At the camp meeting in Vermont, in 1870,
I felt urged by the Spirit of God to bear a plain testimony relative
to the duty of aged and wealthy parents in the disposition of
their property. I had been shown that some men who are shrewd,
prudent, and sharp in regard to the transaction of business generally,
men who are distinguished for promptness and thoroughness, manifest a want of foresight and promptness
in regard to a proper disposal of their property while they are
living. They know not how soon their probation may close; yet
they pass on from year to year with their business unsettled,
and frequently their lives finally close without their having
the use of their reason. Or they may die suddenly, without a
moment's warning, and their property be disposed of in a manner
that they would not have approved. These are guilty of negligence;
they are unfaithful stewards.
Christians who believe the present truth
should manifest wisdom and foresight. They should not neglect
the disposition of their means, expecting a favorable opportunity
to adjust their business during a long illness. They should have
their business in such a shape that, were they called at any
hour to leave it, and should they have no voice in its arrangement,
it might be settled as they would have had it were they alive.
Many families have been dishonestly robbed of all their property
and have been subjected to poverty because the work that might
have been well done in an hour had been neglected. Those who
make their wills should not spare pains or expense to obtain
legal advice and to have them drawn up in a manner to stand the
test.
I saw that those who profess to believe
the truth should show their faith by their works. They should,
with the unrighteous mammon, make friends, that they may finally
be received into everlasting habitations. God has made men stewards
of means. He has placed in their hands the money with which to
carry forward the great work for the salvation of souls for whom
Christ left His home, His riches, His glory, and became poor
that He might, by His own humiliation and sacrifice, bring many
sons and daughters of Adam to God. In His providence the Lord
has ordained that the work in His vineyard should be sustained
by the means entrusted to the hands of His stewards. A neglect
on their part to answer the calls of the cause of God in carrying
forward His work shows them to be unfaithful and slothful servants.
I had been shown some things in reference
to the cause in Vermont, but more especially at Bordoville and
vicinity. The following is from Testimony for the Church, No.
20:
"There is a work to be accomplished
for many who live at Bordoville. I saw that the enemy was busily
at work to carry his points. Men to whom God has entrusted talents
of means have shifted upon their children the responsibility
which Heaven has appointed them of being stewards for God. Instead
of rendering to God the things that are His, they claim that
all they have is their own, as though by their own might and
power and wisdom they had obtained their possessions."
"Some place their means beyond their
control by putting it into the hands of their children. Their
secret motive is to place themselves in a position where they
will not feel responsible to give of their property to spread
the truth. These love in word, but not in deed and in truth.
They do not realize that it is the Lord's money they are handling,
not their own."
"Parents should have great fear in
entrusting children with the talents of means that God has placed
in their hands, unless they have the surest evidence that their
children have greater interest in, love for, and devotion to,
the cause of God than they themselves possess, and that these
children will be more earnest and zealous in forwarding the work
of God, and more benevolent in carrying forward the various enterprises
connected with it which call for means. But many place their
means in the hands of their children, thus throwing upon them
the responsibility of their own stewardship, because Satan prompts
them to do it. In so doing they effectually place that means
in the enemy's ranks. Satan works the matter to suit his own
purpose and keeps from the cause of God the means which it needs,
that it may be abundantly sustained."
"Many who have made a high profession
of faith are deficient in good works. If they should show their
faith by their works they could exert a powerful influence on
the side of truth. But they do not improve upon the talents of
means lent them of God. Those who
think to ease their consciences by willing their property to
their children, or by withholding from God's cause and suffering
it to pass into the hands of unbelieving, reckless children for
them to squander or hoard up and worship, will have to render
an account to God; they are unfaithful stewards of their Lord's
money. They allow Satan to outgeneral them through these children,
whose minds are under his control. Satan's purposes are accomplished
in many ways, while the stewards of God seem stupefied and paralyzed;
they do not realize their great responsibility and the reckoning
which must shortly come."
I was shown that the probation of some
in the vicinity of ----- was soon to close, and that it was important
that their work be finished to God's acceptance, that in the
final settlement they might hear the "Well done" from
the Master. I was also shown the inconsistency of those who profess
to believe the truth withholding their means from the cause of
God, that they may leave it for their children. Many fathers
and mothers are poor in the midst of abundance. They abridge,
in a degree, their own personal comforts and frequently deny
themselves of those things that are necessary for the enjoyment
of life and health, while they have ample means at their command.
