Healdsburg, California, June 20, 1882.
Dear Brethren and Sisters in Battle Creek:
I understand that the testimony [REFERENCE IS HERE MADE TO THE
PRECEDING ARTICLE.] which I sent to Brother -----, with the request
that it be read to the church, was withheld from you for several
weeks after it was received by him. Before sending that testimony
my mind was so impressed by the Spirit of God that I had no rest
day or night until I wrote to you. It was not a work that I would
have chosen for myself. Before my husband's death I decided that
it was not my duty to bear testimony to anyone in reproof of
wrong or in vindication of right, because advantage was taken
of my words to deal harshly with the erring and to unwisely exalt
others whose course I had not in any degree sustained. Many explained
the testimonies to suit themselves. The truth of God is not in
harmony with the traditions of men, nor does it conform to their
opinions. Like its divine Author, it is unchangeable, the same
yesterday, today, and forever. Those who separate from God will
call darkness light, and error truth. But darkness will never
prove itself to be light, nor will error become truth.
The minds of many have been so darkened
and confused by worldly customs, worldly practices, and worldly
influences that all power to discriminate between light and darkness,
truth and error, seems destroyed. I had little hope that my words
would be understood; but when the Lord moved upon me so decidedly,
I could not resist His Spirit. Knowing that you were involving yourselves in the snares of Satan,
I felt that the danger was too great for me to keep silent.
For years the Lord has been presenting
the situation of the church before you. Again and again reproofs
and warnings have been given. October 23, 1879, the Lord gave
me a most impressive testimony in regard to the church in Battle
Creek. During the last months I was with you I carried a heavy
burden for the church, while those who should have felt to the
very depths of their souls were comparatively easy and unconcerned.
I knew not what to do or what to say. I had no confidence in
the course which many were pursuing, for they were doing the
very things which the Lord had warned them not to do.
That God who knows their spiritual condition
declares: They have cherished evil and separated from Me. They
have gone astray, every one of them. Not one is guiltless. They
have forsaken Me, the Fountain of living waters, and have hewed
out to them broken cisterns that can hold no water. Many have
corrupted their ways before Me. Envy, hatred of one another,
jealousy, evil surmising, emulation, strife, bitterness, is the
fruit that they bear. And they will not heed the testimony that
I send them. They will not see their perverse ways and be converted,
that I should heal them.
Many are looking with self-complacency upon
the long years during which they have advocated the truth. They
now feel that they are entitled to a reward for their past trials
and obedience. But this genuine experience in the things of God
in the past makes them more guilty before Him for not preserving
their integrity and going forward to perfection. The faithfulness
for the past year will never atone for the neglect of the present
year. A man's truthfulness yesterday will not atone for his falsehood
today.
Many excused their disregard of the testimonies
by saying: "Sister White is influenced by her husband; the
testimonies are molded by his spirit
and judgment." Others were seeking to gain something from
me which they could construe to justify their course or to give
them influence. It was then I decided that nothing more should
go from my pen until the converting power of God was seen in
the church. But the Lord placed the burden upon my soul. I labored
for you earnestly. How much this cost both my husband and myself,
eternity will tell. Have I not a knowledge of the state of the
church, when the Lord has presented their case before me again
and again for years? Repeated warnings have been given, yet there
has been no decided change.
I saw that the frown of God was upon His
people for their assimilation to the world. I saw that the children
of Brother ----- have been a snare to him. Their ideas and opinions,
their feelings and statements, had an influence upon his mind
and blinded his judgment. These youth are strongly inclined to
infidelity. The mother's want of faith and trust in God has been
given as an inheritance to her children. Her devotion to them
is greater than her devotion to God. The father has neglected
his duty. The result of their wrong course is revealed in their
children.
As I spoke to the church I tried to impress
upon parents their solemn obligation to the children, because
I knew the state of these youth and what tendencies had made
them what they are. But the word was not received. I know what
burdens I bore in the last of my labors among you. I would never
have thus tasked my strength to the utmost had I not seen your
peril. I longed to arouse you to humble your hearts before God,
to return to Him with penitence and faith.
