and work of God. Important
decisions are to be made; but as mortal man cannot see the end
from the beginning, some shrink from venturing and advancing
as the providence of God leads. Someone must advance; someone
must venture in the fear of God, trusting the result with Him.
Those ministers who shun this part of the labor are losing much.
They are failing to obtain that experience which God designed
they should have to make them strong, efficient men that can
be relied upon in any emergency.
Brother A, you shrink from running risks.
You are not willing to venture when you cannot see the way perfectly
clear. Yet someone must do this very work; someone must walk
by faith, or no advance moves will be made, and nothing will
be accomplished. A fear that you will make mistakes and mismoves,
and then be blamed, binds you. You excuse yourself from taking
responsibility because you have made some mistakes in the past.
But you should move according to your best judgment, trusting
the result with God. Someone must do this, and it is a trying
position for anyone. One should not bear all this responsibility
alone, but with much reflection and earnest prayer, it should
be equally shared.
During my husband's affliction, the Lord
tested and proved His people to reveal what was in their hearts;
and in so doing He showed to them what was undiscovered in themselves
that was not according to the Spirit of God. The trying circumstances
under which we were placed called out from our brethren that
which otherwise would never have been revealed. The Lord proved
to His people that the wisdom of man is foolishness, and that
unless they possess firm trust and reliance on God, their plans
and calculations will prove a failure. We are to learn from all
these things. If errors are committed, they should teach and
instruct, but not lead to the shunning of burdens and responsibilities.
Where much is at stake, and where matters of vital consequence
are to be considered, and important questions settled, God's
servants should take individual
responsibility. They cannot lay off the burden and yet do the
will of God. Some ministers are deficient in the qualifications
necessary to build up the churches, and they are not willing
to wear in the cause of God. They have not a disposition to give
themselves wholly to the work, with their interest undivided,
their zeal unabated, their patience and perseverance untiring.
With these qualifications in lively exercise, the churches would
be kept in order, and my husband's labors would not be so heavy.
All ministers do not constantly bear in mind that the labor of
all must bear the inspection of the judgment, and that every
man will be rewarded as his works have been.
Brother A, you have a responsibility to
bear in regard to the Health Institute. [LATER KNOWN AS THE BATTLE
CREEK SANITARIUM.] You should ponder, you should reflect. Frequently
the time that you occupy in reading is the very best time for
you to reflect and to study what must be done to set things in
order at the Institute and at the office. My husband takes on
these burdens because he sees that the work for these institutions
must be done by someone. As others will not lead out, he steps
into the gap and supplies the deficiency.
God has cautioned and warned my husband
in regard to the preservation of his strength. I was shown that
he was raised up by the Lord, and that he lives as a miracle
of mercy--not for the purpose of again gathering upon him the
burdens under which he once fell, but that the people of God
may be benefited by his experience in advancing the general interests
of the cause, and in connection with the work the Lord has given
me, and the burden He has laid upon me to bear.
Brother A, great care should be exercised
by you, especially at Battle Creek. In visiting, your conversation
should be upon the most important subjects. Be careful to back
up precept by example. This is an important post and will require
labor. While you are here, you should take time to ponder the
many things which need to be done and which require solemn reflection,
careful attention, and most earnest, faithful prayer. You should
feel as great an interest in the things relating to
the cause, to the work at the Health Institute
and at the office of publication, as my husband feels; you should
feel that the work is yours. You cannot do the work that God
has specially qualified my husband to do, neither can he do the
work that God has specially qualified you to do. Yet both of
you together, united in harmonious labor, you in your office,
and my husband in his, can accomplish much.
The work in which we have a common interest
is great; and efficient, willing, burden-bearing laborers are
few indeed. God will give you strength, my brother, if you will
move forward and wait upon Him. He will give my husband and myself
strength in our united labor, if we do all to His glory, according
to our ability and strength to labor. You should be located where
you would have a more favorable opportunity to exercise your
gift according to the ability that God has given you. You should
lean your whole weight upon God and give Him an opportunity to
teach, lead, and impress you. You feel a deep interest in the
work and cause of God, and you should look to Him for light and
guidance. He will give you light. But, as an ambassador of Christ,
you are required to be faithful, to correct wrong in meekness
and love, and your efforts will not prove unavailing.
Since my husband has recovered from his
feebleness, we have labored earnestly. We have not consulted
our own ease or pleasure. We have traveled and labored in camp
meetings, and overtaxed our strength, so that it has brought
upon us debility, without the advantages of rest. During the
year 1870 we attended twelve camp meetings. In a number of these
meetings, the burden of labor rested almost wholly upon us. We
traveled from Minnesota to Maine, and to Missouri and Kansas.
My husband and I united our efforts to
improve the Health Reformer [NOW CALLED GOOD HEALTH.] and make
it an interesting and profitable journal, one that would be desired,
not only by our people, but by all classes. This was a severe
tax upon him. He also made very important improvements in the
Review and the instructor. He accomplished the work which should
have been shared by three men. And while all this labor fell
upon him in the publishing branch of the work, the business departments
at the Health Institute and the Publishing Association required
the labor of two men to relieve them of financial embarrassment.
Unfaithful men who had been entrusted with
the work at the office and at the Institute, had, through selfishness
and a lack of consecration, placed matters in the worst possible
condition. There was unsettled business that had to be attended
to. My husband stepped into the gap and worked with all his energies.
He was wearing. We could see that he was in danger; but we could
not see how he could stop, unless the work in the office should
cease. Almost every day some new perplexity would arise, some
new difficulty caused by the unfaithfulness of the men who had
taken charge of the work. His brain was taxed to the utmost.
But the worst perplexities are now over, and the work is moving
on prosperously.
At the General Conference my husband pleaded
to be released from the burdens upon him; but, notwithstanding
his pleading, the burden of editing the Review and the Reformer
was placed upon him, with encouragement that men who would take
burdens and responsibilities would be encouraged to settle at
Battle Creek. But as yet no help has come to lift from him the
burdens of the financial work at the office.
My husband is fast wearing. We have attended
the four Western camp meetings, and our brethren are urging us
to attend the Eastern meetings. But we dare not take additional
burdens upon us. When we came from the labor of the Western camp
meetings in July, 1871, we found a large amount of business that
had been left to accumulate in my husband's absence. We have
seen no opportunity for rest yet. My husband must be released
from the burdens upon him. There are too many that use his brain
instead of using their own. In view of the light which God has
been pleased to give us, we plead for you, my brethren, to release
my husband. I am not willing to
venture the consequences of his going forward and laboring as
he has done. He served you faithfully and unselfishly for years,
and finally fell under the pressure of the burdens placed upon
him. Then his brethren, in whom he had confided, left him. They
let him drop into my hands, and forsook him. For nearly two years
I was his nurse, his attendant, his physician. I do not wish
to pass through the experience a second time. Brethren, will
you lift the burdens from us, and allow us to preserve our strength
as God would have us, that the cause at large may be benefited
by the efforts we may make in His strength? Or will you leave
us to become debilitated so that we will become useless to the
cause?
