Brother E: I have designed to write to
you for some time past, but have not found an opportunity to
do so until now. While speaking to the people last Sabbath, I
felt so clearly impressed with your case that I could with difficulty
refrain from calling your name in public. I will now unburden
my mind by writing you. In my last vision I was shown the deficiencies
of those who profess to labor in word and doctrine. I saw that
you had not been improving your abilities, but had been growing
less and less efficient to teach the truth. You need a thorough
conversion. You have a strong, set will, even to stubbornness.
You might now have been fitted for the solemn work of bearing
the message of truth to others had you been less self-confident
and more humble and meek in spirit.
You do not love close application nor the
taxation of continued effort. You have not been a persevering
student of the word of God, neither
have you been a zealous worker in the cause of God. Your life
has been far from representing the life of Christ. You are not
discriminating. You are not a wise, judicious worker. You do
not study to win souls to Christ, as every minister of Christ
should. You have a set track, a standard of your own, to which
you wish to bring the people; but you fail to do this because
they will not accept your standard. You are bigoted and frequently
carry things to extremes and thereby seriously hurt the cause
of God and turn souls from the truth instead of winning them
to it.
I was shown that you had spoiled several
good openings by your injudicious manner of laboring, and what
shall I say to you in regard to this matter? Souls have been
lost through your lack of wisdom in presenting the truth and
your failure to adorn your calling as a gospel minister by courtesy,
kindness, and long-suffering. True Christian politeness should
characterize all the actions of a minister of Christ. Oh, how
poorly have you represented our pitiful, compassionate Redeemer,
whose life was the embodiment of goodness and true purity. You
have turned souls from the truth by a harsh, censorious, overbearing
spirit. Your words have not been in the gentleness of Christ,
but in the spirit of E. Your nature is naturally coarse and unrefined,
and because you have never felt the necessity of true refinement
and Christian politeness, your life has not been as elevated
as it might have been.
You have remained in the rut of habit.
Your education and training have not been correct, and therefore
your efforts should have been the more earnest to improve, to
reform, and make decided and thorough changes. Unless you realize
a decided and thorough conversion in almost every respect you
are entirely unfitted to preach the truth, and unless you can
have a proper and becoming elevation of character, manners, and
address, you will do more harm than you can do good. You have
not done much in advancing the truth, for you have lingered about
the churches too much, when you could do them no good, but only
injury. Your ways and manners need refining
and sanctifying. You should no longer mar the work of God by
your deficiencies, since you have shown no decided improvement
in becoming a workman in the cause of God.
It is impossible for you to bring others
up to any higher standard than that to which you yourself attain.
If you do not advance, how can you lead the church of God forward
to a higher standard of piety and holiness? All such ministers
as you have been for several years are more of a curse than a
blessing to the cause of God, and the fewer we have of them the
more prosperous will be the cause of present truth.
You are not elevated in your ideas, or
aspiring in your labors. You are content to be commonplace and
to make a cheap minister. You do not aspire to perfection of
Christian character and to that position in the work that Christ
requires every one of His chosen ministers to attain. No one
professing to bear the truth to others is fitted for the responsible
work unless he is making advancement in knowledge and in consecration
to the work, and is improving his manners and temper, and growing
in true wisdom from day to day. Close communion with God is necessary
for every man who would guide souls into the truth. It should
ever be borne in mind by those who take upon themselves the burden
of guiding souls out of nature's darkness into the marvelous
light that they themselves must be advancing in that light, else
how can they lead others? If they are walking in darkness themselves,
it is a most fearful responsibility which they assume in pretending
to teach others the way.
You have engaged in labor in places where
you were not competent to do justice to the work which you undertook.
You did not labor judiciously. You sought to make up for your
lack of real knowledge by censuring other denominations, running
down others, and making hard and bitter criticisms upon their
course and condition. Had your heart been all aglow with the
spirit of truth, had you been sanctified to God and walking in
the light as Christ is in the light, you would have moved in
wisdom and would have had enough ways and means at your command
to maintain an interest without
going out of your way and aside from your specific work to rail
out against others who profess to be Christians.
Unbelievers have been disgusted; they think
that Seventh-day Adventists have been fairly represented by you,
and they decide that it is enough and that they want no more
of such doctrines. Our faith is unpopular at best and is in wide
contrast to the faith and practices of other denominations. In
order to reach those who are in the darkness of error and false
theories, we must approach them with the utmost caution and with
the greatest wisdom, agreeing with them on every point that we
can conscientiously.
