God calls for missionaries. There are men
of ability in the church at ----- who will grow in capacity and
power as they exercise their talents in the work and cause of
God. If these brethren will educate themselves to make the cause
of God their first interest, and will sacrifice their pleasure
and inclination for the truth's sake, the blessing of God will
rest upon them. These brethren, who love the truth, and who have
been for years rejoicing because of increasing light upon the
Scriptures, should let their light shine forth to those who are
in darkness. God will be to them wisdom and power, and will glorify
Himself in working with and by those who wholly follow Him. "If
any man serve Me, him will My Father honor." The wisdom
and power of God will be given to the willing and faithful.
The brethren in ----- have been willing to
give of their means for the various enterprises, but they have
withheld themselves. They have not said: Here am I, Lord; send
me. It is not the strength of human instruments, but the power
and wisdom of Him who employs them and works with them that makes
men successful in doing the work that is necessary to be done.
By offering our goods to the Possessor of heaven and earth while
we withhold ourselves, we cannot meet His approbation nor secure
His blessing. There must be in the hearts of the brethren and
sisters in ----- a principle to lay all, even themselves, upon
the altar of God.
Men are needed in Battle Creek who can
and will take burdens and bear responsibilities. The call has
been given time and again, but hardly a response has been made.
Some would have answered the call if their worldly interests
would have been advanced by so doing. But as there was no prospect
of increasing their means by coming to Battle Creek, they could
see no duty to come. "To obey is better than sacrifice."
And without obedience and unselfish love, the richest offerings
are too meager to be presented to the Possessor of all things.
God calls upon the brethren and sisters
in ----- to arise and come up to the help of the Lord, to the
help of the Lord against the mighty. The reason why there is
so little strength among those who profess the truth is that
they do not exercise the ability that God has given them. Very
many have wrapped their talent in a napkin and hid it in the
earth. It is by using the talents that they increase. God will
test and prove His people.
Brother and Sister I have been faithful
burden bearers in the cause of God, and now their children should
not stand back and let the burdens rest so heavily upon them.
It is time that the powers of the less-worn minds of the children
should be exercised and they work more especially in the Master's
vineyard.
Some of the brethren and sisters in New
York have felt anxious that Brother and Sister K, especially
Sister K, should be encouraged to labor among the churches. But
this is the wrong place for them
to prove themselves. If God has indeed laid upon them the burden
of labor, it is not for the churches; for these are generally
in advance of them. There is a world before Brother and Sister
K, a world lying in wickedness. Their field is a large one. They
have plenty of room to try their gifts and test their calling
without entering into other men's labors and building upon a
foundation that they have not laid. Brother and Sister K have
been very slow to obtain an experience in self-denial. They have
been slow to adopt the health reform in all its branches. The
churches are in advance of them in the denial of appetite. Therefore
they cannot be a benefit to the churches in this direction, but
rather a hindrance.
Brother K has not been a blessing to the
church in -----, but a great burden. He has stood directly in
the way of their advancement. He has not been in a condition
to help when and where they needed help the most. He has not
correctly represented our faith; his conversation and life have
not been unto holiness. He has been far behind, and has not been
ready or willing to discern the leadings of God's providence.
He has stood in the way of sinners; he has not been in such a
position that his influence would recommend our faith to unbelievers.
His example has been a hindrance to the
church and to his unbelieving neighbors. If Brother K had been
wholly consecrated to God, his works would have been fruitful,
productive of much good. But that which more especially distinguishes
God's people from the popular religious bodies is not their profession
alone, but their exemplary characters and their principles of
unselfish love. The powerful, purifying influence of the Spirit
of God upon the heart, carried out in words and works, separates
them from the world and designates them as God's peculiar people.
The character and disposition of Christ's followers will be like
their Master's. He is the pattern, the holy and perfect example
given for Christians to imitate. His true followers will love
their brethren and be in harmony with them. They will love their
neighbors as Christ has given them
example and will make any sacrifice if they can by so doing persuade
souls to leave their sins and be converted to the truth.
The truth, deeply rooted in the hearts
of believers, will spring up and bear fruit unto righteousness.
Their words and works are the channels through which the pure
principles of truth and holiness are conveyed to the world. Especial
blessings and privileges are for those who love the truth and
walk according to the light they have received. If they neglect
to do this, their light will become darkness. When the people
of God become self-sufficient, the Lord leaves them to their
own wisdom. Mercy and truth are promised to the humble in heart,
the obedient and faithful.
Brother K has stood in the way of his children.
If he had been consecrated to God, having his heart in the work,
and living out the truth he professed, he would have felt the
importance of commanding his household after him, as did faithful
Abraham.