The foregoing portion of this appeal was
read at the New Hampshire camp meeting, August, 1871.
When we returned from Kansas in the autumn
of 1870, Brother B was at home sick with fever. Sister Van Horn,
at this very time, was absent from the office in consequence
of fever brought upon her by the sudden death of her mother.
Brother Smith was also from the office, in Rochester, New York,
recovering from a fever. There was a great amount of unfinished
work at the office, yet Brother B left his post of duty to gratify
his own pleasure. This fact in his experience is a sample of
the man. Sacred duties rest lightly upon him.
It was a great breach of the trust reposed
in him to pursue the course he did. In what marked contrast with
this is the life of Christ, our Pattern! He was the Son of Jehovah,
and the Author of our salvation. He labored and suffered for
us. He denied Himself, and His whole life was one continued scene
of toil and privation. Had He chosen so to do, He could have
passed His days in a world of His own creating, in ease and plenty,
and claimed for Himself all the pleasures and enjoyment the world
could give Him. But He did not consider His own convenience.
He lived not to please Himself, but to do good and lavish His
blessings upon others.
Brother B was sick with fever. His case
was critical. In justice to the cause of God, I feel compelled
to state that his sickness was
not the result of unwearied devotion to the interests of the
office. Imprudent exposure on a trip to Chicago, for his own
pleasure, was the cause of his long, tedious, suffering sickness.
God did not sustain him in leaving the work, when so many who
had filled important positions in the office were absent. At
the very time when he should not have excused himself for an
hour, he left his post of duty, and God did not sustain him.
There was no period of rest for us, however
much we needed it. The Review, the Reformer, and the Instructor
must be edited. Many letters had been laid aside until we should
return to examine them. Things were in a sad state at the office.
Everything needed to be set in order. My husband commenced his
labor, and I helped him what I could; but that was but little.
He labored unceasingly to straighten out perplexing business
matters and to improve the condition of our periodicals. He could
not depend upon help from any of his ministering brethren. His
head, heart, and hands were full. He was not encouraged by Brethren
A and C, when they knew he was standing alone under the burdens
at Battle Creek. They did not stay up his hands. They wrote in
a most discouraging manner of their poor health, and that they
were in such an exhausted condition that they could not be depended
on to accomplish any labor. My husband saw that nothing could
be hoped for in that direction. Notwithstanding his double labor
through the summer, he could not rest. And, irrespective of his
weakness, he reined himself up to do the work which others had
neglected.
The Reformer was about dead. Brother B
had urged the extreme positions of Dr. Trall. This had influenced
the doctor to come out in the Reformer stronger than he otherwise
would have done, in discarding milk, sugar, and salt. The position
to entirely discontinue the use of these things may be right
in its order; but the time had not come to take a general stand
upon these points. And those who do take their position, and
advocate the entire disuse of milk, butter, and sugar, should
have their own tables free from these things.
Brother B, even while taking his stand in the Reformer with Dr.
Trall in regard to the injurious effects of salt, milk, and sugar,
did not practice the things he taught. Upon his own table these
things were used daily.
Many of our people had lost their interest
in the Reformer, and letters were daily received with this discouraging
request: "Please discontinue my Reformer." Letters
were received from the West, where the country is new and fruit
scarce, inquiring: "How do the friends of health reform
live at Battle Creek? Do they dispense with salt entirely? If
so, we cannot at present adopt the health reform. We can get
but little fruit, and we have left off the use of meat, tea,
coffee, and tobacco; but we must have something to sustain life."
We had spent some time in the West, and
knew the scarcity of fruit, and we sympathized with our brethren
who were conscientiously seeking to be in harmony with the body
of Sabbathkeeping Adventists. They were becoming discouraged,
and some were backsliding upon the health reform, fearing that
at Battle Creek they were radical and fanatical. We could not
raise an interest anywhere in the West to obtain subscribers
for the Health Reformer. We saw that the writers in the Reformer
were going away from the people and leaving them behind. If we
take positions that conscientious Christians, who are indeed
reformers, cannot adopt, how can we expect to benefit that class
whom we can reach only from a health standpoint?
An Appeal for Burden Bearers
Dear Brethren and Sisters: I feel compelled
at this time to fulfill a long-neglected duty.
For years previous to my husband's dangerous
and protracted illness he performed more labor than two men should
have done in the same time. He saw no time when he could be relieved
from the pressure of care and obtain mental and physical rest.
Through the testimonies he was warned of his danger. I was shown
that he was doing too much brain labor. I will here copy a written
testimony, given as far back as August 26, 1855:
"While at Paris, Maine, I was shown
that my husband's health was in a critical condition, that his
anxiety of mind had been too much for his strength. When the
present truth was first published, he put forth great exertion
and labored with but little encouragement or help from his brethren.
From the first he has taken burdens upon him which were too taxing
for his physical strength.
"These burdens, if equally shared,
need not have been so wearing. While my husband took much responsibility,
some of his brethren in the ministry were not willing to take
any. And those who shunned burdens and responsibilities did not
realize his burdens, and were not as interested in the advancement
of the work and cause of God as they should have been.
My husband felt this lack and laid his shoulder
under burdens that were too heavy and which nearly crushed him.
As the result of these extra efforts more souls will be saved,
but it is these efforts that have told upon his constitution
and deprived him of strength. I have been shown that he should
in a great measure lay aside his anxiety; God is willing that
he should be released from such wearing labor, and that he should
spend more time in the study of the Scriptures and in the society
of his children, seeking to cultivate their minds
"I saw that it is not our duty to
perplex ourselves with individual trials. Such mental labor endured
for others' wrongs should be avoided. My husband can continue
to labor with all his energies, as he has done, and as the result
go down into the grave, and his labors be lost to the cause of
God; or he can now be released, while he has some strength left,
and last longer, and his labors be more efficient."
