Brother A, your experience in reference
to leadership two years ago was for your own benefit and was
highly essential to you. You had very marked, decided views in
regard to individual independence and right to private judgment.
These views you carry to extremes. You reason that you must have
light and evidence for yourself in reference to your duty.
I have been shown that no man's judgment
should be surrendered to the judgment of any one man. But when
the judgment of the General Conference, which is the highest
authority that God has upon the earth, is exercised, private
independence and private judgment must not be maintained, but
be surrendered. Your error was in persistently maintaining your
private judgment of your duty against the voice of the highest
authority the Lord has upon the earth. After you had taken your
own time, and after the work had been much hindered by your delay,
you came to Battle Creek in answer to the repeated and urgent
calls of the General Conference. You firmly maintained that you
had done right in following your own convictions of duty. You
considered it a virtue in you to persistently maintain your position
of independence. You did not seem to have a true sense of the
power that God has given to His church in the voice of the General
Conference. You thought that in responding to the call made to
you by the General Conference you were submitting to the judgment
and mind of one man. You accordingly manifested an independence,
a set, willful spirit, which was all wrong.
God gave you a precious experience at that
time which was of value to you, and which has greatly increased
your success as a minister of Christ. Your proud, unyielding
will was subdued. You had a genuine conversion. This led to reflection
and to your position upon leadership. Your principles in regard
to leadership are right, but you do not make the right application
of them. If you should let the power in the church, the voice
and judgment of the General Conference, stand in the place you
have given my husband, there could then be no fault found with
your position. But you greatly err in giving to one man's mind
and judgment that authority and influence which God has invested
in His church in the judgment and voice of the General Conference.
When this power which God has placed in
the church is accredited to one man, and he is invested with
the authority to be judgment for other minds, then the true Bible
order is changed. Satan's efforts upon such a man's mind will
be most subtle and sometimes overpowering, because through this
mind he thinks he can affect many others. Your position on leadership
is correct, if you give to the highest organized authority in
the church what you have given to one man. God never designed
that His work should bear the stamp of one man's mind and one
man's judgment.
The great reason why Brethren B and C are
at this time deficient in the experience they should now have
is because they have not been self-reliant. They have shunned
responsibilities because in assuming them their deficiencies
would be brought to the light. They have been too willing to
have my husband lead out and bear responsibilities, and have
allowed him to be mind and judgment for them. These brethren
are weak where they should be strong. They have not dared to
follow their own independent judgment, lest they should make
mistakes and be blamed for it, while they have stood ready to
be tempted and to make my husband responsible if they thought
they could see mistakes in his course. They have not lifted the
burdens with him. They have referred continually to my
husband, making him bear the responsibilities which they should have shared with him, until they
are weak in those qualifications wherein they should be strong.
They are weak in moral power when they might be giants, qualified
to stand as pillars in the cause of God.
These brethren have not self-reliance,
or confidence that God will indeed lead them if they follow the
light He has given them. God never intended that strong, independent
men of superior intellect should cling to others for support
as the ivy clings to the oak. All the difficulties, the backsets,
the hardships, and the disappointments which God's servants will
meet in active labor will only strengthen them in the formation
of correct characters. By putting their own energies of mind
to use, the obstacles they meet will prove to them positive blessings.
They will gain mental and spiritual muscle to be used upon important
occasions with the very best results. They will learn self-reliance
and will gain confidence in their own experience that God is
really leading and guiding them. And as they meet peril and have
real anguish of spirit they are obliged to meditate and are made
to feel the necessity of prayer in their effort to move understandingly
and work to advantage in the cause of God; they find that conflict
and perplexity call for the exercise of faith and trust in God,
and for that firmness which develops power. Necessities are constantly
arising for new ways and means to meet emergencies. Faculties
are called into use that would lie dormant were it not for these
pressing necessities in the work of God. This gives a varied
experience so that there will be no use for men of one idea and
those who are only half developed.
Men of might and power in this cause, whom
God will use to His glory, are those who have been opposed, baffled,
and thwarted in their plans. Brethren B and C might have turned
their own failures into important victories; but, instead of
this, they have shunned the responsibilities which would make
liability to mistakes possible. These precious brethren have
failed to gain that education which is strengthened by experience
and which reading and study and all the advantages
otherwise gained will never give them.
