In a vision given me at Bordoville, Vermont,
December 10, 1871, I was shown that the position of my husband
has been a very difficult one. A pressure of care and labor has
been upon him. His brethren in the ministry have not had these
burdens to bear, and they have not appreciated his labors. The
constant pressure upon him has taxed him mentally and physically.
I was shown that his relation to the people of God was similar,
in some respects, to that of Moses to Israel. There were murmurers
against Moses, when in adverse circumstances, and there have
been murmurers against him.
There has been no one in the ranks of Sabbathkeepers
who would do as my husband has done. He has devoted his interest
almost entirely to the building up of the cause of God, regardless
of his own personal interests and at the sacrifice of social
enjoyment with his family. In his devotion to the cause he has
frequently endangered his health and life. He has been so much
pressed with the burden of this work that he has not had suitable
time for study, meditation, and prayer. God has not required
him to be in this position, even for the interest and progress
of the publishing work at Battle Creek. There are other branches
of the work, other interests of the cause, that have been neglected
through his devotion to this one. God has given us both a testimony
which will reach hearts. He has opened before me many channels
of light, not only for my benefit, but for the benefit of His
people at large. He has also given my husband great light upon
Bible subjects, not for himself alone, but for others. I saw
that these things should be written and talked out, and that
new light would continue to shine upon the word.
I saw that we could accomplish tenfold
more to build up the cause by laboring among the people of God,
bearing a varied testimony to meet the wants of the cause in
different places and under different circumstances, than we could
to remain at Battle Creek. Our gifts are needed in the same field
in writing and in speaking. While my husband
is overburdened, as he has been, with an accumulation of cares
and financial matters, his mind cannot be as fruitful in the
word as it otherwise would be. And he is liable to be assailed
by the enemy; for he is in a position where there is a constant
pressure, and men and women will be tempted, as were the Israelites,
to complain and murmur against him who stands in the most responsible
position in the cause and work of God.
While standing under these burdens that
no one else would venture to take, my husband has sometimes,
under the pressure of care, spoken without due consideration
and with apparent severity. He has sometimes censured those in
the office because they did not take care. And when needless
mistakes have occurred, he has felt that indignation for the
cause of God was justifiable in him. This course has not always
been attended with the best results. It has sometimes resulted
in a neglect on the part of those reproved to do the very things
they should have done; for they feared they would not do them
right; and would then be blamed for it. Just as far as this has
been the case, the burden has fallen heavier upon my husband.
The better way would have been for him
to be away from the office more than he has been, and leave the
work with others to do. And if, after patient and fair trial,
they proved themselves unfaithful, or not capacitated for the
work, they should have been discharged, and left to engage in
business where their blunders and mistakes would affect their
own personal interests and not the cause of God.
There were those who stood at the head
of the business of the Publishing Association who were, to say
the very least, unfaithful. And had those in particular who were
associated with them as trustees been aware and their eyes not
blinded and their sensibilities not paralyzed, these men would
have been separated from the work long before they were.
When my husband recovered from his long
and severe sickness, he took hold of the work confused and embarrassed
as it was left by unfaithful men. He labored with all the resolution
and strength of mind and body that he possessed
to bring the work up and to redeem it from the disgraceful perplexity
into which it had been brought by those who had their own interests
prominent and who did not feel that it was a sacred work in which
they were engaged. God's hand has been reached out in judgment
over these unfaithful ones. Their course and the result should
prove a warning to others not to do as they have done.
The experience of my husband during the
period of his sickness was unfortunate for him. He had worked
in this cause with interest and devotion as no other man had
done. He had ventured and taken advance positions as Providence
had led, regardless of censure or praise. He had stood alone
and battled through physical and mental sufferings, not regarding
his own interests, while those whom God designed should stand
by his side left him when he most needed their help. He had not
only been left to battle and struggle without their help and
sympathy, but frequently he had to meet their opposition and
murmurings--murmurings against one who was doing tenfold more
than any of them to build up the cause of God. All these things
have had their influence; they have molded the mind that was
once free from suspicion, trustful, and confiding, and caused
him to lose confidence in his brethren. Those who have acted
a part in bringing about this work will, in a great degree, be
responsible for the result. God would have led them if they had
earnestly and devotedly served Him.