I will now copy from a testimony given
in 1859: "In my last vision I was shown that the Lord would
have my husband give himself more to the study of the Scriptures,
that he may be qualified to labor more effectually in word and
doctrine, both in speaking and in writing. I saw that in the
past we had exhausted our energies through much anxiety and care
to bring the church into a right position. Such wearing labor
in various places, bearing the burdens of the church, is not
required; for the church should bear their own burdens. Our work
is to instruct them in God's word, to urge upon them the necessity
of experimental religion, and to define as clearly as possible
the correct position in regard to the truth. God would have us
raise our voices in the great congregation upon points of present
truth which are of vital importance. These should be presented
with clearness and with decision, and should also be written
out, that the silent messengers may bring them before the people
everywhere. A more thorough consecration to the essential work
is required on our part; we must be earnest to live in the light
of God's countenance. If our minds were less occupied with the
trials of the church they would be more
free to be exercised upon Bible subjects; and a closer application
to Bible truth would accustom the mind to run in that channel,
and we would thus be better qualified for the important work
devolving upon us.
"I was shown that God did not lay
upon us such heavy burdens as we have borne in the past. It is
our duty to talk to the church and show them the necessity of
working for themselves. They have been carried too much. The
reason why we should not be required to take upon ourselves heavy
burdens and engage in perplexing labor is that the Lord has work
of another character for us to perform. He would not have us
exhaust our physical and mental energies, but hold them in reserve,
that upon special occasions, whenever help is actually needed,
our voices may be heard.
"I saw that important moves would
be made, in which our influence would be demanded to lead out;
that influences would arise, and errors would occasionally be
brought into the church, and that then our influence would be
required. But if exhausted by previous labors, we would not possess
that calm judgment, discretion, and self-control necessary for
the important occasion in which God would have us act a prominent
part.
"Satan has crippled our efforts by
so affecting the church as to call forth from us almost double
labor to cut our way through the darkness and unbelief. These
efforts to set things in order in the churches have exhausted
our strength, and lassitude and debility have followed. I saw
that we have a work to do, but the adversary of souls will resist
every effort that we attempt to make. The people may be in a
state of backsliding, so that God cannot bless them, and this
will be disheartening; but we should not be discouraged. We should
do our duty in presenting the light, and leave the responsibility
with the people."
I will here copy from another testimony,
written June 6, 1863: "I was shown that our testimony is
still needed in the church, that we should labor to save ourselves
trials and cares, and that we should
preserve a devotional frame of mind. It is the duty of those
in the office to tax their brains more, and of my husband to
tax his less. Much time is spent by him upon various matters
which confuse and weary his mind, and unfit him for study or
for writing, and thus prevent his light from shining in the Review
as it should.
"My husband's mind should not be crowded
and overtaxed. It must have rest, and he must be left free to
write and attend to matters which others cannot do. Those engaged
in the office could lift from him a great weight of care if they
would dedicate themselves to God and feel a deep interest in
the work. No selfish feelings should exist among those who labor
in the office. It is the work of God in which they are engaged,
and they are accountable to Him for their motives and the manner
in which this branch of His work is performed. They are required
to discipline their minds. Many feel that no blame should be
attached to forgetfulness. This is a great mistake. Forgetfulness
is sin. It leads to many blunders and to much disorder and many
wrongs. Things that should be done ought not to be forgotten.
The mind must be tasked; it must be disciplined until it will
remember.
"My husband has had much care, and
has done many things which others ought to have done, but which
he feared to have them do, lest, in their heedlessness, they
should make mistakes not easily remedied, and thus involve losses.
This has been a great perplexity to his mind. Those who labor
in the office should learn. They should study, and practice,
and exercise their own brains; for they have this branch of business
alone, while my husband has the responsibility of many departments
of the work. If a workman makes a failure, he should feel that
it rests upon him to repair damages from his own purse, and should
not allow the office to suffer loss through his carelessness.
He should not cease to bear responsibilities, but should try
again, avoiding former mistakes. In this way he will learn to
take that care which the word of God ever requires, and then
he will do no more than his duty.
"My husband should take time to do
those things which his judgment tells him would preserve his
health. He has thought that he must throw off the burdens and
responsibilities which were upon him, and leave the office, or
his mind would become a wreck. I was shown that when the Lord
released him from his position, he would give him just as clear
evidence of his release as he gave him when He laid the burden
of the work upon him. But he has borne too many burdens, and
those laboring with him at the office, and also his ministering
brethren, have been too willing that he should bear them. They
have, as a general thing, stood back from bearing burdens, and
have sympathized with those who were murmuring against him, and
left him to stand alone while he was bowed down beneath censure,
until God has vindicated His own cause. If they had taken their
share of the burdens, my husband would have been relieved.
"I saw that God now requires us to
take special care of the health He has given us, for our work
is not yet done. Our testimony must still be borne, and will
have influence. We should preserve our strength to labor in the
cause of God when our labor is needed. We should be careful not
to take upon ourselves burdens that others can and should bear.
We should encourage a cheerful, hopeful, peaceful frame of mind;
for our health depends upon our so doing. The work that God requires
us to do will not prevent our caring for our health, that we
may recover from the effect of overtaxing labor. The more perfect
our health, the more perfect will be our labor. When we overtax
our strength, and become exhausted, we are liable to take cold,
and at such times there is danger of disease assuming a dangerous
form. We must not leave the care of ourselves with God, when
He has placed that responsibility upon us."
October 25, 1869, while at Adams Center,
New York, I was shown that some ministers among us fail to bear
all the responsibility that God would have them. This lack throws
extra labor upon those who are burden bearers, especially
upon my husband. Some ministers fail to move
out and venture something in the cause and work of God. Important
decisions are to be made; but as mortal man cannot see the end
from the beginning, some shrink from venturing and advancing
as the providence of God leads. Someone must advance; someone
must venture in the fear of God, trusting the result with Him.
Those ministers who shun this part of the labor are losing much.
They are failing to obtain that experience which God designed
they should have to make them strong, efficient men that can
be relied upon in any emergency.
Brother A, you shrink from running risks.
You are not willing to venture when you cannot see the way perfectly
clear. Yet someone must do this very work; someone must walk
by faith, or no advance moves will be made, and nothing will
be accomplished. A fear that you will make mistakes and mismoves,
and then be blamed, binds you. You excuse yourself from taking
responsibility because you have made some mistakes in the past.
But you should move according to your best judgment, trusting
the result with God. Someone must do this, and it is a trying
position for anyone. One should not bear all this responsibility
alone, but with much reflection and earnest prayer, it should
be equally shared.
During my husband's affliction, the Lord
tested and proved His people to reveal what was in their hearts;
and in so doing He showed to them what was undiscovered in themselves
that was not according to the Spirit of God. The trying circumstances
under which we were placed called out from our brethren that
which otherwise would never have been revealed. The Lord proved
to His people that the wisdom of man is foolishness, and that
unless they possess firm trust and reliance on God, their plans
and calculations will prove a failure. We are to learn from all
these things. If errors are committed, they should teach and
instruct, but not lead to the shunning of burdens and responsibilities.
