December 10, 1871, I was shown the dangers
of Brother K. His influence upon the cause of God is not what
it should be or what it might be. He seems to be in blindness
as to the result of his course; he does not discern what kind
of wake he leaves behind him. He does not labor in a manner that
God can accept. I saw that he was in as great peril as was Moses
Hull before he left the truth. He trusted in himself. He thought
he was of so great value to the cause of truth that the cause
could not spare him. Brother K has felt very much the same. He
relies too much on his own strength and wisdom. If he could see
his weakness as God sees it he would never flatter himself or
feel in the least to triumph. And unless he makes God his dependence
and strength he will make shipwreck of faith as surely as did
Moses Hull.
He does not in his labors draw strength
from God. He depends upon an excitement to arouse his ambition.
In laboring with a few, where there is no special excitement
to stimulate, he loses his courage. When the labor goes hard
and he is not borne up by this special excitement, he does not
then cling the firmer to God and become more earnest to press
through the darkness and gain the victory. Brother K, you frequently
become childish, weak, and inefficient at the very time when
you should be strongest. This should evidence to you that your
zeal and animation are not always from the right source.
I was shown that here is the danger of
young ministers who engage in discussion. They turn their minds
to the study of the word to gather the sharp things, and they
become sarcastic and, in their efforts to meet an opponent, too
frequently leave God out of the question. The excitement of debate
lessens their interest in meetings where this special excitement
does not exist. Those who engage in debates are not the most
successful laborers and the best adapted to build up the cause.
By some, discussion is coveted, and they prefer this kind of
labor above any other. They do not study the Bible with humility
of mind, that they may know how
to attain the love of God; as Paul says: "That Christ may
dwell in your hearts by faith; that ye, being rooted and grounded
in love, may be able to comprehend with all saints what is the
breadth, and length, and depth, and height; and to know the love
of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that ye might be filled with
all the fullness of God."
Young preachers should avoid discussions,
for they do not increase spirituality or humbleness of mind.
In some cases it may be necessary to meet a proud boaster against
the truth of God in open debate; but generally these discussions,
either oral or written, result in more harm than good. After
a discussion the greater responsibility rests upon the minister
to keep up the interest. He should beware of the reaction which
is liable to take place after a religious excitement, and not
yield to discouragement himself.
Men who will not admit the claims of God's
law, which are so very plain, will generally take a lawless course;
for they have so long taken sides with the great rebel in warring
against the law of God, which is the foundation of His government
in heaven and earth, that they are trained in this labor. In
their warfare they will not open their eyes or consciences to
light. They close their eyes, lest they shall become enlightened.
Their case is as hopeless as was that of the Jews who would not
see the light which Christ brought to them. The wonderful evidences
which He gave them of His Messiahship in the miracles that He
performed, in healing the sick, raising the dead, and doing the
works which no other man had done or could do, instead of melting
and subduing their hearts, and overcoming their wicked prejudices,
inspired them with satanic hatred and fury such as Satan possessed
when he was thrust out of heaven. The greater light and evidence
they had, the greater was their hatred. They were determined
to extinguish the light by putting Christ to death.
The haters of God's law, which is the foundation
of His government in heaven and earth, occupy the same ground
as did the unbelieving Jews. Their defiant power will follow
those who keep the commandments of God, and
any amount of light will be rejected by them. Their consciences
have so long been violated, and their hearts have grown so hard
by their choosing darkness rather than light, that they feel
that it is a virtue in them, in order to gain their object, to
bear false witness or stoop to almost any course of equivocation
or deception, as did the Jews in their rejection of Christ. They
reason that the end justifies the means. They virtually crucify
the law of the Father, as the Jews crucified Christ.