I was shown that my husband had given his
brethren unmistakable evidences of his interest in, and devotion
to, the work of God. After he had spent years of his life in
privation and unceasing toil to establish the publishing interests
upon a sure basis he gave away to the people of God that which
was his own and which he could just as well have kept and received
the profits from had he chosen so to do. By this act he showed
the people that he was not seeking to advantage himself, but
to promote the cause of God.
When sickness came upon my husband, many
acted in the same unfeeling manner toward him that the Pharisees
did toward the unfortunate and oppressed. The Pharisees would
tell the suffering ones that their afflictions were on account
of their sins, and that the judgments of God had come upon them.
By so doing they would increase their weight of suffering. When
my husband fell under his weight of care, there were those who
were merciless.
When he began to recover, so that in his
feebleness and poverty he commenced to labor some, he asked those
who then stood at the head of matters at the office for 40 per
cent discount on a one-hundred dollar order for books. He was
willing to pay sixty dollars for the books which he knew cost
the Association only fifty dollars. He asked this special discount
in view of his past labors and sacrifices in favor of the publishing
department, but was denied this small favor. He was coolly told
that they could give him but 25 per cent discount. My husband
thought this very hard, yet he tried to bear it in a Christian
manner. God in heaven marked the unjust decision, and from that
time took the case in His own hands, and has returned the blessings
removed, as He did to faithful Job. From the time of that heartless
decision, He has been working for His servant, and has raised
him above his former health of body, clearness and strength of
mind, and freedom of spirit. And since that time my husband has
had the pleasure of passing out with his own hands thousands
of dollars' worth of our publications without price. God will
not utterly forget nor forever forsake those who have been faithful,
even if they sometimes commit errors.
My husband has had a zeal for God and for
the truth, and at times this zeal has led him to overlabor to
the injury of physical and mental strength. But the Lord has
not regarded this as so great a sin as the neglect and unfaithfulness
of His servants in reproving wrongs. Those who praised the unfaithful
and flattered the unconsecrated were sharers in their sin of
neglect and unfaithfulness.
God has selected my husband and given him
special qualifications, natural ability, and an experience to
lead out His people in the advance work. But there have been
murmurers among Sabbathkeeping Adventists as there were among
ancient Israel, and these jealous, suspicious ones, by their
suggestions and insinuations, have given occasion to the enemies
of our faith to distrust my husband's honesty. These jealous
ones of the same faith have placed matters before unbelievers
in a false light, and the impressions made stand in the way of
many embracing the truth. They regard my husband as a schemer,
a selfish, avaricious man, and they are afraid of him and of
the truth held by us as a people.
When the appetite of ancient Israel was
restricted, or when any close requirement was brought to bear
upon them, they reflected upon Moses, that he was arbitrary,
that he wished to rule them, and to be altogether a prince over
them, when he was only an instrument in God's hand to bring His
people into a position of submission and obedience to God's voice.
Modern Israel have murmured and become
jealous of my husband because he has pleaded for the cause of
God. He has encouraged liberality, he has rebuked those who loved
this world, and has censured selfishness. He has pleaded for
donations to the cause of God and, to encourage liberality in
his brethren, has led off by liberal donations himself; but by
many murmuring, jealous ones even this has been interpreted that
he wished to be personally benefited by the means of his brethren
and that he had enriched himself at the expense of the cause
of God; when the facts in the case are that God has entrusted
means in his hands to raise him above want so that he need not
be dependent upon the mercies of a changeable, murmuring, jealous
people. Because we have not selfishly studied our own interest,
but have cared for the widow and the fatherless, God has in His
providence worked in our behalf and blessed us with prosperity
and an abundance.
Moses sacrificed a prospective kingdom,
a life of worldly honor and luxury in kingly courts, choosing
rather to suffer affliction with
the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season,
for he esteemed the reproach of Christ greater riches than all
the treasures of Egypt. Had we chosen a life of ease and freedom
from labor and care we might have done so. But this was not our
choice. We chose active labor in the cause of God, an itinerant
life, with all its hardships, privations, and exposure, to a
life of indolence. We have not lived for ourselves, to please
ourselves, but we have tried to live for God, to please and glorify
Him. We have not made it an object to labor for property; but
God has fulfilled His promise in giving us a hundredfold in this
life. He may prove us by removing it from us. If so, we pray
for submission to humbly bear the test.
