Dear Youth: From time to time the Lord
has given me testimonies of warning for you. He has given you
encouragement if you would yield your hearts' best and holiest
affections to Him. As these warnings revive distinctly before
me, I feel a sense of your danger that I know you do not feel.
The school located in Battle Creek brings together many young
people of different mental organizations. If these youth are
not consecrated to God and obedient to His will, and do not walk
humbly in the way of His commandments, the location of a school
in Battle Creek will prove a means of great discouragement to
the church. This school may be made a blessing or a curse. I
entreat you who have named the name of Christ to depart from
all iniquity and develop characters that God can approve.
I inquire: Do you believe that the testimonies
of reproof which have been given you are of God? If you really
believe that the voice of God has spoken to you, pointing out
your dangers, do you heed the counsels given? Do you keep these
testimonies of warning fresh in your minds by reading them often
with prayerful hearts? The Lord has spoken to you, children and
youth, again and again; but you have been slow to heed the warnings
given. If you have not rebelliously braced your hearts against
the views that God has given of your characters and your dangers,
and against the course marked out
for you to pursue, some of you have been inattentive in regard
to the things required of you that you might gain spiritual strength
and be a blessing in the school, in the church, and to all with
whom you associate.
Young men and women, you are accountable
to God for the light that He has given you. This light and these
warnings, if not heeded, will rise up in the judgment against
you. Your dangers have been plainly stated; you have been cautioned
and guarded on every side, hedged in with warnings. In the house
of God you have listened to the most solemn, heart-searching
truths presented by the servants of God in demonstration of the
Spirit. What weight do these solemn appeals have upon your hearts?
What influence do they have upon your characters? You will be
held responsible for every one of these appeals and warnings.
They will rise up in the judgment to condemn those who pursue
a life of vanity, levity, and pride.
Dear young friends, that which you sow,
you will also reap. Now is the sowing time for you. What will
the harvest be? What are you sowing? Every word you utter, every
act you perform, is a seed which will bear good or evil fruit
and will result in joy or sorrow to the sower. As is the seed
sown, so will be the crop. God has given you great light and
many privileges. After this light has been given, after your
dangers have been plainly presented before you, the responsibility
becomes yours. The manner in which you treat the light that God
gives you will turn the scale for happiness or woe. You are shaping
your destinies for yourselves.
You all have an influence for good or for
evil on the minds and characters of others. And just the influence
which you exert is written in the book of records in heaven.
An angel is attending you and taking record of your words and
actions. When you rise in the morning, do you feel your helplessness
and your need of strength from God? and do you humbly, heartily
make known your wants to your heavenly Father? If so, angels
mark your prayers, and if these prayers have not gone forth out
of feigned lips, when you are in danger of unconsciously doing wrong and exerting an influence
which will lead others to do wrong, your guardian angel will
be by your side, prompting you to a better course, choosing your
words for you, and influencing your actions.
If you feel in no danger, and if you offer
no prayer for help and strength to resist temptations, you will
be sure to go astray; your neglect of duty will be marked in
the book of God in heaven, and you will be found wanting in the
trying day. There are some around you who have been religiously
instructed, and some who have been indulged, petted, flattered,
and praised until they have been literally spoiled for practical
life. I am speaking in regard to persons that I know. Their characters
are so warped by indulgence, flattery, and indolence that they
are useless for this life. And if useless so far as this life
is concerned, what may we hope for that life where all is purity
and holiness, and where all have harmonious characters? I have
prayed for these persons; I have addressed them personally. I
could see the influence that they would exert over other minds
in leading them to vanity, love of dress, and carelessness in
regard to their eternal interests. The only hope for this class
is for them to take heed to their ways, humble their proud, vain
hearts before God, make confession of their sins, and be converted.
Vanity in dress as well as the love of
amusement is a great temptation for the youth. God has sacred
claims upon us all. He claims the whole heart, the whole soul,
the whole affections. The answer which is sometimes made to this
statement is: "Oh, I do not profess to be a Christian!"
What if you do not? Has not God the same claims upon you that
He has upon the one who professes to be His child? Because you
are bold in your careless disregard of sacred things, is your
sin of neglect and rebellion passed over by the Lord? Every day
that you disregard the claims of God, every opportunity of offered
mercy that you slight, is charged to your account and will swell
the list of sins against you in the day when the accounts of
every soul will be investigated. I address you, young men and
women, professors or nonprofessors: God calls for your
affections, for your cheerful obedience and
devotion to Him. You now have a short time of probation, and
you may improve this opportunity to make an unconditional surrender
to God.
