I have been shown that Brother B has serious
defects in his character, which disqualify him for being closely
connected with the work of God where important responsibilities
are to be borne. He has sufficient mental ability, but the heart,
the affections, have not been sanctified to God; therefore he
cannot be relied upon as qualified for so important a work as
the publication of the truth in the office at Battle Creek. A
mistake or a neglect of duty in this work affects the cause of
God at large. Brother B has not seen his failings, therefore
he does not reform.
It is by small things that our characters
are formed to habits of integrity. You, my brother, have been
disposed to undervalue the importance of the little incidents
of everyday life. This is a great mistake. Nothing with which
we have to do is really small. Every action is of some account,
either on the side of right or on the side of wrong. It is only
by exercising principle in small transactions of ordinary life
that we are tested and our characters formed. In the varied circumstances
of life we are tested and proved, and thereby we acquire a power
to stand the greater and more important tests that we are called
to endure, and are qualified to fill still more important positions.
The mind must be trained through daily tests to habits of fidelity,
to a sense of the claims of right and duty above inclination
and pleasure. Minds thus trained do not waver between right and
wrong, as the reed trembles in the wind; but as soon as matters
come before them, they discern at once that principle is involved,
and they instinctively choose the right without long debating
the matter. They are loyal because they have trained themselves
in habits of faithfulness and truth. By being faithful in that
which is least, they acquire strength, and it becomes easy for
them to be faithful in greater matters.
Brother B's education has not been such
as to strengthen those high moral
qualities that would enable him to stand alone in the strength
of God in defense of truth, amid the severest opposition, firm
as a rock to principle, true to moral character, unmoved by human
praise or censure or rewards, preferring death rather than a
violated conscience. Such integrity is needed in the office of
publication, where solemn, sacred truths are going forth, upon
which the world is to be tested.
The work of God calls for men of high moral
powers to engage in its promulgation. Men are wanted whose hearts
are nerved with holy fervor, men of strong purpose who are not
easily moved, who can lay down every selfish interest and give
all for the cross and the crown. The cause of present truth is
suffering for men who are loyal to a sense of right and duty,
whose moral integrity is firm, and whose energy is equal to the
opening providence of God. Such qualifications as these are of
more value than untold wealth invested in the work and cause
of God. Energy, moral integrity, and strong purpose for the right
are qualities that cannot be supplied with any amount of gold.
Men possessing these qualifications will have influence everywhere.
Their lives will be more powerful than lofty eloquence. God calls
for men of heart, men of mind, men of moral integrity, whom He
can make the depositaries of His truth, and who will correctly
represent its sacred principles in their daily life.
In some respects Brother B has ability
that but few have. If his heart were sanctified to the work he
could fill an important position in the office with acceptance
to God. He needs to be converted and to humble himself as a little
child, and seek pure, heart religion, in order for his influence
in the office, or in the cause of God anywhere, to be what it
ought to be. As his influence has been, it has injured all connected
with the office, but more especially the young. His position
as foreman gave him influence. He did not conduct himself conscientiously
in the fear of God. He favored particular ones more than others.
He neglected those who, for their faithfulness and ability, deserved
special encouragement, and he brought distress
and perplexity upon those in who he should have had a special
interest. Those who link their affections and interest to one
or two, and favor them to the disadvantage of others, should
not retain their position in the office for a day. This unsanctified
partiality for special ones who may please the fancy, to the
neglect of others who are conscientious and God-fearing, and
in His sight of more value, is offensive to God. That which God
values we should value. The ornament of a meek and quiet spirit
He regards of higher value than external beauty, outward adornment,
riches, or worldly honor.
The true followers of Christ will not choose
intimate friendship with those whose characters have serious
defects, and whose example as a whole it would not be safe to
follow, while it is their privilege to associate with persons
who observe a conscientious regard for duty in business, and
in religion. Those who lack principle and devotion generally
exert a more positive influence to mold the minds of their intimate
friends than is exerted by those who seem well balanced and able
to control and influence the defective in character, those lacking
spirituality and devotion.
Brother B's influence, if unsanctified,
endangers the souls of those who follow his example. His ready
tact and ingenuity are admired, and lead those connected with
him to give him credit for qualifications that he does not possess.