While He has committed to our trust talents
of money and influence, we will try to invest them in His cause,
that should fires consume and adversity diminish, we can have
the pleasure of knowing that some of our treasure is where fires
cannot consume or adversity sweep away. The cause of God is a
sure bank that can never fail, and the investment of our time,
our interest, and our means in it is a treasure in the heavens
that faileth not.
I was shown that my husband has had threefold
the care he should have had. He has felt tried that Brethren
R and S did not help him bear his responsibilities, and has felt
grieved because they did not help him in the business matters
in connection with the Institute and the Publishing Association.
There has been a continual advancement in the work of publishing
ever since the unfaithful were separated from it. And as the
work increased, there should have been men to share the responsibilities;
but some who could have done this had no desire, because it would
not increase their possessions as much as some more lucrative
business.
There is not that talent in our office
that there should be. The work demands the choicest and most
select persons to engage in it. With the present state of things
in the office my husband will still feel the pressure that he
has felt, but which he should no longer bear. It is only by a
miracle of God's mercy that he
has stood under the burden so long. But there are now many things
to be considered. By his persevering care and devotion to the
work he has shown what may be done in the publishing department.
Men with unselfish interests combined with sanctified judgment
may make the work at the office a success. My husband has so
long borne the burden alone that it has told fearfully upon his
strength, and there is a positive necessity for a change. He
must be relieved from care to a great degree, and yet he can
work in the cause of God in speaking and writing.
When we returned from Kansas in the autumn
of 1870, both of us should have had a period of rest. Weeks of
freedom from care were necessary to bring up our exhausted energies.
But when we found the important post at Battle Creek nearly deserted,
we felt compelled to take hold of the work with double energies,
and labored beyond our strength. I was shown that my husband
should stand there no longer unless there are men who will feel
the wants of the cause and bear the burdens of the work, while
he shall simply act as a counselor. He must lay the burden down,
for God has an important work for him to do in writing and speaking
the truth. Our influence in laboring in the wide field will tell
more for the upbuilding of the cause of God. There is a great
amount of prejudice in many minds. False statements have placed
us in a wrong position before the people, and this stands in
the way of many embracing the truth. If they are made to believe
that those who occupy responsible positions in the work at Battle
Creek are designing and fanatical they conclude that the entire
work is wrong and that our views of Bible truth must be incorrect,
and they fear to investigate and receive the truth. But we are
not to go forth to call the people to look to us; we are not
generally to speak of ourselves and vindicate our characters;
but we are to speak the truth, exalt the truth, speak of Jesus,
exalt Jesus, and this, attended by the power of God, will remove
prejudice and disarm opposition.
Brethren R and S love to write; so does
my husband. And God has let His
light shine upon His word, and has led him into a field of rich
thought that would be a blessing to the people of God at large.
While he has borne a triple burden, some of his ministering brethren
have let the responsibility drop heavily upon him, consoling
themselves with the thought that God had placed Brother White
at the head of the work and qualified him for it, and that the
Lord had not fitted them for the position; therefore they have
not taken the responsibility and borne the burdens which they
might have borne.
There should be men who would feel the
same interest that my husband has felt. There never has been
a more important period in the history of Seventh-day Adventists
than the present. Instead of the publishing work diminishing,
the demand for our publications is greatly increasing. There
will be more to do instead of less. My husband has been murmured
against so much, he has contended with jealousy and falsehood
so long, and has seen so little faithfulness in men, that he
has become suspicious of almost everyone, even of his own brethren
in the ministry. The ministering brethren have felt this, and
for fear that they should not move wisely, in many instances
have not moved at all. But the time has come when these men must
labor unitedly to lift the burdens. The ministering brethren
lack faith and confidence in God. They believe the truth, and
in the fear of God they should unite their efforts, and bear
the burdens of this work which God has laid upon them.
If, after one has done the best he can
in his judgment, another thinks he can see where he could have
improved the matter, he should kindly and patiently give the
brother the benefit of his judgment, but should not censure him
nor question his integrity of purpose any sooner than he himself
would wish to be suspected or unjustly censured. If the brother
who feels the cause of God at heart sees that, in his earnest
efforts to do, he has made a failure, he will feel deeply over
the matter; for he will be inclined to distrust himself and to
lose confidence in his own judgment. Nothing will so weaken his
courage and godlike manhood as to realize his mistakes in the
work that God has appointed him
to do, a work which he loves better than his life. How unjust,
then, for his brethren who discover his errors to keep pressing
the thorn deeper and deeper into his heart, to make him feel
more intensely, when with every thrust they are weakening his
faith and courage, and his confidence in himself to work successfully
in the upbuilding of the cause of God.