Where much is at stake, and where matters of vital consequence
are to be considered, and important questions settled, God's
servants should take individual
responsibility. They cannot lay off the burden and yet do the
will of God. Some ministers are deficient in the qualifications
necessary to build up the churches, and they are not willing
to wear in the cause of God. They have not a disposition to give
themselves wholly to the work, with their interest undivided,
their zeal unabated, their patience and perseverance untiring.
With these qualifications in lively exercise, the churches would
be kept in order, and my husband's labors would not be so heavy.
All ministers do not constantly bear in mind that the labor of
all must bear the inspection of the judgment, and that every
man will be rewarded as his works have been.
Brother A, you have a responsibility to
bear in regard to the Health Institute. [LATER KNOWN AS THE BATTLE
CREEK SANITARIUM.] You should ponder, you should reflect. Frequently
the time that you occupy in reading is the very best time for
you to reflect and to study what must be done to set things in
order at the Institute and at the office. My husband takes on
these burdens because he sees that the work for these institutions
must be done by someone. As others will not lead out, he steps
into the gap and supplies the deficiency.
God has cautioned and warned my husband
in regard to the preservation of his strength. I was shown that
he was raised up by the Lord, and that he lives as a miracle
of mercy--not for the purpose of again gathering upon him the
burdens under which he once fell, but that the people of God
may be benefited by his experience in advancing the general interests
of the cause, and in connection with the work the Lord has given
me, and the burden He has laid upon me to bear.
Brother A, great care should be exercised
by you, especially at Battle Creek. In visiting, your conversation
should be upon the most important subjects. Be careful to back
up precept by example. This is an important post and will require
labor. While you are here, you should take time to ponder the
many things which need to be done and which require solemn reflection,
careful attention, and most earnest, faithful prayer. You should
feel as great an interest in the things relating to
the cause, to the work at the Health Institute
and at the office of publication, as my husband feels; you should
feel that the work is yours. You cannot do the work that God
has specially qualified my husband to do, neither can he do the
work that God has specially qualified you to do. Yet both of
you together, united in harmonious labor, you in your office,
and my husband in his, can accomplish much.
The work in which we have a common interest
is great; and efficient, willing, burden-bearing laborers are
few indeed. God will give you strength, my brother, if you will
move forward and wait upon Him. He will give my husband and myself
strength in our united labor, if we do all to His glory, according
to our ability and strength to labor. You should be located where
you would have a more favorable opportunity to exercise your
gift according to the ability that God has given you. You should
lean your whole weight upon God and give Him an opportunity to
teach, lead, and impress you. You feel a deep interest in the
work and cause of God, and you should look to Him for light and
guidance. He will give you light. But, as an ambassador of Christ,
you are required to be faithful, to correct wrong in meekness
and love, and your efforts will not prove unavailing.
Since my husband has recovered from his
feebleness, we have labored earnestly. We have not consulted
our own ease or pleasure. We have traveled and labored in camp
meetings, and overtaxed our strength, so that it has brought
upon us debility, without the advantages of rest. During the
year 1870 we attended twelve camp meetings. In a number of these
meetings, the burden of labor rested almost wholly upon us. We
traveled from Minnesota to Maine, and to Missouri and Kansas.
My husband and I united our efforts to
improve the Health Reformer [NOW CALLED GOOD HEALTH.] and make
it an interesting and profitable journal, one that would be desired,
not only by our people, but by all classes. This was a severe
tax upon him. He also made very important improvements in the
Review and the instructor. He accomplished the work which should
have been shared by three men. And while all this labor fell
upon him in the publishing branch of the work, the business departments
at the Health Institute and the Publishing Association required
the labor of two men to relieve them of financial embarrassment.
Unfaithful men who had been entrusted with
the work at the office and at the Institute, had, through selfishness
and a lack of consecration, placed matters in the worst possible
condition. There was unsettled business that had to be attended
to. My husband stepped into the gap and worked with all his energies.
He was wearing. We could see that he was in danger; but we could
not see how he could stop, unless the work in the office should
cease. Almost every day some new perplexity would arise, some
new difficulty caused by the unfaithfulness of the men who had
taken charge of the work. His brain was taxed to the utmost.
But the worst perplexities are now over, and the work is moving
on prosperously.
At the General Conference my husband pleaded
to be released from the burdens upon him; but, notwithstanding
his pleading, the burden of editing the Review and the Reformer
was placed upon him, with encouragement that men who would take
burdens and responsibilities would be encouraged to settle at
Battle Creek. But as yet no help has come to lift from him the
burdens of the financial work at the office.
My husband is fast wearing. We have attended
the four Western camp meetings, and our brethren are urging us
to attend the Eastern meetings. But we dare not take additional
burdens upon us. When we came from the labor of the Western camp
meetings in July, 1871, we found a large amount of business that
had been left to accumulate in my husband's absence. We have
seen no opportunity for rest yet. My husband must be released
from the burdens upon him. There are too many that use his brain
instead of using their own. In view of the light which God has
been pleased to give us, we plead for you, my brethren, to release
my husband. I am not willing to
venture the consequences of his going forward and laboring as
he has done. He served you faithfully and unselfishly for years,
and finally fell under the pressure of the burdens placed upon
him. Then his brethren, in whom he had confided, left him. They
let him drop into my hands, and forsook him. For nearly two years
I was his nurse, his attendant, his physician. I do not wish
to pass through the experience a second time. Brethren, will
you lift the burdens from us, and allow us to preserve our strength
as God would have us, that the cause at large may be benefited
by the efforts we may make in His strength? Or will you leave
us to become debilitated so that we will become useless to the
cause?
The foregoing portion of this appeal was
read at the New Hampshire camp meeting, August, 1871.
When we returned from Kansas in the autumn
of 1870, Brother B was at home sick with fever. Sister Van Horn,
at this very time, was absent from the office in consequence
of fever brought upon her by the sudden death of her mother.
Brother Smith was also from the office, in Rochester, New York,
recovering from a fever. There was a great amount of unfinished
work at the office, yet Brother B left his post of duty to gratify
his own pleasure. This fact in his experience is a sample of
the man. Sacred duties rest lightly upon him.
It was a great breach of the trust reposed
in him to pursue the course he did. In what marked contrast with
this is the life of Christ, our Pattern! He was the Son of Jehovah,
and the Author of our salvation. He labored and suffered for
us. He denied Himself, and His whole life was one continued scene
of toil and privation. Had He chosen so to do, He could have
passed His days in a world of His own creating, in ease and plenty,
and claimed for Himself all the pleasures and enjoyment the world
could give Him. But He did not consider His own convenience.
He lived not to please Himself, but to do good and lavish His
blessings upon others.