Our work should be to embrace every opportunity
to present the truth in its purity and simplicity where there
is any desire or interest to hear the reasons of our faith. Those
who have dwelt mostly upon the prophecies and the theoretical
points of our faith should without delay become Bible students
upon practical subjects. They should take a deeper draft at the
fountain of divine truth. They should carefully study the life
of Christ and His lessons of practical godliness, given for the
benefit of all and to be the rule of right living for all who
should believe on His name. They should be imbued with the spirit
of their great Exemplar and have a high sense of the sacred life
of a follower of Christ.
Christ met the case of every class in the
subjects and manner of His teaching. He dined and lodged with
the rich and the poor, and made Himself familiar with the interests
and occupations of men, that He might gain access to their hearts.
The learned and the most intellectual were gratified and charmed
with His discourses, and yet they were so plain and simple as
to be comprehended by the humblest minds. Christ availed Himself
of every opportunity to give instruction to the people upon those
heavenly doctrines and precepts which should be incorporated
into their lives and which would distinguish them from all other
religionists because of their holy, elevated character. These
lessons of divine instruction are not brought to bear upon men's
consciences as they should be. These sermons of Christ furnish
ministers believing present truth with discourses which will
be appropriate on almost any occasion.
Here is a field of study for the Bible student, in which he cannot
be interested without having the spirit of the heavenly Teacher
in his own heart. Here are subjects which Christ presented to
all classes. Thousands of people of every stamp of character
and every grade of society were attracted and charmed with the
matter brought before them.
Some ministers who have been long in the
work of preaching present truth have made great failures in their
labors. They have educated themselves as combatants. They have
studied out argumentative subjects for the object of discussion,
and these subjects which they have prepared they love to use.
The truth of God is plain, clear, and conclusive. It is harmonious
and, in contrast with error, shines with clearness and beauty.
Its consistency commends it to the judgment of every heart that
is not filled with prejudice. Our preachers present the arguments
upon the truth, which have been made ready for them, and, if
there are no hindrances, the truth bears away the victory. But
I was shown that in many cases the poor instrument takes the
credit of the victory gained, and the people, who are more earthly
than spiritual, praise and honor the instrument, while the truth
of God is not exalted by the victory it gained.
Those who love to engage in discussion
generally lose their spirituality. They do not trust in God as
they should. They have the theory of the truth prepared to whip
an opponent. The feelings of their own unsanctified hearts have
prepared many sharp, close things to use as a snap to their whip
to irritate and provoke their opponent. The spirit of Christ
has no part in this. While furnished with conclusive arguments,
the debater soon thinks that he is strong enough to triumph over
his opponent, and God is left out of the matter. Some of our
ministers have made discussion their principal business. When
in the midst of the excitement raised by discussion, they seem
nerved up and feel strong and talk strong; and in the excitement
many things pass with the people as all right, which in themselves
are decidedly wrong and a shame to him who
was guilty of uttering words so unbecoming a Christian minister.
These things have a bad influence on ministers
who are handling sacred, elevated truths, truths which are to
prove as a savor of life unto life, or of death unto death, to
those who hear them. Generally the influence of discussions upon
our ministers is to make them self-sufficient and exalted in
their own estimation. This is not all. Those who love to debate
are unfitted for being pastors to the flock. They have trained
their minds to meet opponents and to say sarcastic things, and
they cannot come down to meet hearts that are sorrowing and need
comforting. They have also dwelt so much upon the argumentative
that they have neglected the practical subjects that the flock
of God need. They have but little knowledge of the sermons of
Christ, which enter into the everyday life of the Christian,
and they have but little disposition to study them. They have
risen above the simplicity of the work. When they were little
in their own eyes, God helped them; angels of God ministered
unto them and made their labors highly successful in convincing
men and women of the truth. But in the training of their minds
for discussion they frequently become coarse and rough. They
lose the interest and tender sympathy which should ever attend
the efforts of a shepherd of Christ.