They feel forbidden, as it were, to appropriate their means for
their own comfort or for charitable purposes. They have one object
before them, and that is to save property to leave for their
children. This idea is so prominent, so interwoven with all their
actions, that their children learn to look forward to the time
when this property will be theirs. They depend upon it, and this
prospect has an important but not a favorable influence upon
their characters. Some become spendthrifts, others become selfish
and avaricious, and still others grow indolent and reckless.
Many do not cultivate habits of economy; they do not seek to
become self-reliant. They are aimless, and have but little stability
of character. The impressions received in childhood and youth
are wrought in the texture of character and become the principle
of action in mature life.
Those who have become acquainted with the
principles of the truth should closely follow the word of God
as their guide. They should render to God the things that are
God's. I was shown that several in Vermont were making a great
mistake in regard to appropriating the means that God had entrusted
to their keeping. They were overlooking the claims of God upon
all that they have. Their eyes were blinded by the enemy of righteousness,
and they were taking a course which would result disastrously
for themselves and their dear children.
Children were influencing their parents
to leave their property in their hands for them to appropriate
according to their judgment. With the light of God's word, so
plain and clear in reference to the money lent to stewards, and
with the warnings and reproofs which God has given through the
Testimonies in regard to the disposition of means--if, with all
this light before them, children either directly or indirectly
influence their parents to divide their property while living,
or to will it mainly to the children to come into their hands
after the death of their parents, they take upon themselves fearful
responsibilities. Children of aged parents who profess to believe
the truth should, in the fear of God, advise and entreat their
parents to be true to their profession of faith, and take a course
in regard to their means which God can approve. Parents should
lay up for themselves treasures in heaven by appropriating their
means themselves to the advancement of the cause of God. They
should not rob themselves of heavenly treasure by leaving a surplus
of means to those who have enough; for by so doing they not only
deprive themselves of the precious privilege of laying up a treasure
in the heavens that faileth not, but they rob the treasury of
God.
I stated at the camp meeting that when
property is willed principally to children, while none is appropriated
to the cause of God, or, if any, a meager pittance unworthy to
be mentioned, this property would frequently prove a curse to
the children who inherit it. It
would be a source of temptation and would open a door through
which they would be in danger of falling into many dangerous
and hurtful lusts.
Parents should exercise the right that
God has given them. He entrusted to them the talents He would
have them use to His glory. The children were not to become responsible
for the talents of the father. While they have sound minds and
good judgment, parents should, with prayerful consideration,
and with the help of proper counselors who have experience in
the truth and a knowledge of the divine will, make disposition
of their property. If they have children who are afflicted or
are struggling in poverty, and who will make a judicious use
of means, they should be considered. But if they have unbelieving
children who have abundance of this world, and who are serving
the world, they commit a sin against the Master, who has made
them His stewards, by placing means in their hands merely because
they are their children. God's claims are not to be lightly regarded.
And it should be distinctly understood
that because parents have made their will, this will not prevent
them from giving means to the cause of God while they live. This
they should do. They should have the satisfaction here, and the
reward hereafter, of disposing of their surplus means while they
live. They should do their part to advance the cause of God.
They should use the means lent them by the Master to carry on
the work which needs to be done in His vineyard.
The love of money lies at the root of nearly
all the crimes committed in the world. Fathers who selfishly
retain their means to enrich their children, and who do not see
the wants of the cause of God and relieve them, make a terrible
mistake. The children whom they think to bless with their means
are cursed with it.
Money left to children frequently becomes
a root of bitterness. They often quarrel over the property left
them and in case of a will, are seldom all satisfied with the
disposition made by the father. And instead of the means left
exciting gratitude and reverence
for his memory, it creates dissatisfaction, murmuring, envy,
and disrespect. Brothers and sisters who were at peace with one
another are sometimes made at variance, and family dissensions
are often the result of inherited means. Riches are desirable
only as a means of supplying present wants and of doing good
to others. But inherited riches oftener become a snare to the
possessor than a blessing. Parents should not seek to have their
children encounter the temptations to which they expose them
in leaving them means which they themselves have made no effort
to earn.