Brother B was sick with fever. His case
was critical. In justice to the cause of God, I feel compelled
to state that his sickness was
not the result of unwearied devotion to the interests of the
office. Imprudent exposure on a trip to Chicago, for his own
pleasure, was the cause of his long, tedious, suffering sickness.
God did not sustain him in leaving the work, when so many who
had filled important positions in the office were absent. At
the very time when he should not have excused himself for an
hour, he left his post of duty, and God did not sustain him.
There was no period of rest for us, however
much we needed it. The Review, the Reformer, and the Instructor
must be edited. Many letters had been laid aside until we should
return to examine them. Things were in a sad state at the office.
Everything needed to be set in order. My husband commenced his
labor, and I helped him what I could; but that was but little.
He labored unceasingly to straighten out perplexing business
matters and to improve the condition of our periodicals. He could
not depend upon help from any of his ministering brethren. His
head, heart, and hands were full. He was not encouraged by Brethren
A and C, when they knew he was standing alone under the burdens
at Battle Creek. They did not stay up his hands. They wrote in
a most discouraging manner of their poor health, and that they
were in such an exhausted condition that they could not be depended
on to accomplish any labor. My husband saw that nothing could
be hoped for in that direction. Notwithstanding his double labor
through the summer, he could not rest. And, irrespective of his
weakness, he reined himself up to do the work which others had
neglected.
The Reformer was about dead. Brother B
had urged the extreme positions of Dr. Trall. This had influenced
the doctor to come out in the Reformer stronger than he otherwise
would have done, in discarding milk, sugar, and salt. The position
to entirely discontinue the use of these things may be right
in its order; but the time had not come to take a general stand
upon these points. And those who do take their position, and
advocate the entire disuse of milk, butter, and sugar, should
have their own tables free from these things.
Brother B, even while taking his stand in the Reformer with Dr.
Trall in regard to the injurious effects of salt, milk, and sugar,
did not practice the things he taught. Upon his own table these
things were used daily.
Many of our people had lost their interest
in the Reformer, and letters were daily received with this discouraging
request: "Please discontinue my Reformer." Letters
were received from the West, where the country is new and fruit
scarce, inquiring: "How do the friends of health reform
live at Battle Creek? Do they dispense with salt entirely? If
so, we cannot at present adopt the health reform. We can get
but little fruit, and we have left off the use of meat, tea,
coffee, and tobacco; but we must have something to sustain life."
We had spent some time in the West, and
knew the scarcity of fruit, and we sympathized with our brethren
who were conscientiously seeking to be in harmony with the body
of Sabbathkeeping Adventists. They were becoming discouraged,
and some were backsliding upon the health reform, fearing that
at Battle Creek they were radical and fanatical. We could not
raise an interest anywhere in the West to obtain subscribers
for the Health Reformer. We saw that the writers in the Reformer
were going away from the people and leaving them behind. If we
take positions that conscientious Christians, who are indeed
reformers, cannot adopt, how can we expect to benefit that class
whom we can reach only from a health standpoint?
We must go no faster than we can take those
with us whose consciences and intellects are convinced of the
truths we advocate. We must meet the people where they are. Some
of us have been many years in arriving at our present position
in health reform. It is slow work to obtain a reform in diet.
We have powerful appetites to meet; for the world is given to
gluttony. If we should allow the people as much time as we have
required to come up to the present advanced state in reform,
we would be very patient with them, and allow them to
advance step by step, as we have done, until
their feet are firmly established upon the health reform platform.
But we should be very cautious not to advance too fast, lest
we be obliged to retrace our steps. In reforms we would better
come one step short of the mark than to go one step beyond it.
And if there is error at all, let it be on the side next to the
people.
Above all things, we should not with our
pens advocate positions that we do not put to a practical test
in our own families, upon our own tables. This is dissimulation,
a species of hypocrisy. In Michigan we can get along better without
salt, sugar, and milk than can many who are situated in the Far
West or in the far East, where there is a scarcity of fruit.
But there are very few families in Battle Creek who do not use
these articles upon their tables. We know that a free use of
these things is positively injurious to health, and, in many
cases, we think that if they were not used at all, a much better
state of health would be enjoyed. But at present our burden is
not upon these things. The people are so far behind that we see
it is all they can bear to have us draw the line upon their injurious
indulgences and stimulating narcotics. We bear positive testimony
against tobacco, spirituous liquors, snuff, tea, coffee, flesh
meats, butter, spices, rich cakes, mince pies, a large amount
of salt, and all exciting substances used as articles of food.
If we come to persons who have not been enlightened in regard to health reform, and present our strongest positions at first, there is danger of their becoming discouraged as they see how much they have to give up, so that they will make no effort to reform. We must lead the people along patiently and gradually, remembering the hole of the pit whence we were digged.
We must go no faster than we can take those
with us whose consciences and intellects are convinced of the
truths we advocate. We must meet the people where they are. Some
of us have been many years in arriving at our present position
in health reform. It is slow work to obtain a reform in diet.
We have powerful appetites to meet; for the world is given to
gluttony. If we should allow the people as much time as we have
required to come up to the present advanced state in reform,
we would be very patient with them, and allow them to
advance step by step, as we have done, until
their feet are firmly established upon the health reform platform.
But we should be very cautious not to advance too fast, lest
we be obliged to retrace our steps. In reforms we would better
come one step short of the mark than to go one step beyond it.
And if there is error at all, let it be on the side next to the
people.
Above all things, we should not with our
pens advocate positions that we do not put to a practical test
in our own families, upon our own tables. This is dissimulation,
a species of hypocrisy. In Michigan we can get along better without
salt, sugar, and milk than can many who are situated in the Far
West or in the far East, where there is a scarcity of fruit.
But there are very few families in Battle Creek who do not use
these articles upon their tables. We know that a free use of
these things is positively injurious to health, and, in many
cases, we think that if they were not used at all, a much better
state of health would be enjoyed. But at present our burden is
not upon these things. The people are so far behind that we see
it is all they can bear to have us draw the line upon their injurious
indulgences and stimulating narcotics. We bear positive testimony
against tobacco, spirituous liquors, snuff, tea, coffee, flesh
meats, butter, spices, rich cakes, mince pies, a large amount
of salt, and all exciting substances used as articles of food.
If we come to persons who have not been enlightened in regard to health reform, and present our strongest positions at first, there is danger of their becoming discouraged as they see how much they have to give up, so that they will make no effort to reform. We must lead the people along patiently and gradually, remembering the hole of the pit whence we were digged.
Dear Brethren and Sisters: I feel compelled
at this time to fulfill a long-neglected duty.
For years previous to my husband's dangerous
and protracted illness he performed more labor than two men should
have done in the same time. He saw no time when he could be relieved
from the pressure of care and obtain mental and physical rest.