Yet now when I send you a testimony of
warning and reproof, many of you declare it to be merely the
opinion of Sister White. You have thereby insulted the Spirit
of God. You know how the Lord has manifested Himself through
the spirit of prophecy. Past, present, and future have passed
before me. I have been shown faces
that I had never seen, and years afterward I knew them when I
saw them. I have been aroused from my sleep with a vivid sense
of subjects previously presented to my mind; and I have written,
at midnight, letters that have gone across the continent and,
arriving at a crisis, have saved great disaster to the cause
of God. This has been my work for many years. A power has impelled
me to reprove and rebuke wrongs that I had not thought of. Is
this work of the last thirty-six years from above or from beneath?
Suppose--some would make it appear, incorrectly
however--that I was influenced to write as I did by letters received
from members of the church. How was it with the apostle Paul?
The news he received through the household of Chloe concerning
the condition of the church at Corinth was what caused him to
write his first epistle to that church. Private letters had come
to him stating the facts as they existed, and in his answer he
laid down general principles which if heeded would correct the
existing evils. With great tenderness and wisdom he exhorts them
to all speak the same things, that there be no divisions among
them.
Paul was an inspired apostle, yet the Lord
did not reveal to him at all times just the condition of His
people. Those who were interested in the prosperity of the church,
and saw evils creeping in, presented the matter before him, and
from the light which he had previously received he was prepared
to judge of the true character of these developments. Because
the Lord had not given him a new revelation for that special
time, those who were really seeking light did not cast his message
aside as only a common letter. No, indeed. The Lord had shown
him the difficulties and dangers which would arise in the churches,
that when they should develop he might know just how to treat
them.
He was set for the defense of the church.
He was to watch for souls as one that must render account to
God, and should he not take notice
of the reports concerning their state of anarchy and division?
Most assuredly; and the reproof he sent them was written just
as much under the inspiration of the Spirit of God as were any
of his epistles. But when these reproofs came, some would not
be corrected. They took the position that God had not spoken
to them through Paul, that he had merely given them his opinion
as a man, and they regarded their own judgment as good as that
of Paul.
So it is with many among our people who
have drifted away from the old landmarks and who have followed
their own understanding. What a great relief it would be to such
could they quiet their conscience with the belief that my work
is not of God. But your unbelief will not change the facts in
the case. You are defective in character, in moral and religious
experience. Close your eyes to the fact if you will, but this
does not make you one particle more perfect. The only remedy
is to wash in the blood of the Lamb.
If you seek to turn aside the counsel of
God to suit yourselves, if you lessen the confidence of God's
people in the testimonies He has sent them, you are rebelling
against God as certainly as were Korah, Dathan, and Abiram. You
have their history. You know how stubborn they were in their
own opinions. They decided that their judgment was better than
that of Moses and that Moses was doing great injury to Israel.
Those who united with them were so set in their opinions that,
notwithstanding the judgments of God in a marked manner destroyed
the leaders and the princes, the next morning the survivors came
to Moses and said: Ye have killed the people of the Lord."
We see what fearful deception will come upon the human mind.
How hard it is to convince souls that have become imbued with
a spirit which is not of God. As Christ's ambassador, I would
say to you: Be careful what positions you take. This is God's
work, and you must render to Him
an account for the manner in which you treat His message.
While standing over the dying bed of my
husband, I knew that had others borne their part of the burdens,
he might have lived. I then pleaded, with agony of soul, that
those present might no longer grieve the Spirit of God by their
hardness of heart. A few days later I myself stood face to face
with death. Then I had most clear revealings from God in regard
to myself, and in regard to the church. In great weakness I bore
to you my testimony, not knowing but it would be my last opportunity.
Have you forgotten that solemn occasion? I can never forget it,
for I seemed to be brought before the judgment seat of Christ.
Your state of backsliding, your hardness of heart, your lack
of harmony of love and spirituality, your departure from the
simplicity and purity which God would have you preserve--I knew
it all; I felt it all. Faultfinding, censuring, envy, strife
for the highest place, were among you. I had seen it and to what
it would lead. I feared that effort would cost me my life, but
the interest I felt for you led me to speak. God spoke to you
that day. Did it make any lasting impression?
When I went to Colorado I was so burdened
for you that, in my weakness, I wrote many pages to be read at
your camp meeting. Weak and trembling, I arose at three o'clock
in the morning to write to you. God was speaking through clay.
