December 10, 1871, I was again shown that
the health reform is one branch of the great work which is to
fit a people for the coming of the Lord. It is as closely connected
with the third angel's message as the hand is with the body.
The law of Ten Commandments has been lightly regarded by man,
but the Lord would not come to punish the transgressors of that
law without first sending them a message of warning. The third
angel proclaims that message. Had men ever been obedient to the
law of Ten Commandments, carrying out in their lives the principles
of those precepts, the curse of disease now flooding the world
would not be.
Men and women cannot violate natural law
by indulging depraved appetite and lustful passions, and not
violate the law of God. Therefore He has permitted the light
of health reform to shine upon us, that we may see our sin in
violating the laws which He has established in our being. All
our enjoyment or suffering may be traced to obedience or transgression
of natural law. Our gracious heavenly Father sees the deplorable
condition of men who, some knowingly but many ignorantly, are
living in violation of the laws that He has established. And
in love and pity to the race, He causes the light to shine upon
health reform. He publishes His law and the penalty that will
follow the transgression of it, that all may learn and be careful
to live in harmony with natural law. He proclaims His law so
distinctly and makes it so prominent that it is like a city set
on a hill. All accountable beings can understand it if they will.
Idiots will not be responsible. To make plain natural law, and
urge the obedience of it, is the work that accompanies the third
angel's message to prepare a people for the coming of the Lord.
Adam and Eve fell through intemperate appetite.
Christ came and withstood the fiercest temptation of Satan and,
in behalf of the race, overcame appetite, showing that man may
overcome. As Adam fell through appetite and lost blissful
Eden, the children of Adam may, through Christ,
overcome appetite and through temperance in all things regain
Eden.
Ignorance is no excuse now for the transgression
of law. The light shines clearly, and none need be ignorant,
for the great God Himself is man's instructor. All are bound
by the most sacred obligations to God to heed the sound philosophy
and genuine experience which He is now giving them in reference
to health reform. He designs that the great subject of health
reform shall be agitated and the public mind deeply stirred to
investigate; for it is impossible for men and women, with all
their sinful, health-destroying, brain-enervating habits, to
discern sacred truth, through which they are to be sanctified,
refined, elevated, and made fit for the society of heavenly angels
in the kingdom of glory.
The inhabitants of the Noachian world were
destroyed because they were corrupted through the indulgence
of perverted appetite. Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed
through the gratification of unnatural appetite, which so benumbed
the intellect that they could not discern the difference between
the sacred claims of God and the clamor of appetite. The latter
enslaved them, and they became so ferocious and bold in their
detestable abominations that God would not tolerate them upon
the earth. God ascribes the wickedness of Babylon to her gluttony
and drunkenness.
The apostle Paul exhorts the church: I
beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that
ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto
God, which is your reasonable service." Men, then, can make
their bodies unholy by sinful indulgences. If unholy, they are
unfitted to be spiritual worshipers and are not worthy of heaven.
If man will cherish the light that God in mercy gives him upon
health reform, he may be sanctified through the truth and fitted
for immortality. But if he disregards that light and lives in
violation of natural law he must pay the penalty.
God created man perfect and holy. But man
fell from his holy estate because he transgressed God's law.
Since the Fall there has been a
rapid increase of disease, suffering, and death. Yet notwithstanding
man has insulted his Creator, God's love is still extended to
the race; and He permits light to shine that man may see that
in order to live a perfect life he must live in harmony with
those natural laws which govern his being. Therefore it is of
the greatest importance that he know how to live so that his
powers of body and mind may be exercised to the glory of God.
It is impossible for man to present his
body a living sacrifice, holy, and acceptable to God, while,
because it is customary for the world to do so, he is indulging
in habits that are lessening physical, mental, and moral vigor.
The apostle adds: "And be not conformed to this world: but
be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove
what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God."
Jesus, seated upon the Mount of Olives, gave instruction to His
disciples concerning the signs which should precede His coming.
He said: "But as the days of Noah were, so shall also the
coming of the Son of man be. For as in the days that were before
the Flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving
in marriage, until the day that Noah entered into the ark, and
knew not until the Flood came, and took them all away; so shall
also the coming of the Son of man be."
The same sins exist in our day which brought
the wrath of God upon the world in the days of Noah. Men and
women now carry their eating and drinking to gluttony and drunkenness.
This prevailing sin, the indulgence of perverted appetite, inflamed
the passions of men in the days of Noah and led to general corruption,
until their violence and crimes reached to heaven, and God washed
the earth of its moral pollution by a flood.
The same sins of gluttony and drunkenness
benumbed the moral sensibilities of the inhabitants of Sodom
so that crimes seemed to be the delight of the men and women
of that wicked city. Christ thus warns the world: "Likewise
also as it was in the days of Lot; they did eat, they drank,
they bought, they sold, they planted,
they builded; but the same day that Lot went out of Sodom it
rained fire and brimstone from heaven, and destroyed them all.
Even thus shall it be in the day when the Son of man is revealed."
Christ has here left us a most important
lesson. He does not in His teaching encourage indolence. His
example was the opposite of this. Christ was an earnest worker.
His life was one of self-denial, diligence, perseverance, industry,
and economy. He would lay before us the danger of making eating
and drinking paramount. He reveals the result of giving up to
indulgence of appetite. The moral powers are enfeebled so that
sin does not appear sinful. Crimes are winked at, and base passions
control the mind until general corruption roots out good principles
and impulses, and God is blasphemed. All this is the result of
eating and drinking to excess. This is the very condition of
things which He declares will exist at His second coming.
Will men and women be warned? Will they
cherish the light, or will they become slaves to appetite and
base passions? Christ presents to us something higher to toil
for than merely what we shall eat, and what we shall drink, and
wherewithal we shall be clothed. Eating, drinking, and dressing
are carried to such excess that they become crimes, and are among
the marked sins of the last days, and constitute a sign of Christ's
soon coming. Time, money, and strength, which are the Lord's,
but which He has entrusted to us, are wasted in needless superfluities
of dress and luxuries for the perverted appetite, which lessen
vitality and bring suffering and decay. It is impossible to present
our bodies a living sacrifice to God when they are filled with
corruption and disease by our own sinful indulgence.
Knowledge must be gained in regard to how
to eat and drink and dress so as to preserve health. Sickness
is caused by violating the laws of health; it is the result of
violating nature's law. Our first duty, one which we owe to God,
to ourselves, and to our fellow men, is to obey the laws of God,
which include the laws of health. If we are sick we impose
a weary tax upon our friends and unfit ourselves
for discharging our duties to our families and to our neighbors.
And when premature death is the result of our violation of nature's
law, we bring sorrow and suffering to others; we deprive our
neighbors of the help we ought to render them in living; we rob
our families of the comfort and help we might render them, and
rob God of the service He claims of us to advance His glory.
Then, are we not, in the worst sense, transgressors of God's
law?
But God is all-pitiful, gracious, and tender,
and when light comes to show who have injured their health by
sinful indulgences, and they are convinced of sin, and repent
and seek pardon, He accepts the poor offering rendered to Him,
and receives them. Oh, what tender mercy that He does not refuse
the remnant of the abused life of the suffering, repenting sinner!
In His gracious mercy He saves these souls as by fire. But what
an inferior, pitiful sacrifice, at best, to offer to a pure and
holy God! Noble faculties have been paralyzed by wrong habits
of sinful indulgence. The aspirations are perverted, and the
soul and body defaced.