You, Brother A, have had strength to bear
some responsibilities. God has accepted your energetic labors
and blessed your efforts. You have made some mistakes, but because
of some failures you should in nowise misjudge your capabilities
nor distrust the strength that you may find in God. You have
not been willing and ready to assume responsibilities. You are
naturally inclined to shun them and to choose an easier position,
to write and exercise the mind where no special, vital interests
are involved. You make a mistake in relying upon my husband to
tell you what to do. This is not the work God has given my husband.
You should search out what is to be done and lift the disagreeable
burdens yourself. God will bless you in so doing. You must bear
burdens in connection with the work of God according to your
best judgment. But you must be guarded, lest your judgment shall
be influenced by the opinions of others. If it is apparent that
you have made mistakes, it is your privilege to turn these failures
into victories by avoiding the same in the future. By being told
what to do you will never gain the experience necessary for any
important position.
The same is applicable to all who are standing
in the different positions of trust in the various offices at
Battle Creek. They are not to be coaxed and petted and helped
at every turn, for this will not make men competent for important
positions. It is obstacles that make men strong. It is not helps,
but difficulties, conflicts, rebuffs, that make men of moral
sinew. Too much ease and avoiding responsibility have made weaklings
and dwarfs of those who ought to be responsible men of moral
power and strong spiritual muscle.
Men who ought to be as true in every emergency
as the needle to the pole, have become inefficient by their efforts
to shield themselves from censure and by evading responsibilities
for fear of failure. Men of giant intellect are babes in discipline
because they are cowardly in regard to taking
and bearing the burdens they should. They are neglecting to become
efficient. They have too long trusted one man to plan for them
and to do the thinking which they are highly capable of doing
themselves in the interest of the cause of God. Mental deficiencies
meet us at every point. Men who are content to let others plan
and do their thinking for them are not fully developed. If they
were left to plan for themselves they would be found judicious,
close-calculating men. But when brought into connection with
God's cause, it is entirely another thing to them; they lose
this faculty almost altogether. They are content to remain as
incompetent and inefficient as though others must do the planning
and much of the thinking for them. Some men appear to be utterly
unable to hew out a path for themselves. Must they ever rely
upon others to do their planning and their studying, and to be
mind and judgment for them? God is ashamed of such soldiers.
He is not honored by their having any part to act in His work
while they are mere machines.
Independent men of earnest endeavor are
needed, not men as impressible as putty. Those who want their
work made ready to their hand, who desire a fixed amount to do
and a fixed salary, and who wish to prove an exact fit without
the trouble of adaptation or training, are not the men whom God
calls to work in His cause. A man who cannot adapt his abilities
to almost any place if necessity requires is not the man for
this time. Men whom God will connect with His work are not limp
and fiberless, without muscle or moral force of character. It
is only by continued and persevering labor that men can be disciplined
to bear a part in the work of God. These men should not become
discouraged if circumstances and surroundings are the most unfavorable.
They should not give up their purpose as a complete failure until
they are convinced beyond a doubt that they cannot do much for
the honor of God and the good of souls.
There are men who flatter themselves that
they might do something great and good if they were only circumstanced
differently, while they make no use of the faculties they already
have by working in the positions where Providence
has placed them. Man can make his circumstances, but circumstances
should never make the man. Man should seize circumstances as
his instruments with which to work. He should master circumstances,
but should never allow circumstances to master him. Individual
independence and individual power are the qualities now needed.
Individual character need not be sacrificed, but it should be
modulated, refined, elevated.
I have been shown that it is my husband's
duty to lay off the responsibilities which others would be glad
to have him bear because it excuses them from many difficulties.
My husband's ready judgment and clear discernment, which have
been gained through training and exercise, have led him to take
on many burdens which others should have borne.
Brother A, you are too slow. You should
cultivate opposite qualities. The cause of God demands men who
can see quickly and act instantaneously at the right time and
with power. If you wait to measure every difficulty and balance
every perplexity you meet you will do but little. You will have
obstacles and difficulties to encounter at every turn, and you
must with firm purpose decide to conquer them, or they will conquer
you.