You might say that this communication was only a letter. Yes,
it was a letter, but prompted by the Spirit of God, to bring
before your minds things that had been shown me. In these letters
which I write, in the testimonies I bear, I am presenting to
you that which the Lord has presented to me. I do not write one
article in the paper expressing merely my own ideas. They are
what God has opened before me in vision--the precious rays of
light shining from the throne.
After I came to Oakland I was weighted
down with a sense of the condition of things at Battle Creek,
and I, weak, power less to help you. I knew that the leaven of
unbelief was at work. Those who disregarded the plain injunctions
of God's word were disregarding the testimonies which urged them
to give heed to that word. While visiting Healdsburg last winter,
I was much in prayer and burdened with anxiety and grief. But
the Lord swept back the darkness at one time while I was in prayer,
and a great light filled the room. An angel of God was by my
side, and I seemed to be in Battle Creek. I was in your councils;
I heard words uttered, I saw and heard things that, if God willed,
I wish could be forever blotted from my memory. My soul was so
wounded I knew not what to do or what to say. Some things I cannot
mention. I was bidden to let no one know in regard to this, for
much was yet to be developed.
I was told to gather up the light that
had been given me and let its rays shine forth to God's people.
I have been doing this in articles in the papers. I arose at
three o'clock nearly every morning for months and gathered the
different items written after the last two testimonies were given
me in Battle Creek. I wrote out these matters and hurried them
on to you; but I had neglected to take proper care of myself,
and the result was that I sank under the burden; my writings
were not all finished to reach you at the General Conference.
Again, while in prayer, the Lord revealed
Himself. I was once more in Battle Creek. I was in many houses
and heard your words around your tables. The particulars I have
no liberty now to relate. I hope never to be called to mention
them. I had also several most striking dreams.
What voice will you acknowledge as the
voice of God? What power has the Lord in reserve to correct your
errors and show you your course as it is? What power to work
in the church? If you refuse to
believe until every shadow of uncertainty and every possibility
of doubt is removed you will never believe. The doubt that demands
perfect knowledge will never yield to faith. Faith rests upon
evidence, not demonstration. The Lord requires us to obey the
voice of duty, when there are other voices all around us urging
us to pursue an opposite course. It requires earnest attention
from us to distinguish the voice which speaks from God. We must
resist and conquer inclination, and obey the voice of conscience
without parleying or compromise, lest its promptings cease and
will and impulse control. The word of the Lord comes to us all
who have not resisted His Spirit by determining not to hear and
obey. This voice is heard in warnings, in counsels, in reproof.
It is the Lord's message of light to His people. If we wait for
louder calls or better opportunities, the light may be withdrawn,
and we left in darkness.
By once neglecting to comply with the call
of God's Spirit and His word, when obedience involves a cross,
many have lost much--how much they will never know till the books
are opened at the final day. The pleadings of the Spirit, neglected
today because pleasure or inclination leads in an opposite direction,
may be powerless to convince, or even impress, tomorrow. To improve
the opportunities of the present, with prompt and willing hearts,
is the only way to grow in grace and the knowledge of the truth.
We should ever cherish a sense that, individually, we are standing
before the Lord of hosts; no word, no act, no thought, even,
should be indulged, to offend the eye of the Eternal One. We
shall then have no fear of man or of earthly power, because a
Monarch, whose empire is the universe, who holds in His hands
our individual destinies for time and eternity, is taking cognizance
of all our work. If we would feel that in every place we are
the servants of the Most High, we would be more circumspect;
our whole life would possess to
us a meaning and a sacredness which earthly honors can never
give.
The thoughts of the heart, the words of
the lips, and every act of the life, will make our character
more worthy, if the presence of God is continually felt. Let
the language of the heart be: "Lo, God is here." Then
the life will be pure, the character unspotted, the soul continually
uplifted to the Lord. You have not pursued this course at Battle
Creek. I have been shown that painful and contagious disease
is upon you, which will produce spiritual death unless it is
arrested.
Many are ruined by their desire for a life
of ease and pleasure. Self-denial is disagreeable to them. They
are constantly seeking to escape trials that are inseparable
from a course of fidelity to God. They set their hearts upon
having the good things of this life. This is human success, but
is it not won at the expense of future, eternal interests? The
great business of life is to show ourselves to be true servants
of God, loving righteousness and hating iniquity. We should accept
gratefully such measures of present happiness and present success
as are found in the path of duty. Our greatest strength is realized
when we feel and acknowledge our weakness. The greatest loss
which any one of you in Battle Creek can suffer is the loss of
earnestness and persevering zeal to do right, the loss of strength
to resist temptation, the loss of faith in the principles of
truth and duty.
