God has shown me much in regard to the
work of Satan in Texas and the unchristian conduct of some who
have moved there from Michigan. I was shown that the Brethren
B have not in heart accepted the testimony which has been given
them. They have more confidence in themselves than in the spirit
of prophecy. They have felt that the light given was not of heaven,
but that it originated from reports made to me in regard to them.
This is not correct. But let me ask: Was there not foundation
for reports? Does not their very life history condemn their course?
Not one of this family has had a religious
experience that would qualify him to take any leading position
in teaching the truth to others. "Be ye clean, that bear
the vessels of the Lord," were the words spoken by the angel
of God. "Ye are not chosen vessels of God to do any part
of His most sacred work. Ye mar and corrode, but do not purify
and bless." You have, Brethren B, ever held a low standard
of Christianity. For a time, where you are not fully known, you
have influence. This once gained,
you become less guarded and act out the natural propensities
of the heart, until the lovers of the truth feel that you are
a great hindrance to the advancement of the work of God. This
is no evil surmising, but the actual facts in the case.
If you would always manifest kindness,
respect, noble love and generosity, toward even wicked men, you
might render effectual service to Christ. If the spirit of Christ
dwelt in you, you would represent Him in your words, in your
actions, and even in the expression of your countenance. Your
conversation would be expressive of meekness, not proud and boastful.
You would not seek to exalt and glorify self. Humility is a Christian
grace with which you are unacquainted. You have aspired for the
supremacy and have tried to cause your power and superiority
to be felt in ruling and dictating to others. Especially has
this been the case with A B. He and his wife cannot advance the
moral and spiritual standing of the cause of God by their influence.
The more limited their sphere in connection with the cause of
God the better will it be for the cause. Their words and acts
in matters of deal are not reliable. This is the case with A
B and his brothers generally. The world and the church have a
right to say that their religion is vain. They are worldly and
scheming, and watch their opportunity to make a close bargain.
They are harsh and severe with those who are connected with them.
They are envious, jealous, puffed up.
Those who thus represent the truth rear
a mighty barrier to the salvation of others. Unless they become
transformed, it would be better had they never embraced the truth.
Their minds are controlled more by Satan than by the Spirit of
God. Brother A B's wife naturally possesses a kind heart, but
she has been molded by her husband. She is a careless talker.
Her tongue is frequently set on fire of hell; it is untamable.
"In the multitude of words," says Solomon, "there
wanteth not sin." This is certainly true in her case. She
exaggerates and bears false witness and is thus constantly transgressing
the commandment of God, while she professes to be a
commandment keeper. She does not mean to do
wrong, but her heart is not sanctified by the truth.
While you, Brethren B, have been forward
to engage in controversy with others upon points of our faith,
without an exception you have been asleep in reference to those
things which pertain to Christianity. You are not even dreaming
of the perilous position you occupy. This apathy extends over
the church and over everyone who, professing Christ as you have
done, denies Him by his works. You are leading others in the
same path of recklessness in which you are treading. God's word
declares that without holiness no man shall see God. Jesus died
to redeem us from all iniquity and to purify unto Himself a peculiar
people, zealous of good works.
"The grace of God that bringeth salvation
hath appeared to all men, teaching us that, denying ungodliness
and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly,
in this present world." Christ says: "Be ye therefore
perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect."
What do your prayers amount to while you regard iniquity in your
hearts? Unless you make a thorough change, you will, not far
hence, become weary of reproof, as did the children of Israel;
and, like them, you will apostatize from God. Some of you in
words acknowledge reproof, but you do not in heart accept it.
You go on the same as before, only being less susceptible to
the influence of the Spirit of God, becoming more and more blinded,
having less wisdom, less self-control, less moral power, and
less zeal and relish for religious exercises; and, unless converted,
you will finally yield your hold upon God entirely. You have
not made decided changes in your life when reproof has come,
because you have not seen and realized your defects of character
and the great contrast between your life and the life of Christ.
It has been your policy to place yourselves in a position where
you would not entirely lose the confidence of your brethren.
I was shown that the condition of the -----
church is deplorable. Your influence, Brother A B, and that of
your wife, has resulted, as you and all may see, in discord and
strife, and will prove utter ruin
to the church unless you either change your location or become
converted. You rust and corrode those connected with you. You
have sympathizers, because all do not see you as God sees. Their
perception is perverted by your multiplicity of words and fair
speeches. This is a sad, discouraging state of things.