Sometimes various ways and purposes, different
modes of operation in connection with the work of God, are about
evenly balanced in the mind; but it is at this very point that
the nicest discrimination is necessary. And if anything is accomplished
to the purpose it must be done at the golden moment. The slightest
inclination of the weight in the balance should be seen and should
determine the matter at once. Long delays tire the angels. It
is even more excusable to make a wrong decision sometimes than
to be continually in a wavering position, to be hesitating, sometimes
inclined in one direction, then in another. More perplexity and
wretchedness result from thus hesitating and doubting than from
sometimes moving too hastily.
I have been shown that the most signal
victories and the most fearful defeats have been on the turn
of minutes. God requires promptness
of action. Delays, doubtings, hesitation, and indecision frequently
give the enemy every advantage. My brother, you need to reform.
The timing of things may tell much in favor of truth. Victories
are frequently lost through delays. There will be crises in this
cause. Prompt and decisive action at the right time will gain
glorious triumphs, while delay and neglect will result in great
failures and positive dishonor to God. Rapid movements at the
critical moment often disarm the enemy, and he is disappointed
and vanquished, for he had expected time to lay plans and work
by artifice.
God wants men connected with His work in
Battle Creek whose judgment is at hand, whose minds, when it
is necessary, will act like the lightnings. The greatest promptness
is positively necessary in the hour of peril and danger. Every
plan may be well laid to accomplish certain results, and yet
a delay of a very short time may leave things to assume an entirely
different shape, and the great objects which might have been
gained are lost through lack of quick foresight and prompt dispatch.
Much may be done in training the mind to overcome indolence.
There are times when caution and great deliberation are necessary;
rashness would be folly. But even here, much has been lost by
too great hesitancy. Caution, up to a certain point, is required;
but hesitancy and policy on particular occasions have been more
disastrous than would have been a failure through rashness.
My brother, you need to cultivate promptness.
Away with your hesitating manner. You are slow and neglect to
seize the work and accomplish it. You must get out of this narrow
manner of labor, for it is of the wrong order. When unbelief
takes hold of your soul, your labor is of such a hesitating,
halting, balancing kind that you accomplish nothing yourself
and hinder others from doing. You have just enough interest to
see difficulties and start doubts, but have not the interest
or courage to overcome the difficulties or dispel the doubts.
At such times you need to surrender to God. You need force
f character and less stubbornness and set
willfulness. This slowness, this sluggishness of action, is one
of the greatest defects in your character and stands in the way
of your usefulness.
Your slowness of decision in connection
with the cause and work of God is sometimes painful. It is not
at all necessary. Prompt and decisive action may accomplish great
results. You are generally willing to work when you feel just
like it, ready to do when you can see clearly what is to be done;
but you fail to be that benefit to the cause that you might be
if you were prompt and decisive at the critical moment, and would
overcome the habit of hesitation and delay which has marked your
character and which has greatly retarded the work of God. This
defect, unless overcome, will prove, in instances of great crises,
disastrous to the cause and fatal to your own soul. Punctuality
and decisive action at the right time must be acquired, for you
have not these qualities. In the warfare and battles of nations
there is often more gained by good management in prompt action
than in earnest, dead encounter with the enemy.
The ability to do business with dispatch,
and yet do it thoroughly, is a great acquisition. My brother,
you have really felt that your cautious, hesitating course was
commendable, rather a virtue than a wrong. But from what the
Lord has shown me in this matter, these sluggish movements on
your part have greatly hindered the work of God and caused many
things to be left undone which in justice ought to have been
done with promptness. It will be difficult now for you to make
the changes in your character which God requires you to make,
because it was difficult for you to be punctual and prompt of
action in youth. When the character is formed, the habits fixed,
and the mental and moral faculties have become firm, it is most
difficult to unlearn wrong habits, to be prompt in action. You
should realize the value of time. You are not excusable for leaving
the most important, though unpleasant work, hoping to get rid
of doing it altogether, or thinking that it will become less
unpleasant, while you occupy your time upon pleasant matters
not really taxing. You should first do the
work which must be done and which involves the vital interests
of the cause, and only take up the less important matters after
the more essential are accomplished. Punctuality and decision
in the work and cause of God are highly essential. Delays are
virtually defeats. Minutes are golden and should be improved
to the very best account. Earthly relations and personal interests
should ever be secondary. Never should the cause of God be left
to suffer, in a single particular, because of our earthly friends
or dearest relatives.