Let no man flatter himself that he is a
successful man unless he preserves the integrity of his conscience,
giving himself wholly to the truth and to God. We should move
steadily forward, never losing heart or hope in the good work,
whatever trials beset our path, whatever moral darkness may encompass
us. Patience, faith, and love for duty are the lessons we must
learn. Subduing self and looking to Jesus is an everyday work.
The Lord will never forsake the soul that trusts in Him
and seeks His aid. The crown of life is placed
only upon the brow of the overcomer. There is, for everyone,
earnest, solemn work for God while life lasts. As Satan's power
increases and his devices are multiplied, skill, aptness, and
sharp generalship should be exercised by those in charge of the
flock of God. Not only have we each a work to do for our own
souls, but we have also a duty to arouse others to gain eternal
life.
It pains me to say, my brethren, that your
sinful neglect to walk in the light has enshrouded you in darkness.
You may now be honest in not recognizing and obeying the light;
the doubts you have entertained, your neglect to heed the requirements
of God, have blinded your perceptions so that darkness is now
to you light, and light is darkness. God has bidden you to go
forward to perfection. Christianity is a religion of progress.
Light from God is full and ample, waiting our demand upon it.
Whatever blessings the Lord may give, He has an infinite supply
beyond, an inexhaustible store from which we may draw. Skepticism
may treat the sacred claims of the gospel with jests, scoffing,
and denial. The spirit of worldliness may contaminate the many
and control the few; the cause of God may hold its ground only
by great exertion and continual sacrifice, yet it will triumph
finally.
The word is: Go forward; discharge your
individual duty, and leave all consequences in the hands of God.
If we move forward where Jesus leads the way we shall see His
triumph, we shall share His joy. We must share the conflicts
if we wear the crown of victory. Like Jesus, we must be made
perfect through suffering. Had Christ's life been one of ease,
then might we safely yield to sloth. Since His life was marked
with continual self-denial, suffering, and self-sacrifice, we
shall make no complaint if we are partakers with Him. We can
walk safely in the darkest path if we have the Light of the world
for our guide.
The Lord is testing and proving you. He
has counseled, admonished, and entreated. All these solemn admonitions
will either make the church better or decidedly worse. The oftener
the Lord speaks to correct or counsel, and you disregard His
voice, the more disposed will you be to reject it again and again,
till God says: "Because I have called, and ye refused; I
have stretched out My hand, and no man regarded; but ye have
set at nought all My counsel, and would none of My reproof: I
also will laugh at your calamity; I will mock when your fear
cometh; when your fear cometh as desolation, and your destruction
cometh as a whirlwind; when distress and anguish cometh upon
you. Then shall they call upon Me, but I will not answer; they
shall seek Me early, but they shall not find me; for that they
hated knowledge, and did not choose the fear of the Lord: they
would none of My counsel: they despised all My reproof. Therefore
shall they eat of the fruit of their own way, and be filled with
their own devices."
Are you not halting between two opinions?
Are you not neglecting to heed the light which God has given
you? Take heed lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief
in departing from the living God. You know not the time of your
visitation. The great sin of the Jews was that of neglecting
and rejecting present opportunities. As Jesus views the state
of His professed followers today, He sees base ingratitude, hollow
formalism, hypocritical insincerity, pharisaical pride and apostasy.
The tears which Christ shed on the crest
of Olivet were for the impenitence and ingratitude of every individual
to the close of time. He sees His love despised. The soul's temple
courts have been converted into places of unholy traffic. Selfishness,
mammon, malice, envy, pride, passion, are all cherished in the
human heart. His warnings are rejected and ridiculed, His ambassadors
are treated with indifference, their words
seem as idle tales. Jesus has spoken by mercies, but these mercies
have been unacknowledged; He has spoken by solemn warnings, but
these warnings have been rejected.
I entreat you who have long professed the
faith and who still pay outward homage to Christ: Do not deceive
your own souls. It is the whole heart that Jesus prizes. The
loyalty of the soul is alone of value in the sight of God. "If
thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things
which belong to thy peace!" "Thou, . . . even thou"--Christ
is at this moment addressing you personally, stooping from His
throne, yearning with pitying tenderness over those who feel
not their danger, who have no pity for themselves.
