Dear Children P and Q: You are deceived
in regard to yourselves. You are not Christians. To be true Christians
is to be Christlike. You are far from the mark in this respect;
but I hope that you will not be deceived until it is too late
for you to form characters for heaven.
Your example has not been good. You have
not come to the point to obey the words of Christ: "If any
man will come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his
cross, and follow Me." Here are lessons that you have not
learned. The denial of self has not been a part of your education.
You have neglected to study the words of life. "Search the
Scriptures," said the heavenly Teacher. He knew that this
was necessary for all in order for them to become Christ's true
followers. You love to read storybooks, but do not find the word
of God interesting. You should restrict your reading to the word
of God and to books that are of
a spiritual and useful character. In so doing you will close
a door against temptation, and you will be blessed.
Had you improved the light that has been
given in Battle Creek, you would now be far in advance of what
you are in the divine life. Both of you are vain and proud. You
have not felt that you must give an account of your stewardship.
You are accountable to God for all your privileges and for all
the means which pass through your hands. You have sought your
own pleasure and selfish gratification at the expense of conscience
and the approval of God. You do not act like servants of Christ,
who are responsible to the Saviour who has bought you with His
own precious blood. "Know ye not, that to whom ye yield
yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey;
whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness?
But God be thanked, that ye were the servants of sin, but ye
have obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered
you. Being then made free from sin, ye became the servants of
righteousness."
You are professedly the servants of Christ.
Do you then yield to Him ready and willing obedience? Do you
earnestly inquire how you shall best please Him who has called
you to be soldiers of the cross of Christ? Do you both lift the
cross and glory in it? Answer these questions to God. All your
acts, however secret you may think they have been, are open to
your heavenly Father. Nothing is hidden, nothing covered. All
your acts and the motives which prompt them are open to His sight.
He has full knowledge of all your words and thoughts. It is your
duty to control your thoughts. You will have to war against a
vain imagination. You may think that there can be no sin in permitting
your thoughts to run as they naturally would without restraint.
But this is not so. You are responsible to God for the indulgence
of vain thoughts; for from vain imaginations arises the committal
of sins, the actual doing of those things upon which the mind
has dwelt. Govern your thoughts, and it will then be much easier
to govern your actions. Your thoughts
need to be sanctified. Paul writes to the Corinthians: "Casting
down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself
against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every
thought to the obedience of Christ." When you come into
this position, the work of consecration will be better understood
by you both. Your thoughts will be pure, chaste, and elevated;
your actions pure and sinless. Your bodies will be preserved
in sanctification and honor, that you may present them "a
living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable
service." You are required to deny self in little as well
as in greater things. You should make an entire surrender to
God; you are not approved of Him in your present state.
You have had an unsanctified influence
over the youth in -----. Your love of show leads to an expenditure
of means which is wrong. You do not realize the claims that the
Lord has upon you. You have not become acquainted with the sweet
results of self-denial. Its fruits are sacred. To serve yourselves
and to please yourselves has been the order of your lives. To
spend your means to gratify pride has been your practice. Oh,
how much better it would have been for you to have restrained
your desires and made some sacrifice for the truth of God, and
by thus denying the lust of the eye, the lust of the flesh, and
the pride of life have had something to put into the treasury
of God! Instead of purchasing frivolous things, put your little
into the bank of heaven, that when the Master comes you may receive
both principal and interest.
Have you both studied how much you could
do to honor your Redeemer upon the earth? Oh, no! You have been
pleased to honor yourselves and to receive honor of others, but
to study to show yourselves approved of God has not been the
burden of your lives. Religion, pure and undefiled, with its
strong principles, would prove to you an anchor. In order to
answer life's great ends you must avoid the example of those
who are seeking for their own pleasure and enjoyment, and who
have not the fear of God before them. God has made
provisions for you that are ample. He has
provided that if you comply with the conditions laid down in
His word, and separate from the world, you may receive strength
from Him to repress every debasing influence and to develop that
which is noble, good, and elevating. Christ will be in you "a
well of water springing up into everlasting life." The will,
the intellect, and every emotion, when controlled by religion,
have a transforming power.
"Whether therefore ye eat, or drink,
or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God." Here is
a principle which lies at the foundation of every act, thought,
and motive; the consecration of the entire being, both physical
and mental, to the control of the Spirit of God. The unsanctified
will and passions must be crucified. This may be regarded as
a close and severe work. Yet it must be done, or you will hear
the terrible sentence from the mouth of Jesus: "Depart."
You can do all things through Christ, who strengtheneth you.
You are of that age when the will, the appetite, and the passions
clamor for indulgence. God has implanted these in your nature
for high and holy purposes. It is not necessary that they should
become a curse to you by being debased. They will become this
only when you refuse to submit to the control of reason and conscience.
Restrain, deny, are words and works with which you are not familiar
by experience. Temptations have swayed you. Unsanctified minds
fail to receive that strength and comfort that God has provided
for them. They are restless and possess a strong desire for something
new, something to gratify, to please and excite the mind; and
this is called pleasure. Satan has alluring charms to engage
the interest and excite the imagination of the youth in particular,
that he may fasten them in his snare. You are building upon the
sand. You need to cry earnestly: "O Lord, my inmost soul
convert." You can have an influence for good over other
young people, or you can have an influence for evil.
May the God of peace sanctify you wholly,
soul, body and spirit.