There is danger that our college will be
turned away from its original design. God's purpose has been
made known, that our people should have an opportunity to study
the sciences and at the same time to learn the requirements of
His word. Biblical lectures should be given; the study of the
Scriptures should have the first place in our system of education.
Students are sent from a great distance
to attend the college at Battle Creek for the very purpose of
receiving instruction from the lectures on Bible subjects. But
for one or two years past there has been an effort to mold our
school after other colleges. When this is done, we can give no
encouragement to parents to send their children to Battle Creek
College. The moral and religious influences should not be put
in the background. In times past, God has worked with the efforts
of the teachers, and many souls have seen the truth and embraced
it, and have gone to their homes
to live henceforth for God, as the result of their connection
with the college. As they saw that Bible study was made a part
of their education, they were led to regard it as a matter of
greater interest and importance.
Too little attention has been given to
the education of young men for the ministry. This was the primary
object to be secured in the establishment of the college. In
no case should this be ignored or regarded as a matter of secondary
importance. For several years, however, but few have gone forth
from that institution prepared to teach the truth to others.
Some who came at great expense, with the ministry in view, have
been encouraged by the teachers to take a thorough course of
study which would occupy a number of years, and, in order to
obtain means to carry out these plans, have entered the canvassing
field and given up all thought of preaching. This is entirely
wrong. We have not many years to work, and teachers and principal
should be imbued with the Spirit of God and work in harmony with
His revealed will instead of carrying out their own plans. We
are losing much every year because we do not heed what God has
said upon these points.
Our college is designed of God to meet
the advancing wants for this time of peril and demoralization.
The study of books only cannot give students the discipline they
need. A broader foundation must be laid. The college was not
brought into existence to bear the stamp of any one man's mind.
Teachers and principal should work together as brethren. They
should consult together, and also counsel with ministers and
responsible men, and, above all else, seek wisdom from above,
that all their decisions in reference to the school may be such
as will be approved of God.
To give students a knowledge of books merely
is not the purpose of the institution. Such education can be
obtained at any college in the land. I was shown that it is Satan's
purpose to prevent the attainment
of the very object for which the college was established. Hindered
by his devices, its managers reason after the manner of the world
and copy its plans and imitate its customs. But in thus doing,
they will not meet the mind of the Spirit of God.
A more comprehensive education is needed,
an education which will demand from teachers and principal such
thought and effort as mere instruction in the sciences does not
require. The character must receive proper discipline for its
fullest and noblest development. The students should receive
at college such training as will enable them to maintain a respectable,
honest, virtuous standing in society, against the demoralizing
influences which are corrupting the youth.
It would be well could there be connected
with our college, land for cultivation and also workshops under
the charge of men competent to instruct the students in the various
departments of physical labor. Much is lost by a neglect to unite
physical with mental taxation. The leisure hours of the students
are often occupied with frivolous pleasures, which weaken physical,
mental, and moral powers. Under the debasing power of sensual
indulgence, or the untimely excitement of courtship and marriage,
many students fail to reach that height of mental development
which they might otherwise have attained.
The young should every day be impressed
with a sense of their obligation to God. His law is continually
violated, even by the children of religious parents. Some of
these very youth frequent haunts of dissipation, and the powers
of the mind and body suffer in consequence. This class lead others
to follow their pernicious ways. Thus, while principal and teachers
are giving instruction in the sciences, Satan, with hellish cunning,
is exerting every energy to gain control of the minds of the
pupils and lead them down to ruin.
Generally speaking, the youth have but
little moral strength. This is
the result of neglected education in childhood. A knowledge of
the character of God and our obligations to Him should not be
regarded as a matter of minor consequence. The religion of the
Bible is the only safeguard for the young. Morality and religion
should receive special attention in our educational institutions.