Many have a name to live while they have
become spiritually dead. These will one day say: "Lord,
Lord, have we not prophesied in Thy name? and in Thy name have
cast out devils? and in Thy name done many wonderful works? And
then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from
Me, ye that work iniquity." Woe will be pronounced against
thee, if thou loiter and linger until the Sun of Righteousness
shall set; the blackness of eternal night will be thy portion.
Oh, that the cold, formal, worldly heart may be melted! Christ
shed not only tears for us, but His own blood. Will not these
manifestations of His love arouse us to deep humiliation before
God? It is humility and self-abasement that we need, to be approved
of God.
The man whom God is leading will be dissatisfied
with himself because the light from the perfect Man shines upon
him. But those who lose sight of the Pattern, and place an undue
estimate upon themselves, will see faults to criticize in others;
they will be sharp, suspicious, condemnatory; they will be tearing
others down to build themselves up.
When the Lord last presented your case
before me, and made known to me that you had not regarded the
light which had been given you, I was bidden to speak to you
plainly in His name, for His anger
was kindled against you. These words were spoken to me: "Your
work is appointed you of God. Many will not hear you, for they
refused to hear the Great Teacher; many will not be corrected,
for their ways are right in their own eyes. Yet bear to them
the reproofs and warnings I shall give you, whether they will
hear or forbear."
I bear you the testimony of the Lord. All
will hear His voice who are willing to be corrected; but those
who have been deceived by the enemy are not willing now to come
to the light, lest their deeds shall be reproved. Many of you
cannot discern the work and presence of God. You know not that
it is He. The Lord is still gracious, willing to pardon all who
turn to Him with penitence and faith. Said the Lord: Many know
not at what they stumble. They heed not the voice of God, but
follow the sight of their own eyes and the understanding of their
own hearts. Unbelief and skepticism have taken the place of faith.
They have forsaken Me.
I was shown that fathers and mothers have
departed from their simplicity and neglected the holy calling
of the gospel. The Lord has admonished them not to corrupt themselves
by adopting the customs and maxims of the world. Christ would
have given them the unsearchable riches of His grace freely and
abundantly, but they prove themselves unworthy.
Many are lifting up the soul unto vanity.
No sooner does a person imagine that he possesses any talent
which might be of use in the cause of God than he overestimates
the gift and is inclined to think too highly of himself, as though
he were a pillar of the church. The work which he might do with
acceptance he leaves for someone else with less ability than
he considers himself to possess. He thinks and talks of a higher
station. He must let his light shine before men; but instead
of grace, meekness, lowliness of mind, kindness, gentleness,
and love shining in his life, self, important self, appears everywhere.
The spirit of Christ should so control
our character and conduct that our influence may ever bless,
encourage, and edify. Our thoughts, our words, our acts, should
testify that we are born of God and that the peace of Christ
rules in our hearts. In this way we throw around us the gracious
radiance of which the Saviour speaks when He enjoins upon us
to let our light shine forth to men. Thus we are leaving a bright
track heaven ward. In this way all who are connected with Christ
may become more effectual preachers of righteousness than by
the most able pulpit effort without this heavenly unction. Those
light bearers shed forth the purest radiance that are the least
conscious of their own brightness, as those flowers diffuse the
sweetest fragrance that make the least display.
Our people are making very dangerous mistakes.
We cannot praise and flatter any man without doing him a great
wrong; those who do this will meet with serious disappointment.
They trust too fully to finite man and not enough to God, who
never errs. The eager desire to urge men into public notice is
an evidence of backsliding from God and of friendship with the
world. It is the spirit which characterizes the present day.
It shows that men have not the mind of Jesus; spiritual blindness
and poverty of soul have come upon them. Often persons of inferior
minds look away from Jesus to a merely human standard, by which
they are not made conscious of their own littleness, and hence
have an undue estimate of their own capabilities and endowments.
There is among us as a people an idolatry of human instrumentalities
and mere human talent, and these even of a superficial character.
We must die to self and cherish humble, childlike faith. God's
people have departed from their simplicity. They have not made
God their strength, and they are weak and faint, spiritually.