Debating ministers are generally disqualified
to help the flock where they most need help. Having neglected
practical religion in their own hearts and lives, they cannot
teach it to the flock. Unless there is an excitement, they do
not know how to labor; they seem shorn of their strength. If
they try to speak, they do not seem to know how to present a
subject that is proper for the occasion. When they should present
a subject which will feed the flock of God, and which will reach
and melt hearts, they go back to some of the old stereotyped
matter and go through the arranged arguments, which are dry and
uninteresting. Thus, instead of light and life, they bring darkness
to the flock and also to their own souls.
Some of our ministers fail to cultivate
spirituality, but encourage a show of zeal and a certain activity
which rests upon an uncertain foundation. Ministers of calm contemplation,
of thought and devotion, of conscience and faith, combined with
activity and zeal, are wanted in this age. The two qualities,
thought and devotion, activity and zeal, should go together.
Debating ministers are the most unreliable
among us, because they cannot be depended upon when the work
goes hard. Bring them into a place where there is but little
interest, and they manifest a want of courage, zeal, and real
interest. They depend as much upon being enlivened and invigorated
by the excitement created by debate or opposition as does the
inebriate upon his dram. These ministers need to be converted
anew. They need to drink deep of the unceasing streams which
proceed from the eternal Rock.
The eternal welfare of sinners regulated
the conduct of Jesus. He went about doing good. Benevolence was
the life of His soul. He not only did good to all who came to
Him soliciting His mercy, but He perseveringly sought them out.
He was never elated with applause or dejected by censure or disappointment.
When He met with the greatest opposition and the most cruel treatment
He was of good courage. The most important discourse that Inspiration
has given us, Christ preached to only one listener. As He sat
upon the well to rest, for He was weary, a Samaritan woman came
to draw water; He saw an opportunity to reach her mind, and through
her to reach the minds of the Samaritans, who were in great darkness
and error. Although weary, He presented the truths of His spiritual
kingdom, which charmed the heathen woman and filled her with
admiration for Christ. She went forth publishing the news: "Come,
see a man which told me all things that ever I did: is not this
the Christ?" This woman's testimony converted many to a
belief in Christ. Through her report many came to hear Him for
themselves and believed because of His own word.
However small may be the number of interested
listeners, if the heart is reached
and the understanding convinced, they can, like the Samaritan
woman, carry a report which will raise the interest of hundreds
to investigate for themselves. While laboring in places to create
an interest, there will be many discouragements; but if at first
there seems to be but little interest, it is no evidence that
you have mistaken your duty and place of labor. If the interest
steadily increases, and the people move understandingly, not
from impulse, but from principle, the interest is much more healthy
and durable than it is where a great excitement and interest
are created suddenly, and the feelings are excited by listening
to a debate, a sharp contest on both sides of the question, for
and against the truth. Fierce opposition is thus created, positions
are taken, and rapid decisions made. A feverish state of things
is the result. Calm consideration and judgment are wanting. Let
this excitement subside, or let reaction take place by indiscreet
management, and the interest can never be raised again. The feelings
and sympathies of the people were stirred; but their consciences
were not convicted, their hearts were not broken and humbled
before God.
In the presentation of unpopular truth,
which involves a heavy cross, preachers should be careful that
every word is as God would have it. Their words should never
cut. They should present the truth in humility, with the deepest
love for souls and an earnest desire for their salvation, and
let the truth cut. They should not defy ministers of other denominations
and seek to provoke a debate. They should not stand in a position
like that of Goliath when he defied the armies of Israel. Israel
did not defy Goliath, but Goliath made his proud boasts against
God and His people. The defying, the boasting, and the railing
must come from the opposers of truth, who act the Goliath. But
none of this spirit should be seen in those whom God has sent
forth to proclaim the last message of warning to a doomed world.
Goliath trusted in his armor. He terrified
the armies of Israel by his defiant, savage boastings, while
he made a most imposing display
of his armor, which was his strength. David, in his humility
and zeal for God and his people, proposed to meet this boaster.
Saul consented and had his own kingly armor placed upon David.