Through the testimonies he was warned of his danger. I was shown
that he was doing too much brain labor. I will here copy a written
testimony, given as far back as August 26, 1855:
"While at Paris, Maine, I was shown
that my husband's health was in a critical condition, that his
anxiety of mind had been too much for his strength. When the
present truth was first published, he put forth great exertion
and labored with but little encouragement or help from his brethren.
From the first he has taken burdens upon him which were too taxing
for his physical strength.
"These burdens, if equally shared,
need not have been so wearing. While my husband took much responsibility,
some of his brethren in the ministry were not willing to take
any. And those who shunned burdens and responsibilities did not
realize his burdens, and were not as interested in the advancement
of the work and cause of God as they should have been.
My husband felt this lack and laid his shoulder
under burdens that were too heavy and which nearly crushed him.
As the result of these extra efforts more souls will be saved,
but it is these efforts that have told upon his constitution
and deprived him of strength. I have been shown that he should
in a great measure lay aside his anxiety; God is willing that
he should be released from such wearing labor, and that he should
spend more time in the study of the Scriptures and in the society
of his children, seeking to cultivate their minds
"I saw that it is not our duty to
perplex ourselves with individual trials. Such mental labor endured
for others' wrongs should be avoided. My husband can continue
to labor with all his energies, as he has done, and as the result
go down into the grave, and his labors be lost to the cause of
God; or he can now be released, while he has some strength left,
and last longer, and his labors be more efficient."
I will now copy from a testimony given
in 1859: "In my last vision I was shown that the Lord would
have my husband give himself more to the study of the Scriptures,
that he may be qualified to labor more effectually in word and
doctrine, both in speaking and in writing. I saw that in the
past we had exhausted our energies through much anxiety and care
to bring the church into a right position. Such wearing labor
in various places, bearing the burdens of the church, is not
required; for the church should bear their own burdens. Our work
is to instruct them in God's word, to urge upon them the necessity
of experimental religion, and to define as clearly as possible
the correct position in regard to the truth. God would have us
raise our voices in the great congregation upon points of present
truth which are of vital importance. These should be presented
with clearness and with decision, and should also be written
out, that the silent messengers may bring them before the people
everywhere. A more thorough consecration to the essential work
is required on our part; we must be earnest to live in the light
of God's countenance. If our minds were less occupied with the
trials of the church they would be more
free to be exercised upon Bible subjects; and a closer application
to Bible truth would accustom the mind to run in that channel,
and we would thus be better qualified for the important work
devolving upon us.
"I was shown that God did not lay
upon us such heavy burdens as we have borne in the past. It is
our duty to talk to the church and show them the necessity of
working for themselves. They have been carried too much. The
reason why we should not be required to take upon ourselves heavy
burdens and engage in perplexing labor is that the Lord has work
of another character for us to perform. He would not have us
exhaust our physical and mental energies, but hold them in reserve,
that upon special occasions, whenever help is actually needed,
our voices may be heard.
"I saw that important moves would
be made, in which our influence would be demanded to lead out;
that influences would arise, and errors would occasionally be
brought into the church, and that then our influence would be
required. But if exhausted by previous labors, we would not possess
that calm judgment, discretion, and self-control necessary for
the important occasion in which God would have us act a prominent
part.
"Satan has crippled our efforts by
so affecting the church as to call forth from us almost double
labor to cut our way through the darkness and unbelief. These
efforts to set things in order in the churches have exhausted
our strength, and lassitude and debility have followed. I saw
that we have a work to do, but the adversary of souls will resist
every effort that we attempt to make. The people may be in a
state of backsliding, so that God cannot bless them, and this
will be disheartening; but we should not be discouraged. We should
do our duty in presenting the light, and leave the responsibility
with the people."
I will here copy from another testimony,
written June 6, 1863: "I was shown that our testimony is
still needed in the church, that we should labor to save ourselves
trials and cares, and that we should
preserve a devotional frame of mind. It is the duty of those
in the office to tax their brains more, and of my husband to
tax his less. Much time is spent by him upon various matters
which confuse and weary his mind, and unfit him for study or
for writing, and thus prevent his light from shining in the Review
as it should.
"My husband's mind should not be crowded
and overtaxed. It must have rest, and he must be left free to
write and attend to matters which others cannot do. Those engaged
in the office could lift from him a great weight of care if they
would dedicate themselves to God and feel a deep interest in
the work. No selfish feelings should exist among those who labor
in the office. It is the work of God in which they are engaged,
and they are accountable to Him for their motives and the manner
in which this branch of His work is performed. They are required
to discipline their minds. Many feel that no blame should be
attached to forgetfulness. This is a great mistake. Forgetfulness
is sin. It leads to many blunders and to much disorder and many
wrongs. Things that should be done ought not to be forgotten.
The mind must be tasked; it must be disciplined until it will
remember.
"My husband has had much care, and
has done many things which others ought to have done, but which
he feared to have them do, lest, in their heedlessness, they
should make mistakes not easily remedied, and thus involve losses.
This has been a great perplexity to his mind. Those who labor
in the office should learn. They should study, and practice,
and exercise their own brains; for they have this branch of business
alone, while my husband has the responsibility of many departments
of the work. If a workman makes a failure, he should feel that
it rests upon him to repair damages from his own purse, and should
not allow the office to suffer loss through his carelessness.
He should not cease to bear responsibilities, but should try
again, avoiding former mistakes. In this way he will learn to
take that care which the word of God ever requires, and then
he will do no more than his duty.
"My husband should take time to do
those things which his judgment tells him would preserve his
health. He has thought that he must throw off the burdens and
responsibilities which were upon him, and leave the office, or
his mind would become a wreck. I was shown that when the Lord
released him from his position, he would give him just as clear
evidence of his release as he gave him when He laid the burden
of the work upon him. But he has borne too many burdens, and
those laboring with him at the office, and also his ministering
brethren, have been too willing that he should bear them. They
have, as a general thing, stood back from bearing burdens, and
have sympathized with those who were murmuring against him, and
left him to stand alone while he was bowed down beneath censure,
until God has vindicated His own cause. If they had taken their
share of the burdens, my husband would have been relieved.
"I saw that God now requires us to
take special care of the health He has given us, for our work
is not yet done. Our testimony must still be borne, and will
have influence. We should preserve our strength to labor in the
cause of God when our labor is needed. We should be careful not
to take upon ourselves burdens that others can and should bear.