I have been shown that the spirit of the
world is fast leavening the church. You are following the same
path as did ancient Israel. There
is the same falling away from your holy calling as God's peculiar
people. You are having fellowship with the unfruitful works of
darkness. Your concord with unbelievers has provoked the Lord's
displeasure. You know not the things that belong to your peace,
and they are fast being hid from your eyes. Your neglect to follow
the light will place you in a more unfavorable position than
the Jews upon whom Christ pronounced a woe.
I have been shown that unbelief in the
testimonies has been steadily increasing as the people backslide
from God. It is all through our ranks, all over the field. But
few know what our churches are to experience. I saw that at present
we are under divine forbearance, but no one can say how long
this will continue. No one knows how great the mercy that has
been exercised toward us. But few are heartily devoted to God.
There are only a few who, like the stars in a tempestuous night,
shine here and there among the clouds.
Many who complacently listen to the truths
from God's word are dead spiritually, while they profess to live.
For years they have come and gone in our congregations, but they
seem only less and less sensible of the value of revealed truth.
They do not hunger and thirst after righteousness. They have
no relish for spiritual or divine things. They assent to the
truth, but are not sanctified through it. Neither the word of
God nor the testimonies of His Spirit make any lasting impression
upon them. Just according to the light, the privileges, and opportunities
which they have slighted will be their condemnation. Many who
preach the truth to others are themselves cherishing iniquity.
The entreaties of the Spirit of God, like divine melody, the
promises of His word so rich and abundant, its threatenings against
idolatry and disobedience--all are powerless to melt the world-hardened
heart.
Many of our people are lukewarm. They occupy
the position of Meroz, neither
for nor against, neither cold nor hot. They hear the words of
Christ, but do them not. If they remain in this state, He will
reject them with abhorrence. Many of those who have had great
light, great opportunities, and every spiritual advantage praise
Christ and the world with the same breath. They bow themselves
before God and mammon. They make merry with the children of the
world, and yet claim to be blessed with the children of God.
They wish to have Christ as their Saviour, but will not bear
the cross and wear His yoke. May the Lord have mercy upon you;
for if you go on in this way, nothing but evil can be prophesied
concerning you.
The patience of God has an object, but
you are defeating it. He is allowing a state of things to come
that you would fain see counteracted by and by, but it will be
too late. God commanded Elijah to anoint the cruel and deceitful
Hazael king over Syria, that he might be a scourge to idolatrous
Israel. Who knows whether God will not give you up to the deceptions
you love? Who knows but that the preachers who are faithful,
firm, and true may be the last who shall offer the gospel of
peace to our unthankful churches? It may be that the destroyers
are already training under the hand of Satan and only wait the
departure of a few more standard-bearers to take their places,
and with the voice of the false prophet cry, Peace, peace,"
when the Lord hath not spoken peace. I seldom weep, but now I
find my eyes blinded with tears; they are falling upon my paper
as I write. It may be that erelong all prophesyings among us
will be at an end, and the voice which has stirred the people
may no longer disturb their carnal slumbers.
When God shall work His strange work on
the earth, when holy hands bear the ark no longer, woe will be
upon the people. Oh, that thou hadst known, even thou, in this
thy day, the things that belong unto thy peace! Oh, that our
people may, as did Nineveh, repent with all
their might and believe with all their heart, that God may turn
away His fierce anger from them.
I am filled with pain and anguish as I
see parents conforming to the world and allowing their children
to meet the worldly standard at such a time as this. I am filled
with horror as the condition of families professing present truth
is opened before me. The profligacy of youth and even children
is almost incredible. Parents do not know that secret vice is
destroying and defacing the image of God in their children. The
sins which characterized the Sodomites exist among them. The
parents are responsible; for they have not educated their children
to love and obey God. They have not restrained them nor diligently
taught them the way of the Lord. They have allowed them to go
out and to come in when they chose, and to associate with worldlings.
These worldly influences which counteract parental teaching and
authority are to be found largely in so-called good society.
By their dress, looks, amusements, they surround themselves with
an atmosphere which is opposed to Christ.
Our only safety is to stand as God's peculiar
people. We must not yield one inch to the customs and fashions
of this degenerate age, but stand in moral independence, making
no compromise with its corrupt and idolatrous practices.
It will require courage and independence
to rise above the religious standard of the Christian world.
They do not follow the Saviour's example of self-denial; they
make no sacrifice; they are constantly seeking to evade the cross
which Christ declares to be the token of discipleship.
