God has committed to each of us sacred
trusts, for which He holds us accountable. It is His purpose
that we so educate the mind as to be able to exercise the talents
He has given us in such a manner as to accomplish the greatest
good and reflect the glory to the Giver. We are indebted to God
for all the qualities of the mind. These powers can be cultivated,
and so discreetly directed and controlled as to accomplish the
purpose for which they were given. It is duty to so educate the
mind as to bring out the energies of the soul and develop every
faculty. When all the faculties are in exercise, the intellect
will be strengthened, and the purpose for which they were given
will be accomplished.
Many are not doing the greatest amount
of good because they exercise the intellect in one direction
and neglect to give careful attention to those things for which
they think they are not adapted. Some faculties that are weak
are thus allowed to lie dormant because the work that should
call them into exercise, and consequently
give them strength, is not pleasant. All the powers of the mind
should be exercised, all the faculties cultivated. Perception,
judgment, memory, and all the reasoning powers should have equal
strength in order that minds may be well balanced.
If certain faculties are used to the neglect
of others, the design of God is not fully carried out in us;
for all the faculties have a bearing and are dependent, in a
great measure, upon one another. One cannot be effectually used
without the operation of all, that the balance may be carefully
preserved. If all the attention and strength are given to one,
while others lie dormant, the development is strong in that one
and will lead to extremes, because all the powers have not been
cultivated. Some minds are dwarfed and not properly balanced.
All minds are not naturally constituted alike. We have varied
minds; some are strong upon certain points and very weak upon
others. These deficiencies, so apparent, need not and should
not exist. If those who possess them would strengthen the weak
points in their character by cultivation and exercise they would
become strong.
It is agreeable, but not most profitable,
to exercise those faculties which are naturally the strongest,
while we neglect those that are weak, but which need to be strengthened.
The feeblest faculties should have careful attention, that all
the powers of the intellect may be nicely balanced and all do
their part like well-regulated machinery. We are dependent upon
God for the preservation of all our faculties. Christians are
under obligation to Him to so train the mind that all the faculties
may be strengthened and more fully developed. If we neglect to
do this, they will never accomplish the purpose for which they
were designed. We have no right to neglect any one of the powers
that God has given us. We see monomaniacs all over the country.
They are frequently sane upon every subject but one. The reason
of this is that one organ of the mind was specially exercised
while the others were permitted to lie dormant. The one that
was in constant use became worn
and diseased, and the man became a wreck. God was not glorified
by his pursuing this course. Had he exercised all the organs
equally, all would have had a healthy development; all the labor
would not have been thrown upon one, therefore no one would have
broken down.
Ministers should be guarded, lest they
thwart the purposes of God by plans of their own. They are in
danger of narrowing down the work of God, and confining their
labor to certain localities, and not cultivating a special interest
for the work of God in all its various departments. There are
some who concentrate their minds upon one subject to the exclusion
of others which may be of equal importance. They are one-idea
men. All the strength of their being is concentrated on the subject
upon which the mind is exercised for the time. Every other consideration
is lost sight of. This one favorite theme is the burden of their
thoughts and the theme of their conversation. All the evidence
which has a bearing upon that subject is eagerly seized and appropriated,
and dwelt upon at so great length that minds are wearied in following
them.
Time is frequently lost in explaining points
which are really unimportant, and which would be taken for granted
without producing proof; for they are self-evident. But the real,
vital points should be made as plain and forcible as language
and proof can make them. The power to concentrate the mind upon
one subject to the exclusion of all others is well in a degree;
but the constant exercise of this faculty wears upon those organs
that are called into use to do this work; it throws too great
a tax upon them, and the result is a failure to accomplish the
greatest amount of good. The principal wear comes upon one set
of organs, while the others lie dormant. The mind cannot thus
be healthfully exercised, and, in consequence, life is shortened.
All the faculties should bear a part of
the labor, working harmoniously, balancing one another. Those
who put the whole strength of their mind into one subject are
greatly deficient on other points, for the reason that the faculties
are not equally cultivated. The
subject before them enchains their attention, and they are led
on and on, and go deeper and deeper into the matter. They see
knowledge and light as they become interested and absorbed. But
there are very few minds that can follow them unless they have
given the subject the same depth of thought. There is danger
of such men plowing, and planting the seed of truth so deep that
the tender, precious blade will never find the surface.
Much hard labor is often expended that
is not called for and that will never be appreciated. If those
who have large concentrativeness cultivate this faculty to the
neglect of others, they cannot have well-proportioned minds.
They are like machinery in which only one set of wheels works
at a time. While some wheels are rusting from inaction, others
are wearing from constant use. Men who cultivate one or two faculties,
and do not exercise all equally, cannot accomplish one half the
good in the world that God designed they should. They are one-sided
men; only half of the power that God has given them is put to
use, while the other half is rusting with inaction.
If this class of minds have a special work,
requiring thought, they should not exercise all their powers
upon that one thing, to the exclusion of every other interest.
While they make the subject before them their principal business,
other branches of the work should have a portion of their time.
This would be much better for themselves and for the cause generally.
One branch of the work should not have exclusive attention to
the neglect of all others. In their writings some need to be
constantly guarded, that they do not make points blind that are
plain, by covering them up with many arguments which will not
be of lively interest to the reader. If they linger tediously
upon points, giving every particular which suggests itself to
the mind, their labor is nearly lost. The interest of the reader
will not be deep enough to pursue the subject to its close. The
most essential points of truth may be made indistinct by giving
attention to every minute point. Much ground is covered; but
the work upon which so much labor is expended
is not calculated to do the greatest amount of good, by awakening
a general interest.
In this age, when pleasing fables are drifting upon the surface and attracting the mind, truth presented in an easy style, backed up with a few strong proofs, is better than to search and bring forth an overwhelming array of evidence; for the point then does not stand so distinct in many minds as before the objections and evidences were brought before them. With many, assertions will go further than long arguments. They take many things for granted. Proof does not help the case in the minds of such.