All consideration should be shown for those
in error and all just credit given them for honesty. We should
come as near the people as possible, and then the light and truth
which we have may benefit them. But Brother E, like many of our
ministers, commences a warfare at once against the errors that
others cherish; he thus raises their combativeness and their
set wills, and this holds them encased in an armor of selfish
prejudice which no amount of evidence can remove.
Who but yourself will be responsible for
the souls that you have turned away from the truth by your unsanctified
labors? Who can break down the walls of prejudice which your
injudicious labor has built up? I know of no greater sin against
God than for men to engage in the ministry who labor in self
and not in Christ. They are looked up to as the representatives
of Christ, when they do not represent His spirit in any of their
labors. They do not see or realize the dangers attending the
efforts made by unconsecrated, unconverted men. They move on
like blind men, deficient in almost everything and yet self-confident
and self-sufficient, themselves walking in darkness and stumbling
at every step. They are bodies in darkness.
Brother E, you have narrow ideas, and your
labor has a tendency to lower rather than to elevate the truth.
This is not because you have no ability. You could have made
a good workman, but you are too indolent to make the effort necessary
to attain the object. You would rather come
down in a harsh and overbearing manner upon those who differ
with you than to take the trouble to elevate the tone of your
labor. You take positions, and then when they are questioned
you are not humble enough to yield your notions though they are
shown to be wrong; but you stand up in your independence and
firmly hold to your ideas when concession on your part is essential
and is required of you as a duty. You have stubbornly and unyieldingly
held to your own judgment and opinions to the sacrifice of souls.
Brother E, your set positions and your
strong, determined will to carry out your points at all hazards
were felt and deplored by your wife, and her health suffered
in consequence. You were not gentle and tender to this sensitive
child of God; your strong spirit overbore her more gentle disposition.
She grieved over many things. You could have made her life happier
had you tried; but you sought to have her see things as you saw
them, and, instead of trying to assimilate yourself to her refined
temperament, you tried to mold her to your coarser nature and
your extreme ideas. She was warped in her nature and could not
act out herself. She withered like a plant transplanted to an
uncongenial soil.
You should not seek to mold minds and characters
after your pattern, but should allow your own character to be
molded after the divine Pattern. If this world were composed
of men like yourself in character and temperament, woe would
be to it. As like would meet like whichever way you might turn,
you would be disgusted with your associates, the exact patterns
of yourself, and would wish to be out of the world.
You boast and glory in yourself. But, oh,
how improper is this for any man, even if he have the finest
qualities of mind and the most extended influence! Men of fine
qualities have the greatest influence because they do not know
their worth and how much good they do accomplish in the world.
But it is all out of place for men of your stamp of character
to be lifted up and boastful in self.
In your labors you frequently start out
well; you raise an interest, and conviction rests upon minds
that the arguments used cannot be controverted; but just at the
time when souls are balancing in favor of the truth, self appears
so plainly, is so prominent, that all which might have been gained,
had Jesus shone forth in your words and deportment, is lost.
You lack the very graces which are essential
to win souls to Christ and the truth. You can argue well; but
you have not an experimental knowledge of the divine will, and
for want of a religious experience yourself you are unable to
lead others to the Fountain of living waters. Your own soul is
not in communion with God, but is in darkness; and nothing can
supply the deficiency realized by souls groping their way in
the dark, except the light of truth. Unless you are thoroughly
converted, your efforts to convert others might as well cease
now as for you to labor longer, mangling and perverting the religious
standard by your narrow and bigoted ideas. You have not an experimental
knowledge of the divine will; your own righteousness seems to
you to be of value, when it is valueless. You need to be transformed
before you can be of use in the cause of God. When you are converted
then you can labor to acceptance.
You do not possess the religion of Christ.
You must soften your heart and die to self, and Christ must live
in you; then you will walk in the light as He is in the light,
and you will leave a bright track heavenward to lighten the pathway
of others. You have felt too well satisfied with yourself. You
should educate yourself and overcome your bigoted and fault-finding
spirit. You need to keep the body under and bring it into subjection,
lest, after you have preached to others, you yourself should
be a castaway.