What can I say to arouse our people? I
tell you not a few ministers who stand before the people to explain
the Scriptures are defiled. Their hearts are corrupt, their hands
unclean. Yet many are crying, Peace, "peace;" and the
workers of iniquity are not alarmed. The Lord's hand is not shortened
that He cannot save, nor His ear heavy that
He cannot hear; but it is our sins that have separated us from
God. The church is corrupt because of her members who defile
their bodies and pollute their souls.
If all of those who come together for meetings
of edification and prayer could be regarded as true worshipers,
then might we hope, though much would still remain to be done
for us. But it is in vain to deceive ourselves. Things are far
from being what the appearance would indicate. From a distant
view much may appear beautiful which, upon close examination,
will be found full of deformities. The prevailing spirit of our
time is that of infidelity and apostasy--a spirit of pretended
illumination because of a knowledge of the truth, but in reality
of the blindest presumption. There is a spirit of opposition
to the plain word of God and to the testimony of His Spirit.
There is a spirit of idolatrous exaltation of mere human reason
above the revealed wisdom of God.
There are men among us in responsible positions
who hold that the opinions of a few conceited philosophers, so
called, are more to be trusted than the truth of the Bible, or
the testimonies of the Holy Spirit. Such a faith as that of Paul,
Peter, or John is considered old-fashioned and insufferable at
the present day. It is pronounced absurd, mystical, and unworthy
of an intelligent mind.
God has shown me that these men are Hazaels
to prove a scourge to our people. They are wise above what is
written. This unbelief of the very truths of God's word because
human judgment cannot comprehend the mysteries of His work is
found in every district, in all ranks of society. It is taught
in most of our schools and comes into the lessons of the nurseries.
Thousands who profess to be Christians give heed to lying spirits.
Everywhere the spirit of darkness in the garb of religion will
confront you.
If all that appears to be divine life were
such in reality; if all who profess
to present the truth to the world were preaching for the truth
and not against it, and if they were men of God guided by His
Spirit,--then might we see something cheering amid the prevailing
moral darkness. But the spirit of antichrist is prevailing to
such an extent as never before. Well may we exclaim: "Help,
Lord; for the godly man ceaseth; for the faithful fail from among
the children of men." I know that many think far too favorably
of the present time. These ease-loving souls will be engulfed
in the general ruin. Yet we do not despair. We have been inclined
to think that where there are no faithful ministers there can
be no true Christians, but this is not the case. God has promised
that where the shepherds are not true He will take charge of
the flock Himself. God has never made the flock wholly dependent
upon human instrumentalities. But the days of purification of
the church are hastening on apace. God will have a people pure
and true. In the mighty sifting soon to take place we shall be
better able to measure the strength of Israel. The signs reveal
that the time is near when the Lord will manifest that His fan
is in His hand, and He will thoroughly purge His floor.
The days are fast approaching when there
will be great perplexity and confusion. Satan, clothed in angel
robes, will deceive, if possible, the very elect. There will
be gods many and lords many. Every wind of doctrine will be blowing.
Those who have rendered supreme homage to "science falsely
so called" will not be the leaders then. Those who have
trusted to intellect, genius, or talent will not then stand at
the head of rank and file. They did not keep pace with the light.
Those who have proved themselves unfaithful will not then be
entrusted with the flock. In the last solemn work few great men
will be engaged. They are self-sufficient, independent of God,
and He cannot use them. The Lord has faithful servants, who in
the shaking, testing time will be disclosed to view. There are precious ones now hidden who have
not bowed the knee to Baal. They have not had the light which
has been shining in a concentrated blaze upon you. But it may
be under a rough and uninviting exterior the pure brightness
of a genuine Christian character will be revealed. In the day
time we look toward heaven but do not see the stars. They are
there, fixed in the firmament, but the eye cannot distinguish
them. In the night we behold their genuine luster.
The time is not far distant when the test
will come to every soul. The mark of the beast will be urged
upon us. Those who have step by step yielded to worldly demands
and conformed to worldly customs will not find it a hard matter
to yield to the powers that be, rather than subject themselves
to derision, insult, threatened imprisonment, and death. The
contest is between the commandments of God and the commandments
of men. In this time the gold will be separated from the dross
in the church. True godliness will be clearly distinguished from
the appearance and tinsel of it. Many a star that we have admired
for its brilliancy will then go out in darkness. Chaff like a
cloud will be borne away on the wind, even from places where
we see only floors of rich wheat. All who assume the ornaments
of the sanctuary, but are not clothed with Christ's righteousness,
will appear in the shame of their own nakedness.