Obedience and submission to God's requirements
are the conditions given by the inspired apostle by which we
become children of God, members of the royal family. Every child
and youth, every man and woman, has Jesus rescued by His own
blood from the abyss of ruin to which Satan was compelling them
to go. Because sinners will not accept of the salvation freely
offered them, are they released from their obligations? Their
choosing to remain in sin and bold transgression does not lessen
their guilt. Jesus paid a price for them, and they belong to
Him. They are His property; and if they will not yield obedience
to Him who has given His life for them, but devote their time
and strength and talents to the service of Satan, they are earning
their wages, which is death. Immortal glory and eternal life
is the reward that our Redeemer offers to those who will be obedient
to Him. He has made it possible for them to perfect Christian
character through His name and to overcome on their own account
as He overcame in their behalf. He has given them an example
in His own life, showing them how they may overcome. "The
wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through
Jesus Christ our Lord."
The claims of God are equally binding upon
all. Those who choose to neglect the great salvation offered
to them freely, who choose to serve themselves and remain enemies
of God, enemies of the self-sacrificing Redeemer, are earning
their wages. They are sowing to the flesh and will of the flesh
reap corruption.
Those who have put on Christ by baptism,
by this act showing their separation from the world and that
they have covenanted to walk in newness of life, should not set
up idols in their hearts. Those who have once rejoiced in the
evidence of sins forgiven, who have tasted a Saviour's love and
who then persist in uniting with the foes of Christ, rejecting
the perfect righteousness that
Jesus offers them and choosing the ways that He has condemned,
will be more severely judged than the heathen who have never
had the light and have never known God or His law. Those who
refuse to follow the light which God has given them, choosing
the amusements, vanities, and follies of the world, and refusing
to conform their conduct to the just and holy requirements of
God's law, are guilty of the most aggravating sins in the sight
of God. Their guilt and their wages will be proportionate to
the light and privileges which they have had.
We see the world absorbed in their own
amusements. The first and highest thoughts of the larger portion,
especially of women, are of display. Love of dress and pleasure
is wrecking the happiness of thousands. And some of those who
profess to love and keep the commandments of God ape this class
as near as they possibly can and retain the Christian name. Some
of the young are so eager for display that they are even willing
to give up the Christian name if they can only follow out their
inclination for vanity of dress and love of pleasure. Self-denial
in dress is a part of our Christian duty. To dress plainly, abstaining
from display of jewelry and ornaments of every kind, is in keeping
with our faith. Are we of the number who see the folly of worldlings
in indulging in extravagance of dress as well as in love of amusements?
If so, we should be of that class who shun everything that gives
sanction to this spirit which takes possession of the minds and
hearts of those who live for this world only and who have no
thought or care for the next.
Christian youth, I have seen in some of
you a love for dress and display which has pained me. In some
who have been well instructed, who have had religious privileges
from their babyhood, and who have put on Christ by baptism, thus
professing to be dead to the world, I have seen a vanity in dress
and a levity in conduct that have grieved the dear Saviour and
have been a reproach to the cause of God. I have marked with
pain your religious declension and your disposition to trim and
ornament your apparel. Some have been so unfortunate as to come into possession of gold chains
or pins, or both, and have shown bad taste in exhibiting them,
making them conspicuous to attract attention. I can but associate
these characters with the vain peacock, that displays his gorgeous
feathers for admiration. It is all this poor bird has to attract
attention, for his voice and form are anything but attractive.
The young may endeavor to excel in seeking
for the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit, a jewel of inestimable
value that may be worn with heavenly grace. This adorning will
possess attractions for many in this world, and will be esteemed
of great price by the heavenly angels, and above all by our heavenly
Father, and will fit the wearers to be welcome guests in the
heavenly courts.
The youth have faculties that, with proper
cultivation, would qualify them for almost any position of trust.
If they had made it their object in obtaining an education to
so exercise and develop the powers that God has given them that
they might be useful and prove a blessing to others, their minds
would not be dwarfed to an inferior standard. They would show
depth of thought and firmness of principle, and would command
influence and respect. They might have an elevating influence
upon others, which would lead souls to see and acknowledge the
power of an intelligent Christian life. Those who have greater
care to ornament their persons for display than to educate the
mind and exercise their powers for the greatest usefulness, that
they may glorify God, do not realize their accountability to
God. They will be inclined to be superficial in all they undertake
and will narrow their usefulness and dwarf their intellect.
I feel deeply pained at heart for the fathers
and mothers of these youth, as well as for the children. There
has been a lack in the training of these children, which leaves
a heavy responsibility somewhere. Parents who have petted and
indulged their children instead of from principle judiciously
restraining them, can see the characters they have formed. As
the training has been, so the character inclines.