I was shown that so far as talk is concerned,
A B is qualified to lead the meetings; but when moral fitness
is weighed, he is found wanting. His heart is not right with
God. When others are placed in a leading position, they have
the opposing spirit of himself and his wife to meet. This unsanctified
spirit is not manifested openly, but works secretly to hinder,
perplex, and discourage those who are trying to do the very best
they can. God sees this, and it will in due time receive its
just reward. Rule or ruin is the policy of this brother, and
his wife is now in no better condition herself. Her senses are
perverted. She is not right with God.
Brother A B, a record of the sad history
you are making is kept in heaven. In heart you are at war with
the testimonies of reproof. The E family have been, and are still,
deceived in you. Others are more or less perplexed because you
can talk well on present truth. Harmony and unity do not exist
in the church at -----. You have not received and acted upon
the light given you. Had you heeded the words of Solomon you
would not today be found standing in such a slippery path. He
says: "Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean
not unto thine own understanding." Entire submission to
the will and ways of God, united with deep distrust of your own
wisdom, would have led you in a safer path.
Your self-confidence has been very great.
No sooner has a brother been suggested to lead the meetings,
or to take a position of trust in preference to yourself, than
you have resolved that he should not succeed if you could help
it, and with the might of your perverse will you have set your
spirit to oppose.
Your course toward Brother D was abusive.
His heart was stirred with the deepest sympathy for you. He had
been your friend, but the fact that he disconnected from you
was sufficient to create in you
a spirit of jealousy which was as cruel as the grave. And this
spirit was exercised against a blind man, one who should have
had the kindest care and the deepest sympathy from all. It was
your perverse and deceptive spirit which led others to sympathize
with you rather than with him. When he saw that the clear light
of the case could not be brought before the brethren, and was
fully convinced that wrong was triumphing over right, his spirit
was so wounded that he became desperate. It was then that he
let go his hold upon God. A partial shock of paralysis came upon
him. He was nearly ruined, mentally and physically. In the church
meetings, matters of no special account were talked over, dwelt
upon, and made the most of; and wrong, cruelly wrong impressions
were made upon the minds of those present.
To thus seek to injure a man who is in
full possession of all his faculties is a great sin; but such
a course toward a man who is blind, and who should be treated
in such a manner as to cause him to feel his loss of sight as
little as possible, is a sin of far greater magnitude. Had you
been a man of fine feelings, or a Christian, as you profess to
be, you could not have abused him as you did. But Brother D has
a Friend in heaven who has pleaded his cause for him and strengthened
him to grasp God's promises anew. When Brother D was crazed with
his great grief and the treatment he had received, he acted like
an insane man. This was used against him as evidence that he
had a wrong spirit. But the all-seeing Judge weighs motives,
and He will reward as the works have been.
You, Brother A B, have been puffed up with
vain conceit and have felt yourself competent for any task. You
have renounced the Testimonies of the Spirit of God; and if you
had your own way, would cast everything in a new mold. How hard
it is for you to see things in a just light when duty leads in
one direction and inclination in another. Your ideas of the character
of Christ, and of the necessary preparation for the life to come,
are narrow and perverted.
I was shown that the brothers B and their
families are descending lower and lower. "Clouds they are
without water, carried about of winds; trees whose fruit withereth,
without fruit;" and if they continue in the course they
have been pursuing, they will finally be "twice dead, plucked
up by the roots." In leaning to their own understanding,
they have gone down to the point where they have no practical
godliness, no heaven, no God as theirs.
If God's people were all connected with
Him, they would discern the limited capacities of these men,
their prejudices, envy, jealousy, and self-confidence. The objections
which their wicked hearts may raise against the Testimonies of
the Spirit of God, will not, in the providence of God, be removed.
They may stumble and fall upon questions of their own originating.
But God's people should see that their proud hearts have never
been humbled, and their high looks have never been brought low.
The Bible is clear upon all points which relate to Christian
duty. All who do the will of God shall know of the doctrine.
But these persons are seeking light from their own tapers and
not from the Sun of Righteousness.
No man who does not utter the real sentiment
of his heart can be called a truthful man. Falsehood virtually
consists in an intention to deceive; and this may be shown by
a look or a word. Even facts may be so arranged and stated as
to constitute falsehoods. Some are adepts at this business, and
they will seek to justify themselves for departing from strict
veracity. There are some who, in order to tear down or injure
the reputation of another, will, from sheer malice, fabricate
falsehoods concerning them. Lies of self-interest are uttered
in buying and selling goods, cattle, or any kind of merchandise.