"And He said to another, Follow Me.
But he said, Lord, suffer me first to go and bury my father.
Jesus said unto him, Let the dead bury their dead: but go thou
and preach the kingdom of God. And another also said, Lord, I
will follow Thee; but let me first go bid them farewell, which
are at home at my house. And Jesus said unto him, No man, having
put his hand to the plow, and looking back, is fit for the kingdom
of God."
No earthly ties, no earthly considerations,
should weigh one moment in the scale against duty to the cause
and work of God. Jesus severed His connection from everything
to save a lost world, and He requires of us a full and entire
consecration. There are sacrifices to be made for the interests
of God's cause. The sacrifice of feeling is the most keen that
is required of us; yet after all it is a small sacrifice. You
have plenty of friends, and if the feelings are only sanctified,
you need not feel that you are making a very great sacrifice.
You do not leave your wife among heathen. You are not called
to tread the burning African desert or to face prisons and encounter
trial at every step. Be careful how you appeal to your sympathies
and let human feelings and personal considerations mingle with
your efforts and labors for the cause of God. He demands unselfish
and willing service. You can render this and yet do all your
duties to your family; but hold this as a secondary matter.
My husband and myself have made mistakes
in consenting to take responsibilities that others should carry.
In the commencement of this work a man was needed to propose,
to execute with determination,
and to lead out battling with error and surmounting obstacles.
My husband bore the heaviest burden and met the most determined
opposition. But when we became a fully organized body, and several
men were chosen to act in responsible positions, then it was
the proper time for my husband to cease to act longer as one
man to stand under the responsibilities and carry the heavy burdens.
This labor devolved on more than one. Here is where the mistake
has been made by his brethren in urging him, and by himself in
consenting, to stand under the burdens and responsibilities that
he had borne alone for years. He should have laid down these
burdens years ago, and they should have been divided with other
men chosen to act in behalf of the people Satan would be pleased
to have one man's mind and one man's judgment control the minds
and judgment of those who believe the present truth.
My husband has frequently been left almost
alone to see and feel the wants of the cause of God and to act
promptly. His leading brethren were not deficient in intellect,
but they lacked a willing mind to stand in the position which
my husband has occupied. They have inconsistently allowed a paralytic
to bear the burdens and responsibilities of this work, which
no one of them alone could endure with their strong nerves and
firm muscles. He has sometimes used apparent severity and has
spoken so as to give offense. When he has seen others who might
have shared his burdens avoiding responsibilities, it has grieved
him to the heart, and he has spoken impulsively. He has not been
placed in this unreasonable position by the Lord, but by his
brethren. His life has been but little better than a species
of slavery. The constant trial, the harassing care, the exhausting
brainwork, have not been valued by his brethren. He has led an
unenjoyable life, and he has increased his unhappiness by complaining
of his brother ministers who neglected to do what they might
have done. Nature has been outraged time and again. While his
brethren have found fault with him for doing so much, they have
not come up to take their share of the responsibility, but have
been too willing to make him responsible
for everything. You came nobly up to bear responsibilities when
there were no others who would lift them. If his brethren in
the ministry had cultivated a willingness to lift the burdens
they should have borne, my husband would not have seen and done
so much work which needed to be done and which he thought must
not be neglected.
God has not suffered the life of my husband
to end ingloriously. He has sustained him. But the man who performs
double labor, who crowds the work of two years into one, is burning
his candle at both ends. There is yet a work for my husband to
do which he should have done years ago. He should now have less
of the strife, perplexity, and responsibility of life, and be
ripening, softening, and elevating for his last change. He should
now husband his strength. He should not allow the responsibilities
of the cause to rest upon him so heavily, but should stand free,
where the prejudices and suspicions of his brethren will not
disturb his peace.