The lack of harmony and love between the
two brothers K is a reproach to the cause of God. Both are at
fault. Both have a work to do in subduing self and cultivating
the Christian graces. God is dishonored by the dissensions, and
I do not go too far when I say hatred, that exist between these
two natural brothers. Brother A K is greatly at fault. He has
cherished feelings that have not been in accordance with the
will of God. He knows the peculiarities of his brother, B K,
that he has a fretful, unhappy temperament. Frequently he cannot
see good when it lies directly in his path. He sees only evil
and becomes discouraged very easily. Satan magnifies a molehill
into a mountain before him. All things considered, Brother B
K has in many things pursued a less censurable course than his
brother, because it has been less injurious to the cause of present
truth.
These natural brothers must be fully reconciled
to each other before they can lift the reproach from the cause
of God that their disunion has caused. "In this the children
of God are manifest, and the children
of the devil: whosoever doeth not righteousness is not of God,
neither he that loveth not his brother." "He that saith
he is in the light, and hateth his brother, is in darkness even
until now." Those who labor for God should be clean vessels,
sanctified to the Master's use. "Be ye clean, that bear
the vessels of the Lord." "If a man say, I love God,
and hateth his brother, he is a liar: for he that loveth not
his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath
not seen? And this commandment have we from Him, That he who
loveth God love his brother also."
The ambassadors of Christ have a responsible
and sacred work before them. They are savors of life unto life,
or of death unto death. Their influence decides the destiny of
souls for whom Christ died. Brother and Sister K both lack experience.
Their lives have not been unto holiness. They have not had a
deep and thorough knowledge of the divine will. They have not
been steadily advancing onward and upward in the divine life,
so that their experience could be of value to the church. Their
course has burdened the church not a little.
Sister K's past life has not been of such
a character that her experience could be a blessing to others.
She has not lived up to her convictions of duty. Her conscience
has been violated too many times. She has been a pleasure seeker
and has given her life to vanity, frivolity, and fashion, in
face of the light of truth which has shone upon her pathway.
She knew the way, but neglected to walk in it. The Lord gave
Sister K a testimony of warning and reproof. She believed the
testimony and separated herself from that class who were lovers
of pleasure more than lovers of God. Then, as she viewed her
past life, so full of neglects and wrongs, she gave up to unbelief
and stolid gloom. Despair spread its dark wings over her. Her
marriage to Brother K changed the order of things somewhat, but
at times since she has been very gloomy and desponding.
Sister K has a good knowledge of the prophecies
and can trace them and speak upon them very readily. Some of
the brethren and sisters have been anxious to urge Brother and
Sister K to go out as active laborers. But
there is danger of their working from a wrong standpoint. Sister
K's educational advantages have been superior to those of many
by whom she is surrounded. As she has labored publicly, she has
depended upon her own strength more than upon the Spirit of God.
She has had a spirit of lofty independence and has thought that
she was qualified to teach rather than be taught. With her lack
of experience in spiritual things she is unprepared to labor
among the churches. She has not the discernment and spiritual
strength necessary to build them up. If she and her husband engage
in this work at all, they should commence by exerting a good
influence in the church at -----. Their labor should be bestowed
where the work most needs to be done.
There is work to be done in new fields.
Sinners who never have heard the warning message need to be warned.
Here Brother and Sister K have ample room to work and prove their
calling. No one should hinder them in their efforts in new fields.
There are sinners to save in every direction. But some ministers
are inclined to go over and over the same ground among the churches,
when their labors cannot help them, and their time is wasted.
We wish that all the Lord's servants were
laborers. The work of warning souls should not be confined to
ministers alone, but brethren who have the truth in their hearts,
and who have exerted a good influence at home, should feel that
a responsibility rests upon them to devote a part of their time
to going out among their neighbors and into adjoining towns to
be missionaries for God. They should carry our publications and
engage in conversation and, in the spirit of Christ, pray with
and for those whom they visit. This is the work that will arouse
a spirit of investigation and reformation.
For years the Lord has been calling the
attention of His people to health reform. This is one of the
great branches of the work of preparation for the coming of the
Son of man. John the Baptist went forth in the spirit and power
of Elijah to prepare the way of
the Lord and to turn the people to the wisdom of the just. He
was a representative of those living in these last days to whom
God has entrusted sacred truths to present before the people
to prepare the way for the second appearing of Christ. John was
a reformer. The angel Gabriel, direct from heaven, gave a discourse
upon health reform to the father and mother of John. He said
that he should not drink wine or strong drink, and that he should
be filled with the Holy Ghost from his birth.