Lies of vanity are uttered by men who love to appear what they
are not. A story cannot pass through their hands without embellishment.
Oh, how much is done in the world which the doers will one day
wish to undo! But the record of words and deeds in the books
of heaven will tell the sad story of falsehoods spoken and acted.
Falsehood and deception of every cast is
sin against the God of truth and verity. The word of God is plain
upon these points. Ye shall not "deal falsely, neither lie
one to another." "All liars shall have their part in
the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the
second death." God is a God of sincerity and truth. The
word of God is a book of truth. Jesus is a faithful and true
witness. The church is the witness and ground of the truth. All
the precepts of the Most High are true and righteous altogether.
How, then, must prevarication and any exaggeration or deception
appear in His sight? For the falsehood he uttered because he
coveted the gifts which the prophet refused, the servant of Elisha
was struck with leprosy, which ended only with death.
Even life itself should not be purchased
with the price of falsehood. By a word or a nod the martyrs might
have denied the truth and saved their lives. By consenting to
cast a single grain of incense upon the idol altar they might
have been saved from the rack, the scaffold, or the cross. But
they refused to be false in word or deed, though life was the
boon they would receive by so doing. Imprisonment, torture, and
death, with a clear conscience, were welcomed by them, rather
than deliverance on condition of deception, falsehood, and apostasy.
By fidelity and faith in Christ they earned spotless robes and
jeweled crowns. Their lives were ennobled and elevated in the
sight of God because they stood firmly for the truth under the
most aggravated circumstances.
Men are mortals. They may be sincerely
pious and yet have many errors of understanding and many defects
of character, but they cannot be Christ's followers and yet be
in league with him who "loveth and maketh a lie." Such
a life is a fraud, a perpetual falsehood, a fatal deception.
It is a close test upon the courage of men and women to be brought
to face their own sins and to frankly acknowledge them. To say,
"That mistake must be charged to my account," requires
a strength of inward principle that the world possesses in but
a limited degree. But he who has the courage to say this in
sincerity gains a decided victory over self
and effectually closes the door against the enemy.
An adherence to the strictest principles
of truth will frequently cause present inconvenience and may
even involve temporal loss, but it will increase the reward in
the future life. Religion does not consist merely in a system
of dry doctrines, but in practical faith, which sanctifies the
life and corrects the conduct in the family circle and in the
church. Many may tithe mint and rue, but neglect the weightier
matters, mercy and the love of God. To walk humbly with God is
essential to the perfection of Christian character. God requires
undeviating principle in the minutest details of the transactions
of life. Said Christ: "He that is faithful in that which
is least is faithful also in much."
It is neither the magnitude nor the seeming
insignificance of a business transaction that makes it fair or
unfair, honest or dishonest. By the least departure from rectitude
we place ourselves on the enemy's ground, and may go on, step
by step, to any length of injustice. A large proportion of the
Christian world divorce religion from their business. Thousands
of little tricks and petty dishonesties are practiced in dealing
with their fellow men, which reveal the true state of the heart,
showing its corruption.
You, Brother A B, do not honor the cause
of truth. The fountain needs to be cleansed, that the streams
may be pure. Your wife is engaged too much in seeking spot and
stain upon the characters of her brethren and sisters. While
seeking to weed the gardens of her neighbors, she has neglected
her own. She must make most diligent efforts in order to build
up a spotless character. There is the most fearful danger that
she will fail here. If she loses heaven, she loses everything.
Both of you should cleanse the soul-temple, which has become
terribly polluted. Your minds have become sadly perverted. "The
fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom." Be very jealous
and distrustful of self, but never let your tongues be used to
express the jealousy of your hearts in regard to another.
A great work remains for both of you to do,
to so humble yourselves before God that He will accept your repentance.
Hitherto you have been hearers but not persevering doers of the
word. You have admitted again and again that you were wrong,
but the carnal mind has remained unchanged. You have made a little
change under the influence of feeling, but there has not been
a reformation of principle. I saw that the time has now fully
come when action must be taken in your cases unless a thorough
change is wrought in your lives. The church of God must not compromise
with your coarse ways and low standard of Christianity.
One of you brothers is enough in a place.