God has permitted the precious light of
truth to shine upon His word and illuminate the mind of my husband.
He may reflect the rays of light from the presence of Jesus upon
others by his preaching and writing. But while serving tables,
doing business in connection with the cause, he has been deprived,
to a great degree, of the privilege of using his pen and of preaching
to the people.
He has felt that he was called of God to
stand in defense of the truth, and to reprove, sometimes severely,
those who were not doing justice to the work. The pressure of
care and the affliction of disease have often thrown him into
discouragement, and he has sometimes viewed matters in an exaggerated
light. His brethren have taken advantage of his words, and of
his prompt manners, which have been in marked contrast with their
tardy labor and narrow plans of operation. They have accredited
to my husband motives and feelings which were not his due. The
wide contrast between themselves and him seemed like a gulf;
but this might easily have been bridged, had these men of intellect
put their undivided interests and
whole hearts into the work of building up and advancing the precious
cause of God.
We might exert a constant influence in
this place, at the head of the work, which would advance the
prosperity of our institutions. But the course of others who
do not do what they might, who are subject to temptation, and
who, if their track is crossed, would reflect upon our most earnest
efforts for the prosperity of God's cause, compels us to seek
an asylum elsewhere where we may work to better advantage with
less danger of being crushed under burdens. God has given us
great freedom and power with His people at Battle Creek. When
we came to this place last summer, our work commenced in earnest,
and it has continued ever since. One perplexity and difficulty
has followed closely upon another, calling forth taxing labor
to set things right.
When the Lord showed that Brother D might
be the man for the place, if he remained humble and relied upon
His strength, He did not make a blunder and select the wrong
man. For a time Brother D had a true interest and acted as a
father at the Health Institute. But he became self-exalted, self-sufficient.
He pursued a wrong course. He yielded to temptation. The excuses
which the directors have made for their neglect of duty are all
wrong. Their shifting responsibilities upon Brother and Sister
White is marked against them. They simply neglected their duty
because it was unpleasant.
I saw that help was needed upon the Pacific
Coast. But God would not have us take the responsibilities or
bear the perplexities which belong to others. We may stand as
counselors and help them with our influence and our judgment.
We may do much if we will not be induced to get under the load
and bear the weight which others should bear, and which it is
important for them to bear in order to gain a necessary experience.
We have important matter to write out which the people greatly
need. We have precious light on Bible truth which we should speak
to the people.
I was shown that God did not design that
my husband should bear the burdens he has borne for the last
five months. The working part in
connection with the cause has been left to fall upon him. This
has brought perplexity, weariness, and nervous debility, which
have resulted in discouragement and depression. From the commencement
of the cause there has been a lack of harmonious action on the
part of his brethren. His brethren in the ministry have loved
freedom. They have not borne the responsibilities which they
might, and have failed to gain the experience which they might
have had to enable them to stand in the most responsible positions
relative to the vital interests of the cause of God at the present
time. They have excused their neglect to bear responsibilities
on the ground that they feared being reflected upon afterward.
The religion we profess is colored by our
natural dispositions and temperaments; therefore it is of the
highest importance that the weak points in our character be strengthened
by exercise and that the strong, unfavorable points be weakened
by working in an opposite direction and by strengthening opposite
qualities. But some brethren have not done what they might and
should have done, and which would have given my husband sufficient
encouragement and help to continue to bear some responsibilities
at the head of the work. His fellow laborers did not move independently,
looking to God for light and for duty for themselves; they did
not follow in His opening providence and consult together upon
plans of operation and unite in their plans and manner of labor.
Since coming to Michigan last summer, the
Lord has especially blessed the labors of my husband. He has
been sustained in a most remarkable manner to do work that so
much needed to be done. Had those associated with him been awake
to see and understand the wants of the cause of God at our last
Michigan camp meeting, the many things not done might have been
accomplished. There was a failure to meet the wants of the occasion.