We should encourage a cheerful, hopeful, peaceful frame of mind;
for our health depends upon our so doing. The work that God requires
us to do will not prevent our caring for our health, that we
may recover from the effect of overtaxing labor. The more perfect
our health, the more perfect will be our labor. When we overtax
our strength, and become exhausted, we are liable to take cold,
and at such times there is danger of disease assuming a dangerous
form. We must not leave the care of ourselves with God, when
He has placed that responsibility upon us."
October 25, 1869, while at Adams Center,
New York, I was shown that some ministers among us fail to bear
all the responsibility that God would have them. This lack throws
extra labor upon those who are burden bearers, especially
upon my husband. Some ministers fail to move
out and venture something in the cause and work of God. Important
decisions are to be made; but as mortal man cannot see the end
from the beginning, some shrink from venturing and advancing
as the providence of God leads. Someone must advance; someone
must venture in the fear of God, trusting the result with Him.
Those ministers who shun this part of the labor are losing much.
They are failing to obtain that experience which God designed
they should have to make them strong, efficient men that can
be relied upon in any emergency.
Brother A, you shrink from running risks.
You are not willing to venture when you cannot see the way perfectly
clear. Yet someone must do this very work; someone must walk
by faith, or no advance moves will be made, and nothing will
be accomplished. A fear that you will make mistakes and mismoves,
and then be blamed, binds you. You excuse yourself from taking
responsibility because you have made some mistakes in the past.
But you should move according to your best judgment, trusting
the result with God. Someone must do this, and it is a trying
position for anyone. One should not bear all this responsibility
alone, but with much reflection and earnest prayer, it should
be equally shared.
During my husband's affliction, the Lord
tested and proved His people to reveal what was in their hearts;
and in so doing He showed to them what was undiscovered in themselves
that was not according to the Spirit of God. The trying circumstances
under which we were placed called out from our brethren that
which otherwise would never have been revealed. The Lord proved
to His people that the wisdom of man is foolishness, and that
unless they possess firm trust and reliance on God, their plans
and calculations will prove a failure. We are to learn from all
these things. If errors are committed, they should teach and
instruct, but not lead to the shunning of burdens and responsibilities.
Where much is at stake, and where matters of vital consequence
are to be considered, and important questions settled, God's
servants should take individual
responsibility. They cannot lay off the burden and yet do the
will of God. Some ministers are deficient in the qualifications
necessary to build up the churches, and they are not willing
to wear in the cause of God. They have not a disposition to give
themselves wholly to the work, with their interest undivided,
their zeal unabated, their patience and perseverance untiring.
With these qualifications in lively exercise, the churches would
be kept in order, and my husband's labors would not be so heavy.
All ministers do not constantly bear in mind that the labor of
all must bear the inspection of the judgment, and that every
man will be rewarded as his works have been.
Brother A, you have a responsibility to
bear in regard to the Health Institute. [LATER KNOWN AS THE BATTLE
CREEK SANITARIUM.] You should ponder, you should reflect. Frequently
the time that you occupy in reading is the very best time for
you to reflect and to study what must be done to set things in
order at the Institute and at the office. My husband takes on
these burdens because he sees that the work for these institutions
must be done by someone. As others will not lead out, he steps
into the gap and supplies the deficiency.
God has cautioned and warned my husband
in regard to the preservation of his strength. I was shown that
he was raised up by the Lord, and that he lives as a miracle
of mercy--not for the purpose of again gathering upon him the
burdens under which he once fell, but that the people of God
may be benefited by his experience in advancing the general interests
of the cause, and in connection with the work the Lord has given
me, and the burden He has laid upon me to bear.
Brother A, great care should be exercised
by you, especially at Battle Creek. In visiting, your conversation
should be upon the most important subjects. Be careful to back
up precept by example. This is an important post and will require
labor. While you are here, you should take time to ponder the
many things which need to be done and which require solemn reflection,
careful attention, and most earnest, faithful prayer. You should
feel as great an interest in the things relating to
the cause, to the work at the Health Institute
and at the office of publication, as my husband feels; you should
feel that the work is yours. You cannot do the work that God
has specially qualified my husband to do, neither can he do the
work that God has specially qualified you to do. Yet both of
you together, united in harmonious labor, you in your office,
and my husband in his, can accomplish much.
The work in which we have a common interest
is great; and efficient, willing, burden-bearing laborers are
few indeed. God will give you strength, my brother, if you will
move forward and wait upon Him. He will give my husband and myself
strength in our united labor, if we do all to His glory, according
to our ability and strength to labor. You should be located where
you would have a more favorable opportunity to exercise your
gift according to the ability that God has given you. You should
lean your whole weight upon God and give Him an opportunity to
teach, lead, and impress you. You feel a deep interest in the
work and cause of God, and you should look to Him for light and
guidance. He will give you light. But, as an ambassador of Christ,
you are required to be faithful, to correct wrong in meekness
and love, and your efforts will not prove unavailing.
Since my husband has recovered from his
feebleness, we have labored earnestly. We have not consulted
our own ease or pleasure. We have traveled and labored in camp
meetings, and overtaxed our strength, so that it has brought
upon us debility, without the advantages of rest. During the
year 1870 we attended twelve camp meetings. In a number of these
meetings, the burden of labor rested almost wholly upon us. We
traveled from Minnesota to Maine, and to Missouri and Kansas.
My husband and I united our efforts to
improve the Health Reformer [NOW CALLED GOOD HEALTH.] and make
it an interesting and profitable journal, one that would be desired,
not only by our people, but by all classes. This was a severe
tax upon him. He also made very important improvements in the
Review and the instructor. He accomplished the work which should
have been shared by three men. And while all this labor fell
upon him in the publishing branch of the work, the business departments
at the Health Institute and the Publishing Association required
the labor of two men to relieve them of financial embarrassment.
Unfaithful men who had been entrusted with
the work at the office and at the Institute, had, through selfishness
and a lack of consecration, placed matters in the worst possible
condition. There was unsettled business that had to be attended
to. My husband stepped into the gap and worked with all his energies.
He was wearing. We could see that he was in danger; but we could
not see how he could stop, unless the work in the office should
cease. Almost every day some new perplexity would arise, some
new difficulty caused by the unfaithfulness of the men who had
taken charge of the work. His brain was taxed to the utmost.
But the worst perplexities are now over, and the work is moving
on prosperously.
At the General Conference my husband pleaded
to be released from the burdens upon him; but, notwithstanding
his pleading, the burden of editing the Review and the Reformer
was placed upon him, with encouragement that men who would take
burdens and responsibilities would be encouraged to settle at
Battle Creek. But as yet no help has come to lift from him the
burdens of the financial work at the office.