You are continually at strife and war among yourselves, hateful,
and hating one another. But although you are a byword to those
of the world with whom you associate, yet you are so far distant
from God that you cannot see but that you are about right. You
each need a nearer view of the character of Christ, that you
may discern more clearly what it is to be like Him. Unless you
all change your deportment, and entirely overcome your pompous,
dictatorial, uncourteous course of conduct, you will dishonor
the cause wherever you are; and it would have been better had
you never been born. The time has come for you to turn to the
right or to the left. "If the Lord be God, follow Him: but
if Baal, then follow him." The deformed character developed
in you is a disgrace to the Christian name. No church will prosper
under your rule or guidance, for you are not connected with God.
You are boastful, proud, and self-important, and would mold others
after the same pattern as yourselves.
The church of God has long been burdened
with your unchristian acts and deportment. God help you to see
and feel that your eternal interests demand an entire transformation.
By your example others are led astray from the pure, elevated
path of holiness. Truly great men are invariably modest. Humility
is a grace which sits naturally upon them as a garment. Those
who have stored their minds with useful knowledge, and who possess
genuine attainments and refinement, are the ones who will be most willing to admit the weakness
of their own understanding. They are not self-confident nor boastful;
but in view of the higher attainments to which they might rise
in intellectual greatness, they seem to themselves to have but
just begun the ascent. It is the superficial thinker, the one
who has but a beginning or smattering of knowledge, who deems
himself wise and who takes on disgusting airs of importance.
You might today be men of honor and of
trust, but you have all been so well satisfied with yourselves
that you have not improved the light and privileges which have
been graciously granted you. Your minds have not been expanded
by the Christian graces, neither have your affections been sanctified
by communion with the Life-giver. There is a littleness, an earthliness,
which stamps the outer character and reveals the fact beyond
doubt that you have been walking in the way of your own heart
and in the sight of your own eyes and that you are filled with
your own devices.
When connected with God and sincerely seeking
His approval, man becomes elevated, ennobled, and sanctified.
The work of elevation is one that man must perform for himself
through Jesus Christ. Heaven may give him every advantage so
far as temporal and spiritual things are concerned, but it is
all in vain unless he is willing to appropriate these blessings
and to help himself. His own powers must be put to use, or he
will finally be weighed in the balances and pronounced wanting;
he will be a failure so far as this life is concerned, and will
lose the future life.
All who will with determined effort seek
help from above, and subdue and crucify self, may be successful
in this world, and may gain the future, immortal life. This world
is the field of man's labor. His preparation for the future world
depends upon the way he discharges his duties in this world.
He is designed of God to be a blessing to society; and he cannot,
if he would, live and die to himself. God has bound us together
as members of one family, and this relationship everyone is bound
to cherish. There are services due to others which we cannot
ignore and yet keep the commandments of God.
To live, think, and act for self only is to become useless as
servants of God. High-sounding titles and great talents are not
essential in order to be good citizens or exemplary Christians.
We have in our ranks too many who are restless,
talkative, self-commending, and who take the liberty to put themselves
forward, having no reverence for age, experience, or office.
The church is suffering today for help of an opposite character
--modest, quiet, God-fearing men, who will bear disagreeable
burdens when laid upon them, not for the name, but to render
service to their Master, who died for them. Persons of this character
do not think it detracts from their dignity to rise up before
the ancient and to treat gray hairs with respect. Our churches
need weeding out. Too much self-exaltation and self-sufficiency
exists among the members.
Those who fear and reverence God, He will
delight to honor. Man may be so elevated as to form the connecting
link between heaven and earth. He came from the hand of his Creator
with a symmetrical character, endowed with such capacities for
improvement that, combining divine influence with human effort,
he might elevate himself almost to an angel's sphere. Yet, when
thus elevated, he will be unconscious of his goodness and greatness.
God has given man intellectual faculties
capable of the highest cultivation. Had the Brethren B seen the
natural coarseness and roughness of their characters, and with
assiduous care cultivated and trained the mind, strengthening
their weak points of character and overcoming their glaring defects,
some of them would have been accepted as Christ's messengers.
But as they now are, God cannot accept any one of them as His
representative. They have not sufficiently realized the need
of improvement to cause them to seek for it. Their minds have
not been trained by study, observation, reflection, and a constant
effort to thoroughly discipline themselves for the duties of
life. The means of improvement are within the reach of all. None
are so poor or so busy but that with Jesus to help them they
can make improvements in their life and character.