When trees without fruit are cut down as
cumberers of the ground, when multitudes of false brethren are
distinguished from the true, then the hidden ones will be revealed
to view, and with hosannas range under the banner of Christ.
Those who have been timid and self-distrustful will declare themselves
openly for Christ and His truth. The most weak and hesitating
in the church will be as David--willing to do and dare. The deeper
the night for God's people, the more brilliant the stars. Satan
will sorely harass the faithful; but,
in the name of Jesus, they will come off more than conquerors.
Then will the church of Christ appear "fair as the moon,
clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with banners."
The seeds of truth that are being sown
by missionary efforts will then spring up and blossom and bear
fruit. Souls will receive the truth who will endure tribulation
and praise God that they may suffer for Jesus. "In the world
ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome
the world." When the overflowing scourge shall pass through
the earth, when the fan is purging Jehovah's floor, God will
be the help of His people. The trophies of Satan may be exalted
on high, but the faith of the pure and holy will not be daunted.
Elijah took Elisha from the plow and threw
upon him his mantle of consecration. The call to this great and
solemn work was presented to men of learning and position; had
these been little in their own eyes and trusted fully in the
Lord, He would have honored them with bearing His standard in
triumph to the victory. But they separated from God, yielded
to the influence of the world, and the Lord rejected them.
Many have exalted science and lost sight
of the God of science. This was not the case with the church
in the purest times.
God will work a work in our day that but
few anticipate. He will raise up and exalt among us those who
are taught rather by the unction of His Spirit than by the outward
training of scientific institutions. These facilities are not
to be despised or condemned; they are ordained of God, but they
can furnish only the exterior qualifications. God will manifest
that He is not dependent on learned, self-important mortals.
There are few really consecrated men among
us, few who have fought and conquered in the battle with self.
Real conversion is a decided change of feelings and motives;
it is a virtual taking leave of
worldly connections, a hastening from their spiritual atmosphere,
a withdrawing from the controlling power of their thoughts, opinions,
and influences. The separation causes pain and bitterness to
both parties. It is the variance which Christ declares that He
came to bring. But the converted will feel a continual longing
desire that their friends shall forsake all for Christ, knowing
that, unless they do, there will be a final and eternal separation.
The true Christian cannot, while with unbelieving friends, be
light and trifling. The value of the souls for whom Christ died
is too great.
He "that forsaketh not all that he
hath," says Jesus, "cannot be My disciple." Whatever
shall divert the affections from God must be given up. Mammon
is the idol of many. Its golden chain binds them to Satan. Reputation
and worldly honor are worshiped by another class. The life of
selfish ease and freedom from responsibility is the idol of others.
These are Satan's snares, set for unwary feet. But these slavish
bands must be broken; the flesh must be crucified with the affections
and lusts. We cannot be half the Lord's and half the world's.
We are not God's people unless we are such entirely. Every weight,
every besetting sin, must be laid aside. God's watchmen will
not cry, "Peace, peace," when God has not spoken peace.
The voice of the faithful watchmen will be heard: "Go ye
out from thence, touch no unclean thing; go ye out of the midst
of her; be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord."
The church cannot measure herself by the
world nor by the opinion of men nor by what she once was. Her
faith and her position in the world as they now are must be compared
with what they would have been if her course had been continually
onward and upward. The church will be weighed in the balances
of the sanctuary. If her moral character and spiritual state
do not correspond with the benefits and blessings God has conferred
upon her, she will be found wanting. The
light has been shining clear and definite upon her pathway, and
the light of 1882 calls her to an account. If her talents are
unimproved, if her fruit is not perfect before God, if her light
has become darkness, she is indeed found wanting. The knowledge
of our state as God views it, seems to be hidden from us. We
see, but perceive not; we hear, but do not understand; and we
rest as unconcerned as if the pillar of cloud by day, and the
pillar of fire by night, rested upon our sanctuary. We profess
to know God, and to believe the truth, but in works deny Him.
Our deeds are directly adverse to the principles of truth and
righteousness, by which we profess to be governed.