My husband is fast wearing. We have attended
the four Western camp meetings, and our brethren are urging us
to attend the Eastern meetings. But we dare not take additional
burdens upon us. When we came from the labor of the Western camp
meetings in July, 1871, we found a large amount of business that
had been left to accumulate in my husband's absence. We have
seen no opportunity for rest yet. My husband must be released
from the burdens upon him. There are too many that use his brain
instead of using their own. In view of the light which God has
been pleased to give us, we plead for you, my brethren, to release
my husband. I am not willing to
venture the consequences of his going forward and laboring as
he has done. He served you faithfully and unselfishly for years,
and finally fell under the pressure of the burdens placed upon
him. Then his brethren, in whom he had confided, left him. They
let him drop into my hands, and forsook him. For nearly two years
I was his nurse, his attendant, his physician. I do not wish
to pass through the experience a second time. Brethren, will
you lift the burdens from us, and allow us to preserve our strength
as God would have us, that the cause at large may be benefited
by the efforts we may make in His strength? Or will you leave
us to become debilitated so that we will become useless to the
cause?
The foregoing portion of this appeal was
read at the New Hampshire camp meeting, August, 1871.
When we returned from Kansas in the autumn
of 1870, Brother B was at home sick with fever. Sister Van Horn,
at this very time, was absent from the office in consequence
of fever brought upon her by the sudden death of her mother.
Brother Smith was also from the office, in Rochester, New York,
recovering from a fever. There was a great amount of unfinished
work at the office, yet Brother B left his post of duty to gratify
his own pleasure. This fact in his experience is a sample of
the man. Sacred duties rest lightly upon him.
It was a great breach of the trust reposed
in him to pursue the course he did. In what marked contrast with
this is the life of Christ, our Pattern! He was the Son of Jehovah,
and the Author of our salvation. He labored and suffered for
us. He denied Himself, and His whole life was one continued scene
of toil and privation. Had He chosen so to do, He could have
passed His days in a world of His own creating, in ease and plenty,
and claimed for Himself all the pleasures and enjoyment the world
could give Him. But He did not consider His own convenience.
He lived not to please Himself, but to do good and lavish His
blessings upon others.
Brother B was sick with fever. His case
was critical. In justice to the cause of God, I feel compelled
to state that his sickness was
not the result of unwearied devotion to the interests of the
office. Imprudent exposure on a trip to Chicago, for his own
pleasure, was the cause of his long, tedious, suffering sickness.
God did not sustain him in leaving the work, when so many who
had filled important positions in the office were absent. At
the very time when he should not have excused himself for an
hour, he left his post of duty, and God did not sustain him.
There was no period of rest for us, however
much we needed it. The Review, the Reformer, and the Instructor
must be edited. Many letters had been laid aside until we should
return to examine them. Things were in a sad state at the office.
Everything needed to be set in order. My husband commenced his
labor, and I helped him what I could; but that was but little.
He labored unceasingly to straighten out perplexing business
matters and to improve the condition of our periodicals. He could
not depend upon help from any of his ministering brethren. His
head, heart, and hands were full. He was not encouraged by Brethren
A and C, when they knew he was standing alone under the burdens
at Battle Creek. They did not stay up his hands. They wrote in
a most discouraging manner of their poor health, and that they
were in such an exhausted condition that they could not be depended
on to accomplish any labor. My husband saw that nothing could
be hoped for in that direction. Notwithstanding his double labor
through the summer, he could not rest. And, irrespective of his
weakness, he reined himself up to do the work which others had
neglected.
The Reformer was about dead. Brother B
had urged the extreme positions of Dr. Trall. This had influenced
the doctor to come out in the Reformer stronger than he otherwise
would have done, in discarding milk, sugar, and salt. The position
to entirely discontinue the use of these things may be right
in its order; but the time had not come to take a general stand
upon these points. And those who do take their position, and
advocate the entire disuse of milk, butter, and sugar, should
have their own tables free from these things.
Brother B, even while taking his stand in the Reformer with Dr.
Trall in regard to the injurious effects of salt, milk, and sugar,
did not practice the things he taught. Upon his own table these
things were used daily.
Many of our people had lost their interest
in the Reformer, and letters were daily received with this discouraging
request: "Please discontinue my Reformer." Letters
were received from the West, where the country is new and fruit
scarce, inquiring: "How do the friends of health reform
live at Battle Creek? Do they dispense with salt entirely? If
so, we cannot at present adopt the health reform. We can get
but little fruit, and we have left off the use of meat, tea,
coffee, and tobacco; but we must have something to sustain life."
We had spent some time in the West, and
knew the scarcity of fruit, and we sympathized with our brethren
who were conscientiously seeking to be in harmony with the body
of Sabbathkeeping Adventists. They were becoming discouraged,
and some were backsliding upon the health reform, fearing that
at Battle Creek they were radical and fanatical. We could not
raise an interest anywhere in the West to obtain subscribers
for the Health Reformer. We saw that the writers in the Reformer
were going away from the people and leaving them behind. If we
take positions that conscientious Christians, who are indeed
reformers, cannot adopt, how can we expect to benefit that class
whom we can reach only from a health standpoint?
We must go no faster than we can take those
with us whose consciences and intellects are convinced of the
truths we advocate. We must meet the people where they are. Some
of us have been many years in arriving at our present position
in health reform. It is slow work to obtain a reform in diet.
We have powerful appetites to meet; for the world is given to
gluttony. If we should allow the people as much time as we have
required to come up to the present advanced state in reform,
we would be very patient with them, and allow them to
advance step by step, as we have done, until
their feet are firmly established upon the health reform platform.
But we should be very cautious not to advance too fast, lest
we be obliged to retrace our steps. In reforms we would better
come one step short of the mark than to go one step beyond it.
And if there is error at all, let it be on the side next to the
people.
Above all things, we should not with our
pens advocate positions that we do not put to a practical test
in our own families, upon our own tables. This is dissimulation,
a species of hypocrisy. In Michigan we can get along better without
salt, sugar, and milk than can many who are situated in the Far
West or in the far East, where there is a scarcity of fruit.
But there are very few families in Battle Creek who do not use
these articles upon their tables. We know that a free use of
these things is positively injurious to health, and, in many
cases, we think that if they were not used at all, a much better
state of health would be enjoyed. But at present our burden is
not upon these things. The people are so far behind that we see
it is all they can bear to have us draw the line upon their injurious
indulgences and stimulating narcotics. We bear positive testimony
against tobacco, spirituous liquors, snuff, tea, coffee, flesh
meats, butter, spices, rich cakes, mince pies, a large amount
of salt, and all exciting substances used as articles of food.
If we come to persons who have not been enlightened in regard to health reform, and present our strongest positions at first, there is danger of their becoming discouraged as they see how much they have to give up, so that they will make no effort to reform. We must lead the people along patiently and gradually, remembering the hole of the pit whence we were digged.