I was shown that some children professing
to believe the truth would, in an indirect manner, influence
the father to keep his means for his children instead of appropriating
it to the cause of God while he lives. Those who have influenced
their father to shift his stewardship upon them little know what
they are doing. They are gathering upon themselves double responsibility,
that of balancing the father's mind so that he did not fulfill
the purpose of God in the disposition of the means lent him of
God to be used to His glory, and the additional responsibility
of becoming stewards of means that should have been put out to
the exchangers by the father, that the Master could have received
His own with usury.
Many parents make a great mistake in placing
their property out of their hands into the hands of their children
while they are themselves responsible for the use or abuse of
the talent lent them of God. Neither parents nor children are
made happier by this transfer of property. And the parents, if
they live a few years even, generally regret this action on their
part. Parental love in their children is not increased by this
course. The children do not feel increased gratitude and obligation
to their parents for their liberality. A curse seems to lay at
the root of the matter, which only crops out in selfishness on
the part of the children and unhappiness and miserable feelings
of cramped dependence on the part of the parents.
If parents, while they live, would assist
their children to help themselves, it would be better than to
leave them a large amount at death. Children who are left to
rely principally upon their own
exertions make better men and women, and are better fitted for
practical life than those children who have depended upon their
father's estate. The children left to depend upon their own resources
generally prize their abilities, improve their privileges, and
cultivate and direct their faculties to accomplish a purpose
in life. They frequently develop characters of industry, frugality,
and moral worth, which lie at the foundation of success in the
Christian life. Those children for whom parents do the most,
frequently feel under the least obligation toward them. The errors
of which we have spoken have existed in -----. Parents have shifted
their stewardship upon their children.
At the camp meeting at -----, 1870, I appealed
to those who had means to use that means in the cause of God
as His faithful stewards, and not leave this work for their children.
It is a work which God has left them to do, and when the Master
calls them to account, they can, as faithful stewards, render
to Him that which He has lent them, both principal and interest.
Brethren X, Y, Z were presented before
me. These men were making a mistake in regard to the appropriation
of their means. Some of their children were influencing them
in this work, and were gathering upon their souls responsibilities
that they were ill-prepared to bear. They were opening a door
and inviting the enemy to come in with his temptations to harass
and destroy them. The two younger sons of Brother X were in great
danger. They were associating with individuals of a stamp of
character which would not elevate, but would debase them. The
subtle influence of these associations was gaining an imperceptible
influence over these young men. The conversation and deportment
of evil companions were of that character to separate them from
the influence of their sisters and their sisters' husbands. While
speaking upon this subject at the camp meeting I felt deeply.
I knew the persons were before me whom I had seen in vision.
I urged upon those who heard me the necessity of thorough consecration
to God. I called no names, for I was not permitted to do this.
I was to dwell upon principles, appeal to
the hearts and consciences, and give those who professed to love
God and keep His commandments an opportunity to develop character.
God would send them warnings and admonitions, and if they really
desired to do His will they had an opportunity. Light was given,
and then we were to wait and see if they would come to the light.
I left the camp meeting with a burden of
anxiety upon my mind in reference to the persons whose danger
I had been shown. In a few months news reached us of Brother
Y's death. His property was left to his children. Last December
we had an appointment to hold meetings in Vermont. My husband
was indisposed and could not go. In order to save too great a
disappointment, I consented to go to Vermont in company with
Sister Hall. I spoke to the people with some freedom, but our
conference meetings were not free. I knew that the Spirit of
the Lord could not have a free course until confessions were
made and there was a breaking of heart before God. I could not
keep silent. The Spirit of the Lord was upon me, and I related
briefly the substance of what I have written. I called the names
of some present who were standing in the way of the work of God.
The result of leaving property to children
by will, and also of parents' shifting the responsibility of
their stewardship upon their children while the parents were
living, had been verified before them. Covetousness had led Brother
Y's sons to pursue a wrong course. This was especially true of
one of his sons. I labored faithfully, relating the things which
I had seen in reference to the church, especially to the sons
of Brother Y. One of these brothers, himself a father, was corrupt
in heart and life, a reproach to the precious cause of present
truth; his low standard of morals was corrupting to the youth.
The Spirit of the Lord came into the meetings,
and humble confessions were made by some, accompanied by tears.
After the meeting I had an interview with the younger sons of
Brother X. I pleaded with them, and entreated them for their
souls' sake to turn square about, break away
from the company of those who were leading them on to ruin, and
seek for the things which make for their peace. While pleading
for these young men, my heart was drawn out after them, and I
longed to see them submit to God. I prayed for them, and urged
them to pray for themselves. We were gaining the victory; they
were yielding. The voice of each was heard in humble, penitential
prayer, and I felt that indeed the peace of God rested upon us.