John separated himself from friends and
from the luxuries of life. The simplicity of his dress, a garment
woven of camel's hair, was a standing rebuke to the extravagance
and display of the Jewish priests, and of the people generally.
His diet, purely vegetable, of locusts and wild honey, was a
rebuke to the indulgence of appetite and the gluttony that everywhere
prevailed. The prophet Malachi declares: "Behold, I will
send you Elijah the prophet before the coming of the great and
dreadful day of the Lord: and he shall turn the heart of the
fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their
fathers." Here the prophet describes the character of the
work. Those who are to prepare the way for the second coming
of Christ are represented by faithful Elijah, as John came in
the spirit of Elijah to prepare the way for Christ's first advent.
The great subject of reform is to be agitated, and the public
mind is to be stirred. Temperance in all things is to be connected
with the message, to turn the people of God from their idolatry,
their gluttony, and their extravagance in dress and other things.
The self-denial, humility, and temperance
required of the righteous, whom God especially leads and blesses,
is to be presented to the people in contrast to the extravagant,
health-destroying habits of those who live in this degenerate
age. God has shown that health reform is as closely connected
with the third angel's message as the hand is with the body.
There is nowhere to be found so great a cause of physical and
moral degeneracy as a neglect of this important subject. Those
who indulge appetite and passion, and close their eyes to the
light for fear they will see sinful indulgences which they are
unwilling to forsake, are guilty before God. Whoever turns from
the light in one instance hardens his heart to disregard the
light upon other matters. Whoever violates moral obligations
in the matter of eating and dressing prepares the way to violate
the claims of God in regard to eternal interests. Our bodies
are not our own. God has claims upon us to take care of the habitation.
He has given us, that we may present our bodies to Him a living
sacrifice, holy and acceptable. Our bodies belong to Him who
made them, and we are in duty bound to become intelligent in
regard to the best means of preserving them from decay. If we
enfeeble the body by self-gratification, by indulging the appetite,
and by dressing in accordance with health-destroying fashions,
in order to be in harmony with the world, we become enemies of
God.
Brother and Sister K have not appreciated
the light upon health reform. They have not seen a place for
it in connection with the third message. Providence has been
leading the people of God out from the extravagant habits of
the world, away from the indulgence of appetite and passion,
to take their stand upon the platform of self-denial and temperance
in all things. The people whom God is leading will be peculiar.
They will not be like the world. But if they follow the leadings
of God they will accomplish His purposes, and will yield their
will to His will. Christ will dwell in the heart. The temple
of God will be holy. Your body, says the apostle, is the temple
of the Holy Ghost. God does not require His children to deny
themselves to the injury of physical strength. He requires them
to obey natural law, to preserve physical health. Nature's path
is the road He marks out, and it is broad enough for any Christian.
God has, with a lavish hand, provided us with rich and varied
bounties for our sustenance and enjoyment. But in order for us
to enjoy the natural appetite, which will preserve health and
prolong life, He restricts the appetite. He says: Beware; restrain,
deny, unnatural appetite. If we create a perverted appetite,
we violate the laws of our being and assume the responsibility
of abusing our bodies and of bringing disease upon ourselves.
The spirit and power of Elijah have been
stirring hearts to reform and directing them to the wisdom of
the just. Brother and Sister K have not been converted to the
health reform, notwithstanding the amount of evidence that God
has given upon the subject. Self-denial is essential to genuine
religion. Those who have not learned to deny themselves are destitute
of vital, practical godliness. We cannot expect anything else
than that the claims of religion will come in contact with the
natural affections and worldly interests. There is work for everyone
in the vineyard of the Lord. None should be idle. Angels of God
are all astir, ascending to heaven and descending to earth again
with messages of mercy and warning. These heavenly messengers
are moving upon minds and hearts. There are men and women everywhere
whose hearts are susceptible of being inspired with the truth.
If those who have a knowledge of the truth would now work in
unison with the Spirit of God, we would see a great work accomplished.
New fields are open in which all can test
their calling by experimental effort in bringing souls out from
darkness and error, and establishing them upon the platform of
eternal truth. If Brother and Sister K feel that God has called
them to engage in His work, they have enough to do to call sinners
to repentance; but in order for God to work in and through them,
they need a thorough conversion. The work of fitting a people
in these last days for the coming of Christ, is a most sacred,
solemn work, and calls for devoted, unselfish laborers. Those
who have humility, faith, energy, perseverance, and decision
will find plenty to do in their Master's vineyard. There are
responsible duties to be performed, which require earnestness
and the exertion of all their energies. It is willing service
that God accepts. If the truth we profess is of such infinite
importance as to decide the destiny of souls, how careful should
we be in its presentation.