At the office he was reckless of his time. If this had affected
himself only, it would have been a small matter; but his position
as foreman gave him influence. His example before those in the
office, especially the apprentices, was not circumspect and conscientious.
If, with his ingenious talent, Brother B possessed a high sense
of moral obligation, his services would be invaluable to the
office. If his principles had been such that nothing could have
moved him from the straight line of duty, that no inducement
which could have been presented would have purchased his consent
to a wrong action, his influence would have molded others; but
his desires for pleasure allured him from
his post of duty. If he had stood in the strength of God, unmoved
by censure or flattery, steady to principle, faithful to his
convictions of truth and justice, he would have been a superior
man and would have won a commanding influence everywhere. Brother
B lacks frugality and economy. He lacks the tact which would
enable him to adapt himself to the opening providence of God
and make him a minuteman. He loves human praise. He is swayed
by circumstances, and is subject to temptation, and his integrity
cannot be relied upon.
Brother B's religious experience was not
sound. He moved from impulse, not from principle. His heart was
not right with God, and he did not have the fear of God and His
glory before him. He acted very much like a man engaged in common
business; he had but very little sense of the sacredness of the
work in which he was engaged. He had not practiced self-denial
and economy, therefore he had no experience in this. At times
he labored earnestly and manifested a good interest in the work.
Then again he would be careless of his time and spend precious
moments in unimportant conversation, hindering others from doing
their duty and setting them an example of recklessness and unfaithfulness.
The work of God is sacred and calls for men of lofty integrity.
Men are wanted whose sense of justice, even in the smallest matters,
will not allow them to make an entry of their time that is not
minute and correct--men who will realize that they are handling
means that belongs to God, and who would not unjustly appropriate
one cent to their own use; men who will be just as faithful and
exact, careful and diligent, in their labor, in the absence of
their employer as in his presence, proving by their faithfulness
that they are not merely men pleasers, eye-servants, but are
conscientious, faithful, true workmen, doing right, not for human
praise, but because they love and choose the right from a high
sense of their obligation to God.
Parents are not thorough in the education
of their children. They do not see the necessity of molding their
minds by discipline. They give them a superficial education,
manifesting greater care
for the ornamental than for that solid education which would
so develop and direct the faculties as to bring out the energies
of the soul, and cause the powers of mind to expand and strengthen
by exercise. The faculties of the mind need cultivation, that
they may be exercised to the glory of God. Careful attention
should be given to the culture of the intellect, that the various
organs of the mind may have equal strength by being brought into
exercise, each in its distinctive office. If parents allow their
children to follow the bent of their own minds, their own inclination
and pleasure, to the neglect of duty, their characters will be
formed after this pattern, and they will not be competent for
any responsible position in life. The desires and inclinations
of the young should be restrained, their weak points of character
strengthened, and their overstrong tendencies repressed.
If one faculty is suffered to remain dormant,
or is turned out of its proper course, the purpose of God is
not carried out. All the faculties should be well developed.
Care should be given to each, for each has a bearing upon the
others, and all must be exercised in order that the mind be properly
balanced. If one or two organs are cultivated and kept in continual
use because it is the choice of your children to put the strength
of the mind in one direction to the neglect of other mental powers,
they will come to maturity with unbalanced minds and inharmonious
characters. They will be apt and strong in one direction, but
greatly deficient in other directions just as important. They
will not be competent men and women. Their deficiencies will
be marked, and will mar the entire character.
Brother B has cultivated an almost ungovernable
propensity for sight-seeing and trips of pleasure. Time and means
are wasted to gratify his desire for pleasure excursions. His
selfish love of pleasure leads to the neglect of sacred duties.
Brother B loves to preach, but he has never taken up this work
feeling the woe upon him if he preach not the gospel. He has
frequently left work in the office which demanded his care,
to comply with calls from some of his brethren
in other churches. If he had felt the solemnity of the work of
God for this time, and gone forth making God his trust, practicing
self-denial, and lifting the cross of Christ, he would have accomplished
good. But he frequently had so little realization of the holiness
of the work, that he would improve the opportunity of visiting
other churches in making the occasion a scene of self-gratification,
in short, a pleasure trip. What a contrast between his course
and that pursued by the apostles, who went forth burdened with
the word of life, and in the demonstration of the Spirit preached
Christ crucified! They pointed out the living way through self-denial
and the cross. They had fellowship with their Saviour in His
sufferings, and their greatest desire was to know Christ Jesus,
and Him crucified. They considered not their own convenience,
nor counted their lives dear unto themselves. They lived not
to enjoy, but to do good, and to save souls for whom Christ died.