Had Brother A stood cheerful in God, walking in the light, ready
to see what was to be done, and executing the work with dispatch,
we should now be months advanced in our work, and we might long
ago have been working to establish the press upon the Pacific
Coast. God cannot be glorified
by our falling into singular gloom and then remaining under the
cloud. The light does shine, although we may not realize its
blessing; but if we make all diligence to press to the light,
and if we move ahead just as though the light did shine, we shall
soon pass out of the darkness and find light all around us.
At our last camp meeting the angels of
God in a special manner came with their power to lighten, to
heal, and to bless both my husband and Brother Waggoner. A precious
victory was there gained which should never lose its influence.
I have been shown that God had in a most marked manner given
my husband tokens of His love and care, and also of His sustaining
grace. He has regarded his zeal and devotion to His cause and
work. This should ever lead to humility and gratitude on the
part of my husband.
God wants minutemen. He will have men who,
when important decisions are to be made, are as true as the needle
to the pole; men whose special and personal interests are swallowed
up, as were our Saviour's, in the one great general interest
for the salvation of souls. Satan plays upon the human mind wherever
a chance has been left for him to do so; and he seizes upon the
very time and place where he can do the most service to himself
and the greatest injury to the cause of God. A neglect to do
what we might do, and what God requires us to do in His cause,
is a sin which cannot be palliated with excuses of circumstances
or conditions, for Jesus has made provision for all in every
emergency.
My brother, in doing the work of God you
will be placed in a variety of circumstances which will require
self-possession and self-control, but which will qualify you
to adapt yourself to circumstances and the peculiarities of the
situation. Then you can act yourself unembarrassed. You should
not place too low an estimate upon your ability to act your part
in the various callings of practical life. Where you are aware
of deficiencies, go to work at once to remedy those defects.
Do not trust to others to supply your deficiencies, while you
go on indifferently, as though it were a matter of course that
your peculiar organization must
ever remain so. Apply yourself earnestly to cure these defects,
that you may be perfect in Christ Jesus, wanting in nothing.
If you form too high an opinion of yourself,
you will think that your labors are of more real consequence
than they are, and you will plead individual independence which
borders on arrogance. If you go to the other extreme and form
too low an opinion of yourself, you will feel inferior and will
leave an impression of inferiority which will greatly limit the
influence that you might have for good. You should avoid either
extreme. Feeling should not control you; circumstances should
not affect you. You may form a correct estimate of yourself,
one which will prove a safeguard from both extremes. You may
be dignified without vain self-confidence; you may be condescending
and yielding without sacrificing self-respect or individual independence,
and your life may be of great influence with those in the higher
as well as the lower walks of life.
Brother A, your danger now is of being
affected by reports. Your labors are decidedly practical, close,
and cutting. You rein up the people to very close tests and requirements.
This is necessary at times; but your labors are getting to be
too much of this character, and will lose their force unless
mingled with more of the softening, encouraging grace of the
Spirit of God. You allow the words of your relatives and special
friends to influence your propositions and affect your decisions.
You credit them too readily and incorporate their views into
your own ideas and are too often led astray. You need to be guarded.
The families in ----- which are so closely related have had an
influence. Your judgment, your feelings, your views, influence
them, and, in turn, they influence you; and a strong current
will be set flowing in a wrong direction unless you are all humble
and thoroughly consecrated to God. All the elements of these
family connections are naturally independent and conscientious,
and, unless especially balanced and controlled by the Spirit
of God, are inclined to extremes.
Never, never be influenced by reports.
Never let your conduct be influenced by your dearest relatives.
The time has come when the greatest wisdom needs to be exercised
in reference to the cause and work of God. Judgment is needed
to know when to speak and when to keep silent. Hunger for sympathy
frequently leads to imprudence of a grave character in opening
the feelings to others. Your appearance frequently claims sympathy
when it would be better for you if you did not receive it. It
is an important duty for all to become familiar with the tenor
of their conduct from day to day and the motives which prompt
their actions. They need to become acquainted with the particular
motives which prompt particular actions. Every action of their
lives is judged, not by the external appearance, but from the
motive which dictated the action.
All should guard the senses, lest Satan
gain victory over them; for these are the avenues to the soul.