You take small views of matters, pick at
straws, find fault, and question the course of others, when you
might far better be overcoming the defects in your own character
and life, working from a Christian standpoint, seeking light
from God, and preparing to unite with pure angels in the kingdom
of heaven. As you are, you would mar all heaven. You are
uncultivated, unrefined, and unsanctified.
There is no place in heaven for such a character as you now possess.
If you will take hold of the work earnestly
and, without making any apology for sin, will condemn sin in
the flesh and reach up in faith and hope for divine grace and
right judgment, you may overcome those deficiencies in your character
which disqualify you for laboring in the cause of God. You have
not advanced or improved for many years. You are further today
from the standard of Christian perfection, from possessing the
qualifications which should be found in the minister of the gospel,
than you were a few months after you had received the truth.
God is displeased with those who are not
intelligent in regard to the Christian religion and yet are trying
to lead others. You are correctly represented by the man who
sought to pull out a mote from his brother's eye when a beam
was in his own eye. First set your own heart in order, and reform
your own character; obtain a connection with God, and gain a
daily Christian experience; then you may bear a burden for souls
who are out of Christ.
There are but few of the brethren who have
taken more time to read different authors than you have, and
yet you are very deficient in the qualifications necessary for
a minister teaching the truth. You fail to quote, or even read,
the Scriptures correctly. This should not be. You have not advanced
in mental culture and have not secured a growth of grace in the
soul which would shine out in your words and deportment. You
have not felt the necessity of reaching up for higher and holier
attainments.
Chasing through books superficially clogs
the mind and causes you to become a mental dyspeptic. You cannot
digest and use one half that you read. If you should read with
the one object in view to improve the mind, and should read only
as much as the mind can comprehend and digest, and would patiently
persevere in such a course of reading, good results would be
accomplished. You, as well as other ministers, need to attend
school and to commence like a child to master
the first branches of knowledge. You can neither read, spell,
nor pronounce correctly, and yet there are but few who have had
less taxation and less burdens of responsibility to bear than
yourself.
The position of our ministers calls for
health of body and discipline of mind. Good sound sense, strong
nerves, and a cheerful temper will recommend the gospel minister
anywhere. These should be sought for and perseveringly cultivated.
Your life thus far has been unprofitable.
You have some very good ideas, but the Spirit of God does not
dwell in your heart. You are not quickened by His power, and
you have not genuine faith, hope, and love. The Spirit of Christ
dwelling in you will enable you to take of the things of God
and reveal them to others. You can be of no benefit to the cause
of God till the work of a faithful minister of Christ is more
exalted in your mind. You want a purpose in your life to do good,
as did Jesus. The self-denial and love which you manifest in
this work will tell upon the lives and characters of others.
You should get rid of your cold, frozen
formality as soon as possible. You need to cultivate feelings
of tenderness and friendliness in your everyday life. You should
exhibit true courtesy and Christian politeness. The heart that
really loves Jesus loves those for whom He died. Just as truly
as the needle points to the pole, so will the true follower of
Christ, with a spirit of earnest labor, seek to save souls for
whom Christ has given His life. Working for the salvation of
sinners will keep the love of Christ warm in the heart and will
give that love a proper growth and development. Without a correct
knowledge of the divine will there will be a lack of harmonious
development in the Christian character.
I beseech you, my brother, to become acquainted
with God. "The steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord."
Ministering angels mark every step of our progress. But your
will is not surrendered to God; your thoughts are not holy.
You go on, stumbling along in darkness, not
knowing where to place your feet. The Lord reveals His will to
those who are earnest and anxious to be guided. The reason for
your inefficiency is that you have given up the idea of knowing
and doing the will of God, therefore you do not know anything
positively. Though blind yourself, you attempt to lead the blind.
Oh, in what a position are you and many
other ministers! Having forsaken God, the Fountain of living
waters, you and they have hewn out to yourselves broken cisterns
that can hold no water. I entreat of you to be alarmed and turn
to the Lord with that deep and earnest repentance which will
secure to you His forgiveness and the enduring strength of His
might, that you may indeed be filled with all the fullness of
God. He frowns upon your course, for you have been as a stumbling
block to souls. You have depended on your own works and righteousness
for success, and have not a knowledge of the divine will.
May the Lord reveal to you your true character
and let you see your real deficiencies. When you are enlightened
by the Spirit of God to understand this you will have such a
sense of your sinful neglect and unimproved life as will strike
terror to your soul and cause you sorrow that will lead to repentance
that needeth not to be repented of.