Brother B can present arguments upon doctrinal
points, but the practical lessons of sanctification, self-denial,
and the cross, he has not experienced in himself. He can speak
to the ear, but not having felt the sanctifying influence of
these truths upon his heart, nor practiced them in his life,
he fails to urge the truth home upon the conscience with a deep
sense of its importance and solemnity in view of the judgment,
when every case must be decided. Brother B has not trained his
mind, and his deportment out of meeting has not been exemplary.
The burden of the work has not seemed to rest upon him, but he
has been trifling and boyish, and by his example has lowered
the standard of religion. Sacred and common things have been
placed on a level.
Brother B has not been willing to endure
the cross; he has not been willing to follow Christ from the
manger to the judgment hall and Calvary. He has brought upon
himself sore affliction by seeking his own pleasure. He has yet
to learn that his own strength is weakness and his wisdom is
folly. If he had felt that he was engaged in the work of God,
and that he was indebted to One
who had given him time and talents, and who required that they
be improved to His glory,--had he stood faithfully at his post,--he
would not have suffered that long, tedious sickness. His exposure
upon that pleasure trip caused him months of suffering and would
have caused his death had it not been for the earnest, effectual
prayer of faith put up in his behalf by those who felt that he
was not prepared to die. Had he died at that time his case would
have been far worse than that of the unenlightened sinner. But
God mercifully heard the prayers of His people and gave him a
new lease of life, that he might have opportunity to repent of
his unfaithfulness and to redeem the time. His example had influenced
many in Battle Creek in the wrong direction.
Brother B came up from his sickness, but
how little did he or his family feel humbled under the hand of
God. The work of the Spirit of God, and wisdom from Him, are
not manifested that we may be happy and satisfied with ourselves,
but that our souls may be renewed in knowledge and true holiness.
How much better would it have been for this brother if his affliction
had prompted to faithful searching of heart, to discover the
imperfections in his character, that he might put them away,
and with humble spirit come forth from the furnace as gold purified,
reflecting the image of Christ.
The sickness that he had brought upon himself,
the church helped him bear. His watchers were provided, and his
expenses were in a great measure borne by the church; yet neither
he nor his family appreciated this generosity and tenderness
on the part of the church. They felt that they deserved all that
was done for them. As Brother B came up from his sickness, he
felt wrong toward my husband because he disapproved his course,
which was so censurable. He united with others to injure my husband's
influence, and since he has left the office he has not felt right.
He would poorly stand the test of being proved by God.
Brother B has not yet learned the lesson
that he will have to learn if he is saved at last--to deny self,
and resist his desire for pleasure.
He will have to be brought over the ground again and tried still
more closely, because he failed to endure the trials of the past.
He has displeased God in justifying self. He has but little experience
in the fellowship of the sufferings of Christ. He loves display
and does not economize his means. The Lord knows. He weighs the
inward feelings and intentions of the heart. He understands man.
He tests our fidelity. He requires that we should love and serve
Him with the whole mind, and heart, and strength. The lovers
of pleasure may put on a form of godliness that involves some
self-denial even, and they may sacrifice time and money, and
yet self not be subdued, and the will not be brought into subjection
to the will of God.
The influence of the D girls was very bad
in Battle Creek. They had not been trained. Their mother had
neglected her sacred duty and had not restrained her children.
She had not brought them up in the fear and admonition of the
Lord. They had been indulged and shielded from bearing responsibilities
until they had no relish for the plain, homely duties of life.
The mother had educated the daughters to think much of dress,
but the inward adorning was not exalted before them. These young
girls were vain and proud. Their minds were impure; their conversation
was corrupting; and yet there was a class in Battle Creek who
would associate with this stamp of minds, and they could not
associate with them without coming down to their level. These
girls were not dealt as severely with as the case demanded. They
love the society of young men, and the young men are the theme
of their meditation and of their conversation. They have corrupted
manners, and are headstrong and self-confident.