Angels seemed to be all around us, and I was shut up in a vision
of God's glory. The state of the cause at ----- was again shown
me. I saw that some had backslidden far from God. The youth were
in a state of backsliding.
I was shown that the two younger sons of
Brother X were naturally goodhearted, conscientious young men,
but that Satan had blinded their perception. Their companions
were not all of that class which would strengthen and improve
their morals or increase their understanding and love for the
truth and heavenly things. "One sinner destroyeth much good."
The ridicule and corrupt conversation of these companions had
had its effect to dispel serious and religious impressions.
It is wrong for Christians to associate
with those whose morals are loose. An intimate, daily intercourse
which occupies time without contributing in any degree to the
strength of the intellect or morals is dangerous. If the moral
atmosphere surrounding persons is not pure and sanctified, but
is tainted with corruption, those who breathe this atmosphere
will find that it operates almost insensibly upon the intellect
and heart to poison and to ruin. It is dangerous to be conversant
with those whose minds naturally take a low level. Gradually
and imperceptibly those who are naturally conscientious and love
purity will come to the same level and partake of and sympathize
with the imbecility and moral barrenness with which they are
so constantly brought in contact.
It was important that the associations
of these young men should change. "Evil communications corrupt
good manners." Satan has worked
through agents to ruin these young men. Nothing can more effectually
prevent or banish serious impressions and good desires than association
with vain, careless, and corrupt-minded persons. Whatever attractions
such persons may possess by their wit, sarcasm, and fun, the
fact that they treat religion with levity and indifference is
sufficient reason why they should not be associated with. The
more engaging they are in other respects, the more should their
influence be dreaded as companions, because they throw around
an irreligious life so many dangerous attractions.
These young men should choose for their
associates those who love the purity of truth, whose morals are
untainted, and whose habits are pure. They must comply with the
conditions laid down in the word of God, if they would indeed
become sons of God, members of the royal family, children of
the heavenly King. "Come out from among them, and be ye
separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing; and
I will receive you." God loves these young men, and if they
will follow the leadings of His Spirit, and walk in His counsel,
He will be their strength.
God has given Brother A Y good abilities,
quick perceptions, and a good understanding of His word. If his
heart were sanctified, he could have an influence for good with
his brothers, as well as his neighbors and those with whom he
associates. But the love of money has taken so firm a hold of
his soul, and has been so interwoven with all the transactions
of life, that he has become conformed to the world instead of
being transformed by the renewing of the mind. His powers have
been perverted and debased by sordid love of gain, which has
made him selfish, penurious, and overbearing. Had his qualities
been put into active use in his Master's service, rather than
used to serve his own selfish interests, had his object and aim
been to do good and glorify God, the qualities of mind that God
had given him would impart to his character an energy, humility,
and efficiency which could not fail to command respect and would
give him an influence over all with whom he associated.
I was shown that the property left by the
father had indeed been a root of bitterness to his children.
Their peace and happiness, and their confidence in one another,
had been greatly disturbed by it. Brother A Y did not need his
father's property. He had enough talents to handle that God had
entrusted to his management. If he made a right disposition of
that which he had, he would at least be among that number who
were faithful in that which is least. The addition of the stewardship
of his father's property, which he had covetously desired, was
a heavier responsibility than he could well manage.
For several years the love of money has
been rooting out the love of humanity and the love of God. And
as the means of his father were within his reach, he desired
to retain all that was possible in his own hands. He pursued
a selfish course toward his brothers because he had the advantage
and could do so. His brothers have not had right feelings. They
have felt bitter toward him. He has in deal advantaged himself
to the disadvantage of others until his course has reproached
the cause of God. He has lost command of himself. His greatest
object has been gain, selfish gain. The love of money in the
heart was the root of all this evil. I was shown that had he
turned his powers to labor in the vineyard of the Lord he would
have done much good, but these qualifications perverted can do
a great deal of harm.
