Economy in the outlay of means is an excellent
branch of Christian wisdom. This matter is not sufficiently considered
by those who occupy responsible positions in our institutions.
Money is an excellent gift of God. In the hands of His children
it is food for the hungry, drink for the thirsty, and raiment
for the naked; it is a defense for the oppressed and a means
of health to the sick. Means should not be needlessly or lavishly
expended for the gratification of pride or ambition.
In order to meet the real wants of the
people, the stern motives of religious principle must be a controlling
power. When Christians and worldlings are brought together, the
Christian element is not to assimilate with the unsanctified.
The contrast between the two must be kept sharp and positive.
They are servants of two masters. One class strive to keep the
humble path of obedience to God's requirements,--the path of
simplicity, meekness, and humility,--imitating the Pattern, Christ
Jesus. The other class are in every way the opposite of the first.
They are servants of the world, eager and ambitious to follow
its fashions in extravagant dress and in the gratification of
appetite. This is the field in which Christ has given those connected
with the sanitarium their appointed work. We are not to lessen
the distance between us and worldlings by coming to their standard,
stepping down from the high path cast up for the ransomed of
the Lord to walk in. But the charms exhibited in the Christian's
life--the principles carried out in our daily work, in holding
appetite under the control of reason, maintaining simplicity
in dress, and engaging in holy conversation--will be a light
continually shining upon the pathway of those whose habits are
false.
There are weak and vain ones who have no
depth of mind or power of principle, who are foolish enough to
be influenced and corrupted from the simplicity of the gospel
by the devotees of fashion. If they see that those who profess
to be reformers are, as far as
their circumstances will admit, indulging the appetite and dressing
after the customs of the world, the slaves of self-indulgence
will become confirmed in their perverse habits. They conclude
that they are not so far out of the way after all, and that no
great change need be made by them. The people of God should firmly
uphold the standard of right and exert an influence to correct
the wrong habits of those who have been worshiping at the shrine
of fashion, and break the spell which Satan has had over these
poor souls. Worldlings should see a marked contrast between their
own extravagance and the simplicity of reformers who are followers
of Christ.
The secret of life's success is in a careful,
conscientious attention to the little things. God makes the simple
leaf, the tiny flower, the blade of grass, with as much care
as He creates a world. The symmetrical structure of a strong,
beautiful character is built up by individual acts of duty. All
should learn to be faithful in the least as well as in the greatest
duty. Their work cannot bear the inspection of God unless it
is found to include a faithful, diligent, economical care for
the little things.
All who are connected with our institutions
should have a jealous care that nothing be wasted, even if the
matter does not come under the very part of the work assigned
them. Everyone can do something toward economizing. All should
perform their work, not to win praise of men, but in such a manner
that it may bear the scrutiny of God.
Christ once gave His disciples a lesson
upon economy which is worthy of careful attention. He wrought
a miracle to feed the hungry thousands who had listened to His
teachings; yet after all had eaten and were satisfied, He did
not permit the fragments to be wasted. He who could, in their
necessity, feed the vast multitude by His divine power, bade
His disciples gather up the fragments, that nothing might be
lost. This lesson was given as much for our benefit as for those
living in Christ's day. The Son of God has a care for the
necessities of temporal life. He did not neglect
the broken fragments after the feast, although He could make
such a feast whenever He chose. The workers in our institutions
would do well to heed this lesson: "Gather up the fragments
that remain, that nothing be lost." This is the duty of
all; and those who occupy a leading position should set the example.
Those whose hands are open to respond to
the calls for means to sustain the cause of God and to relieve
the suffering and the needy are not the ones who are found loose
and lax and dilatory in their business management. They are always
careful to keep their outgoes within their income. They are economical
from principle; they feel it their duty to save, that they may
have something to give.
Some of the workers, like the children
of Israel, allow perverted appetite and old habits of indulgence
to clamor for the victory. They long, as did ancient Israel,
for the leeks and onions of Egypt. All connected with these institutions
should strictly adhere to the laws of life and health, and thus
give no countenance, by their example, to the wrong habits of
others.
It is transgression in the little things
that first leads the soul away from God. By their one sin in
partaking of the forbidden fruit, Adam and Eve opened the floodgates
of woe upon the world. Some may regard that transgression as
a very little thing, but we see that its consequences were anything
but small. The angels in heaven have a wider and more elevated
sphere of action than we, but right with them and right with
us are one and the same thing.
It is not a mean, penurious spirit that
would lead the proper officers to reprove existing wrongs and
require from all the workers justice, economy, and self-denial.
It is no coming down from proper dignity to guard the interests
of our institutions in these matters. Those who are faithful
themselves, naturally look for faithfulness in others. Strict
integrity should govern the dealings of the managers and should
be enforced upon all who labor under their direction.
Men of principle need not the restriction
of locks and keys; they do not
need to be watched and guarded. They will deal truly and honorably
at all times, alone, with no eye upon them, as well as in public.
They will not bring a stain upon their souls for any amount of
gain or selfish advantage. They scorn a mean act. Although no
one else might know it, they would know it themselves, and this
would destroy their self-respect. Those who are not conscientious
and faithful in little things would not be reformed were there
laws and restrictions and penalties upon the point.
Few have moral stamina to resist temptation,
especially of the appetite, and to practice self-denial. To some
it is a temptation too strong to be resisted to see others eat
the third meal; and they imagine they are hungry, when the feeling
is not a call of the stomach for food, but a desire of the mind
that has not been fortified with firm principle and disciplined
to self-denial. The walls of self-control and self-restriction
should not in a single instance be weakened and broken down.
Paul, the apostle to the Gentiles, says: "I keep under my
body, and bring it into subjection: lest that by any means, when
I have preached to others, I myself should be a castaway."
Those who do not overcome in little things
will have no moral power to withstand greater temptations. All
who seek to make honesty the ruling principle in the daily business
of life will need to be on their guard that they covet "no
man's silver, or gold, or apparel." While they are content
with convenient food and clothing, it will be found an easy matter
to keep the heart and hands from the defilement of covetousness
and dishonesty.
The habits formed in childhood and youth
have more influence than any natural endowment in making men
and women intellectually great or dwarfed and crippled; for the
very best talents may, through wrong habits, become warped and
enfeebled. To a great extent the character is determined in early
years. Correct, virtuous habits formed in youth will generally
mark the course of the individual through life. In most cases
those who reverence God and honor the right will be found to have learned this lesson before the world
could stamp its images of sin upon the soul. Men and women of
mature age are generally as insensible to new impressions as
is the hardened rock; but youth is impressible, and a right character
may then be easily formed.
Those who are employed in our institutions
have, in many respects, the best advantages for the formation
of correct habits. None will be placed beyond the reach of temptation,
for in every character there are weak points that are in danger
when assailed. Those who profess the name of Christ should not,
like the self-righteous Pharisee, find great pleasure in recounting
their good deeds, but all should feel the necessity of keeping
the moral nature braced by constant watchfulness. Like faithful
sentinels they should guard the citadel of the soul, never feeling
that they may relax their vigilance for a moment. In earnest
prayer and living faith is their only safety.
Those who begin to be careless of their
steps will find that, before they are aware of it, their feet
are entangled in a web from which it is impossible for them to
extricate themselves. It should be a fixed principle with all
to be truthful and honest. Whether they are rich or poor, whether
they have friends or are left alone, come what will, they should
resolve in the strength of God that no influence shall lead them
to commit the least wrong act. One and all should realize that
upon them, individually, depends in a measure the prosperity
of the institutions which God has established among us.