The entire family love display. The mother
is not a prudent, dignified woman. She is not qualified to bring
up children. To dress her children to make a show is of greater
consequence to her than the inward adorning. She has not disciplined
herself. Her will has not been brought into conformity to the
will of God. Her heart is not right with God. She is a stranger to the operation of His Spirit upon
the heart, bringing the desires and affections into conformity
to the obedience of Christ. She does not possess ennobling qualities
of mind and does not discern sacred things. She has let her children
do as they pleased. The fearful experience that she has had with
two of her elder children has not made the deep impression on
her mind that the circumstances demanded. She has educated her
children to love dress, vanity, and folly. She has not disciplined
her two younger girls. A D, under a proper influence, would be
a worthy young man; but he has much to learn. He follows inclination
rather than duty. He loves to follow his own will and pleasure,
and has not a correct knowledge of the duties devolving upon
a Christian. Self-gratification, and his own inclination, he
would gladly interpret to be duty. Self-gratification he has
not overcome. He has a work to do to clear his spiritual vision,
that he may understand what it is to be sanctified to God, and
learn the high claims of God upon him. The serious defects in
his education have affected his life.
If, with his good qualifications, Brother
B were well balanced and a faithful foreman of the office, his
labor would be of great value to the office, and he could earn
double wages. But for the past years, considering his deficiency,
with his unconsecrated influence, the office could better afford
to do without him, even if his services could be had for nothing.
Brother and Sister B have not learned the lesson of economy.
The gratification of the taste, and the desire for pleasure and
display, have had an overpowering influence upon them. Small
wages would be of more advantage to them than large, for they
would use all as they pass along, were it ever so much. They
would enjoy as they go, and then when affliction draws upon them,
would be wholly unprepared. Twenty dollars a week would be laid
out about the same as twelve. Had Brother and Sister B been economical
managers, denying themselves, they could ere this have had a
home of their own, and besides this have had means to draw upon
in case of adversity. But they will not economize as others have
done, upon whom they have sometimes
been dependent. If they neglect to learn these lessons, their
characters will not be found perfect in the day of God.
Brother B has been the object of the great
love and condescension of Christ, and yet he has never felt that
he could imitate the great Exemplar. He claims, and all his life
has sought after, a better portion in this life than was given
our Lord. He has never felt the depths of ignorance and sin from
which Christ has proposed to lift him and to link him to His
divine nature.
It is a fearful thing to minister in sacred
things when the heart and hands are not holy. To be a co-worker
with Christ involves fearful responsibilities; to stand as His
representative is no small matter. The fearful realities of the
judgment will test every man's work. The apostle said, "We
preach not ourselves, but Christ Jesus the Lord;" "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." The sufficiency of
the apostle was not in himself, but in the gracious influence
of the Spirit of Christ, which filled his soul and brought every
thought into subjection to the obedience of Christ. The power
of truth attending the word preached will be a savor of life
unto life or of death unto death. Ministers are required to be
living examples of the mind and spirit of Christ, living epistles,
known and read of all men. I tremble when I consider that there
are some ministers, even among Seventh-day Adventists, who are
not sanctified by the truths which they preach. Nothing less
than the quick and powerful Spirit of God working in the hearts
of His messengers to give the knowledge of the glory of God,
can gain for them the victory.
Brother B's preaching has not been marked
by the sanction of God's Spirit. He can talk fluently and make
a point plain, but his preaching has lacked spirituality. His
appeals have not touched the heart with a new tenderness. There
has been an array of words, but the hearts of his hearers have
not been quickened and melted with a sense of a Saviour's love.
Sinners have not been convicted and drawn
to Christ by a sense that "Jesus of Nazareth passeth by."
Sinners should have a clear impression given them of the nearness
and willingness of Christ to give them present salvation. A Saviour
should be presented before the people, while the heart of the
speaker should be subdued and imbued with His Spirit. The very
tones of the voice, the look, the words, should possess an irresistible
power to move hearts and control minds. Jesus should be found
in the heart of the minister. If Jesus is in the words and in
the tones of the voice, if they are mellow with His tender love,
it will prove a blessing of more value than all the riches, pleasures,
and glories of the earth; for such blessings will not come and
go without accomplishing a work. Convictions will be deepened,
impressions will be made, and the question will be raised: "What
shall I do to be saved?"