But he would not consent to wear it. He laid off the king's armor,
for he had not proved it. He had proved God and, in trusting
in Him, had gained special victories. To put on Saul's armor
would give the impression that he was a warrior, when he was
only little David who tended the sheep. He did not mean that
any credit be given to the armor of Saul, for his trust was in
the Lord God of Israel. He selected a few pebbles from the brook,
and with his sling and staff, his only weapons, he went forth
in the name of the God of Israel to meet the armed warrior.
Goliath disdained David, for his appearance
was that of a mere youth untaught in the tactics of warfare.
Goliath railed upon David and cursed him by his gods. He felt
that it was an insult upon his dignity to have a mere stripling,
without so much as an armor, come to meet him. He made his boast
of what he would do to him. David did not become irritated because
he was looked upon as so inferior, neither did he tremble at
his terrible threats, but replied: "Thou comest to me with
a sword, and with a spear, and with a shield: but I come to thee
in the name of the Lord of hosts, the God of the armies of Israel,
whom thou hast defied." David tells Goliath that in the
name of the Lord he will do to him the very things that Goliath
had threatened to do to David. "And all this assembly shall
know that the Lord saveth not with sword and spear: for the battle
is the Lord's, and He will give you into our hands."
Our ministers should not defy and provoke
discussion. Let the defying be on the side of the opposers of
God's truth. I was shown that Brother K and other ministers have
acted too much the part of Goliath. And then after they have
dared and provoked discussion they have trusted in their prepared
arguments, as Saul wanted David to trust in his armor. They have
not, like humble David, trusted in the God of Israel, and made
Him their strength. They have gone forth confident and
boastful, like Goliath, magnifying themselves
and not hiding behind Jesus. They knew the truth was strong,
and therefore have not humbled their hearts and in faith trusted
in God to give the truth the victory. They have become elated
and lost their balance, and frequently the discussions have not
been successful, and the result has been an injury to their own
souls and to the souls of others.
I was shown that some of our young ministers
are getting a passion for debating, and that, unless they see
their danger, this will prove a snare to them. I was shown that
Brother L is in great danger. He is training his mind in the
wrong direction. He is in danger of getting above the simplicity
of the work. When he gets on Saul's armor, if, like David, he
has wisdom to lay it off because he has not proved it, he may
recover himself before he goes too far. These young preachers
should study the practical teachings of Christ as well as the
theoretical, and learn of Jesus, that they may have His grace,
His meekness, His humility and lowliness of mind. If they, like
David, are brought into a position where God's cause really calls
for them to meet a defier of Israel, and if they go forth in
the strength of God, relying wholly upon Him, He will carry them
through and cause His truth to triumph gloriously. Christ has
given us an example. "Yet Michael the Archangel, when contending
with the devil He disputed about the body of Moses, durst not
bring against him a railing accusation, but said, The Lord rebuke
thee."
As soon as a preacher comes down from the
position a minister should ever occupy, and descends to the comical
to create a laugh over his opponent, or when he is sarcastic
and sharp, and rails upon him, he does that which the Saviour
of the world did not dare to do; for he places himself upon the
enemy's ground. Ministers who contend with opposers of the truth
of God do not have to meet men merely, but Satan and his host
of evil angels. Satan watches for a chance to get the advantage
of ministers who are advocating the truth, and when they cease
to put their entire trust in God, and their words are not in the spirit and love of Christ, the
angels of God cannot strengthen and enlighten them. They leave
them to their own strength, and evil angels press in their darkness;
for this reason the opponents of the truth sometimes seem to
have the advantage, and the discussion does more harm than real
good.
God's servants should come nearer to Him.
Brethren K, L, M, and N should be seeking to cultivate personal
piety, rather than to encourage a love of debate. They should
be seeking to become shepherds to the flock, rather than to be
fitting themselves to create an excitement by swaying the feelings
of the people. These brethren are in danger of depending more
upon their popularity and their success with the people as smart
debaters than upon being humble, faithful laborers and meek,
devoted followers of Christ, co-workers with Him.