We may be as severe as we like in disciplining ourselves, but
we must be very cautious not to push souls to desperation. Some
feel that Brother White is altogether too severe in speaking
in a decided manner to individuals, in reproving what he thinks
is wrong in them. He may be in danger of not being so careful
in his manner of reproving as to give no occasion for reflection;
but some of those who complain of his manner of reproving use
the most cutting, reproving, condemnatory language, too indiscriminating
to be spoken to a congregation, and they feel that they have
relieved their souls and done a good work. But the angels of
God do not always approve such labor If Brother White makes one
individual feel that he is not doing right, if he is too severe
toward that one and needs to be taught to modify his manners,
to soften his spirit, how much more necessary for his ministering
brethren to feel the inconsistency of making a large congregation
suffer from cutting reproofs and strong denunciations, when the
really innocent must suffer with the guilty.
It is worse, far worse, to give expression
to the feelings in a large gathering, firing at anyone and everyone,
than to go to the individuals who may have done wrong and
personally reprove them. The offensiveness
of this severe, overbearing, denunciatory talk in a large gathering
is of as much more grave a character in the sight of God than
giving personal, individual reproof as the numbers are greater
and the censure more general. It is ever easier to give expression
to the feelings before a congregation, because there are many
present, than to go to the erring and, face to face with them,
openly, frankly, plainly state their wrong course. But bringing
into the house of God strong feelings against individuals, and
making all the innocent as well as the guilty suffer, is a manner
of labor which God does not sanction and which does harm rather
than good. It has too often been the case that criticizing and
denunciatory discourses have been given before a congregation.
These do not encourage a spirit of love in the brethren. They
do not tend to make them spiritually minded and lead them to
holiness and heaven, but a spirit of bitterness is aroused in
hearts. These very strong sermons that cut a man all to pieces
are sometimes positively necessary to arouse, alarm, and convict.
But unless they bear the especial marks of being dictated by
the Spirit of God they do far more injury than they can do good.
I was shown that my husband's course has
not been perfect. He has erred sometimes in murmuring and in
giving too severe reproof. But from what I have seen, he has
not been so greatly at fault in this respect as many have supposed
and as I have sometimes feared. Job was not understood by his
friends. He flings back upon them their reproaches. He shows
them that if they are defending God by avowing their faith in
Him and their consciousness of sin, he has a more deep and thorough
knowledge of it than they ever had. "Miserable comforters
are ye all," is the answer he makes to their criticisms
and censures. "I also," says Job, "could speak
as ye do: if your soul were in my soul's stead, I could heap
up words against you, and shake mine head at you." But he
declares that he would not do this. "I," he says, "would
strengthen you with my mouth, and the moving of my lips should
assuage your grief."
Brethren and sisters who are well meaning,
but who have narrow conceptions and look only at externals, may
attempt to help matters of which they have no real knowledge.
Their limited experience cannot fathom the feelings of a soul
who has been urged out by the Spirit of God, who has felt to
the depths that earnest and inexpressible love and interest for
the cause of God and for souls that they have never experienced,
and who has borne burdens in the cause of God that they have
never lifted.
Some shortsighted, short-experienced friends
cannot, with their narrow vision, appreciate the feelings of
one who has been in close harmony with the soul of Christ in
connection with the salvation of others. His motives are misunderstood
and his actions misconstrued by those who would be his friends,
until, like Job, he sends forth the earnest prayer: Save me from
my friends God takes the case of Job in hand Himself. His patience
has been severely taxed; but when God speaks, all his pettish
feelings are changed. The self-justification which he felt was
necessary to withstand the condemnation of his friends is not
necessary toward God. He never misjudges; He never errs. Says
the Lord to Job, "Gird up now thy loins like a man;"
and Job no sooner hears the divine voice than his soul is bowed
down with a sense of his sinfulness, and he says before God,
"I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes."
When God has spoken, my husband has hearkened
to His voice; but to bear the condemnation and reflection of
his friends who do not seem to discriminate has been a great
trial. When his brethren shall have stood under the same circumstances,
and borne the responsibilities that he has borne with as little
encouragement and help as he has had, then they may be able to
understand how to sustain, how to comfort, how to bless, without
torturing his feelings by reflections and censures which he in
no way deserves.