Frequently the truth and facts are to be
plainly spoken to the erring, to make them see and feel their
error that they may reform. But this should ever be done with
pitying tenderness, not with harshness or severity, but considering
one's own weakness, lest he also be tempted. When the one at
fault sees and acknowledges his error, then, instead of grieving
him, and seeking to make him feel more deeply, comfort should
be given. In the sermon of Christ upon the mount He said: "Judge
not, that ye be not judged. For with what judgment ye judge,
ye shall be judged: and with what measure ye mete, it shall be
measured to you again." Our Saviour reproved for rash judgment.
"Why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye;
. . . and, behold, a beam is in thine own eye?" It is frequently
the case that while one is quick to discern the errors of his
brethren, he may be in greater faults himself, but be blind to
them.
All who are followers of Christ should
deal with one another exactly as we wish the Lord to deal with
us in our errors and weaknesses, for we are all erring and need
His pity and forgiveness. Jesus consented to take human nature,
that He might know how to pity, and how to plead with His Father
in behalf of sinful, erring mortals. He volunteered to become
man's Advocate, and He humiliated Himself to become acquainted
with the temptations wherewith man was beset, that He might succor
those who should be tempted, and be a tender and faithful high
priest.
Frequently there is necessity for plainly
rebuking sin and reproving wrong. But ministers who are working
for the salvation of their fellow men should not be pitiless
toward the errors of one another,
nor make prominent the defects in their organizations. They should
not expose or reprove their weaknesses. They should inquire if
such a course, pursued by another toward themselves, would bring
about the desired effect; would it increase their love for, and
confidence in, the one who thus made prominent their mistakes?
Especially should the mistakes of ministers who are engaged in
the work of God be kept within as small a circle as possible,
for there are many weak ones who will take advantage if they
are aware that those who minister in word and doctrine have weaknesses
like other men. And it is a most cruel thing for the faults of
a minister to be exposed to unbelievers, if that minister is
counted worthy to labor in the future for the salvation of souls.
No good can come of this exposure, but only harm. The Lord frowns
upon this course, for it is undermining the confidence of the
people in those whom He accepts to carry forward His work. The
character of every fellow laborer should be jealously guarded
by brother ministers. Saith God: "Touch not Mine anointed,
and do My prophets no harm." Love and confidence should
be cherished. A lack of this love and confidence in one minister
for another does not increase the happiness of the one thus deficient,
but as he makes his brother unhappy he is unhappy himself. There
is greater power in love than was ever found in censure. Love
will melt its way through barriers, while censure will close
up every avenue of the soul.
My husband must have a change. Losses may
occur at the office of publication for want of his long experience,
but the loss of money cannot bear any comparison to the health
and life of God's servant. The income of means may not be as
large for want of economical managers; but if my husband should
fail again, it would dishearten his brethren and weaken their
hands. Means cannot come in as an equivalent.
There is much to be done. Missionaries
should be in the field who are willing, if need be, to go to
foreign countries to present the truth before those who sit in
darkness. But there is little disposition among young men to
consecrate themselves to God and
to devote their talents to His service. They are too willing
to shun responsibilities and burdens. They are not obtaining
the experience in burden bearing or the knowledge of the Scriptures
that they should have to fit them for the work that God would
accept at their hands. It is the duty of all to see how much
they can do for the Master who has died for them. But many are
seeking to do just as little as possible and are cherishing the
faint hope of getting into heaven at last. It is their privilege
to have stars in their crown because of souls saved through their
instrumentality. But alas! indolence and spiritual sloth prevail
everywhere. Selfishness and pride occupy a large place in their
hearts, and there is but little room for heavenly things.
In the prayer that Christ taught His disciples was the request: Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us. We cannot repeat this prayer from the heart and dare to be unforgiving, for we ask the Lord to forgive our trespasses against Him in the same manner that we forgive those who trespass against us. But few realize the true import of this prayer. If those who are unforgiving did comprehend the depth of its meaning they would not dare to repeat it and ask God to deal with them as they deal with their fellow mortals. And yet this spirit of hardness and lack of forgiveness exists even among brethren to a fearful extent. Brother is exacting with brother.