The brothers B have not had the help they
ought to have had. A B has labored to great disadvantage. He
has taken too many burdens upon him, which has crippled his labors
so that he has not increased in spiritual strength and courage
as he should. The church, who have the light of truth, and should
be strong in God to will and do, and to sacrifice, if need be,
for the truth's sake, have been like weak children. They have
required the time and labor of Brother A B to settle difficulties
which should never have existed. And when these difficulties
have arisen because of selfishness and unsanctified hearts, they
could have been put away in an hour, had there been humility
and a spirit of confession.
The brothers B make a mistake in remaining
at -----. They should change their
location and not see this place oftener than a few times in the
year. They would have greater freedom in bearing their testimony.
These brethren have not felt freedom in speaking out truth and
facts as they have existed. If they had lived elsewhere, they
would have been more free from burdens, and their testimony would
have had tenfold more weight when they did visit this church.
While Brother A B has been weighed down with petty church trials
and kept at -----, he should have been laboring abroad. He has
served tables until his mind has become clouded, and he does
not comprehend the force and power of the truth. He has not been
awake to the real wants of the cause of God. He has been losing
spirituality and courage. The work of keeping up systematic benevolence
has been neglected. Some of the brethren, whose whole interest
was once in the advancement of the cause of God, have been growing
selfish and penurious instead of becoming more self-sacrificing
and their love for the truth and devotion to it increasing. They
have been growing less devotional and more like the world. Father
C is one of this number. He needs a new conversion. Brother C
has been favored with superior privileges, and if these are not
improved, condemnation and darkness will follow equal to the
light he has had, for the nonimprovement of the talents lent
of God for him to improve.
The brethren in Vermont have grieved the
Spirit of God in allowing their love for the truth and their
interest in the work of God to decline.
Brother D B overtaxed his strength last
season while laboring in new fields with the tent without suitable
help. God does not require this brother, or any of His servants,
to injure their health by exposure and taxing labor. The brethren
at ----- should have felt an interest that would have been shown
by their works. They could have secured help if they had been
awake to the interest of the cause of God and felt the worth
of souls. While Brother D B felt a deep sense of the work of
God and the value of souls, which called for continual effort,
a large church at ----- by their petty difficulties
held Brother A B from helping his brother.
These brothers should come up with renewed courage, shake themselves
from the trials and discouragements which have held them at -----
and crippled their testimony, and should claim strength from
the Mighty One. They should have borne a plain, free testimony
to Brother X and Y, and urged the truth home, and done what they
could to have these men make a proper distribution of their property.
Brother A B, in taking so many burdens, is lessening his mental
and physical strength.
If Brother C had been walking in the light
for a few years past, he would have felt the value of souls.
Had he been cultivating a love for the truth he might have been
qualified to teach the truth to others. He might have helped
Brother D B in his work with the tent. He might at least have
taken the burdens of the church at home. If he had had love for
his brethren, and been sanctified through the truth, he could
have been a peacemaker instead of a stirrer-up of strife, which,
united with other difficulties, called Brother A B from his brother's
side at a most important time and resulted in Brother D B's laboring
far beyond his strength. And yet, after Brother D B had done
all that he could, the work was not accomplished that might have
been had there been the interest there should have been in -----
to supply help when it was so much needed. A fearful responsibility
rests upon that church for their neglect of duty.
I was shown that Brother X's course in
dividing his property among his children was shifting the responsibility
upon them which he should not have laid off. He now sees that
the result of this course has brought to him no increase of affection
from his children. They have not felt under obligation to their
parents for what they have done for them. These children were
young and inexperienced. They were not qualified to bear the
responsibility laid upon them. Their hearts were unconsecrated,
and true friends were looked upon by them as designing enemies,
while those who would separate very friends were accepted. These
agents of Satan were continually suggesting false ideas to the
minds of these young men, and the
hearts of brothers and sisters, father and mother, were at variance.
Father X made a mistake. Had he confided
more in his daughters' husbands, who loved the truth in sincerity,
and had he been more willing to be helped by the advice of these
men of experience, great mistakes might have been prevented.
But this is the way the enemy generally succeeds in managing
matters in regard to the appropriation of means.
These cases mentioned were designed of
God to be developed that all might see the effect of the deceitfulness
of riches upon the heart. The result in these cases, which is
apparent to all, should prove a warning to fathers and mothers
and to ambitious children. The word of God defines covetousness
as idolatry. It is impossible for men and women to keep the law
of God and love money. The heart's affections should be placed
upon heavenly things. Our treasure should be laid up in heaven,
for where our treasure is, there will our heart be also.