"The path of the just is as the shining
light, that shineth more and more unto the perfect day."
Brother and Sister K, had you walked in the light as it shone
upon your pathway, had you been
drawing nearer to God, steadfastly believing the truth and walking
humbly before God in the light He has given, you would now have
an experience that would be of inestimable value. Had you improved
the talents lent you of God, you would have shone as lights in
the world. But light becomes darkness to all those who will not
walk in it. In order to be accepted and blessed of God as our
fathers were, we must, like them, be faithful. We must improve
our light as the ancient, faithful prophets improved theirs.
God requires of us according to the grace that He has bestowed
upon us, and He will not accept less than He claims. All His
righteous demands must be fully met. In order for us to discharge
our responsibilities, we must stand on that elevated ground which
the order and advancement of holy, sacred truth has prepared
for us.
Brother L fails to realize the sanctifying
influence of the truth of God upon the heart. He is not as patient,
humble, and forbearing as he should be. He is easily stirred;
self arises, and he says and does many things without due reflection.
He does not at all times exert a saving influence. If he were
imbued with the Spirit of Christ, he could with one hand take
hold of the Mighty One, while with the hand of faith and love
he would reach the poor sinner. Brother L needs the powerful
influence of divine love; for this will renew and refine the
heart, sanctify the life, and elevate and ennoble the entire
man. Then his words and works will savor of heaven rather than
of his own spirit.
If the words of eternal life are sown in
the heart, fruit will be produced unto righteousness and peace.
A spirit of self-sufficiency and self-importance must be overcome
by you, my dear brother. You should cultivate a spirit that is
willing to be instructed and counseled. Whatever others may say
or do, you should say: What is that to me? Christ has bidden
me follow Him. You should cultivate a spirit of meekness. You
need an experience in genuine godliness, and unless you have
this, you cannot engage in the work of God understandingly.
Your spirit must soften and be subdued by
being brought into obedience to the will of Christ. You should
at all times maintain the lowly dignity of a follower of Jesus.
Our deportment, our words and actions, preach to others. We are
living epistles, known and read of all men.
You should be careful not to preach the
truth from strife or contention, for if you do you will most
assuredly turn the battle against yourself and be found advancing
the cause of the enemy rather than the truth of God. Every time
that you engage in a contest it should be from a sense of duty.
If you make God your strength and subdue yourself, and let the
truth bear away the victory, the devices of Satan and his fiery
darts will fall upon himself, and you will be strengthened, kept
from error, and guarded from every false way. You need to cultivate
caution and not rush on in your own strength. The work is important
and sacred, and you need great wisdom. You should counsel with
your brethren who have had experience in the work. But, above
everything else, you should obtain a thorough knowledge of your
own weakness and dangers, and should strengthen the weak points
in your character, that you may not make shipwreck of faith.
We are living amid the perils of the last
days, and if we have a spirit of self-sufficiency and independence
we shall be exposed to the wiles of Satan and be overcome. Self-importance
must be put away from you, and you be hid in God, depending alone
upon Him for strength. The churches do not need your labor. If
you are consecrated to God, you can labor in new fields, and
God will work with you. Purity of heart and life God will accept.
Anything short of this, He will not regard. We must suffer with
Christ if we would reign with Him.
Brother M could have accomplished good
if he had, years ago, given all for Christ. He has not been sanctified
through the truth; his heart has not been right with God. He
has hid his talent in the earth. What will he who has put his
talents to a wrong use say when the Master shall require him
to give account of his stewardship?
Brother M has not been an honor to the cause of God. It is dangerous
to contend with the providence of God and to be dissatisfied
with almost everything, as though there had been a special arrangement
of circumstances to tempt and destroy. The work of pruning and
purifying to fit us for heaven is a great work and will cost
us much suffering and trial, because our wills are not subjected
to the will of Christ. We must go through the furnace till the
fires have consumed the dross and we are purified and reflect
the divine image. Those who follow their inclinations and are
governed by appearances are not good judges of what God is doing.
They are filled with discontent. They see failure where there
is indeed triumph, a great loss where there is gain; and, like
Jacob, they are ready to exclaim, "All these things are
against me," when the very things whereof they complain
are all working together for their good.
No cross, no crown. How can one be strong in the Lord without trials? To have strength we must have exercise. To have strong faith, we must be placed in circumstances where our faith will be exercised. The apostle Paul, just before his martyrdom, exhorted Timothy: "Be thou partaker of the afflictions of the gospel according to the power of God." It is through much tribulation that we are to enter the kingdom of God. Our Saviour was tried in every possible way, and yet He triumphed in God continually. It is our privilege to be strong in the strength of God under all circumstances and to glory in the cross of Christ.