Satan uses men and women as agents to solicit
to sin and make it attractive. These agents he faithfully educates
to so disguise sin that he can more successfully destroy souls
and rob Christ of His glory. Satan is the great enemy of God
and man. He transforms himself through his agents into angels
of light. In the Scriptures he is called a destroyer, an accuser
of the brethren, a deceiver, a liar, a tormentor, and a murderer.
Satan has many in his employ, but is most successful when he
can use professed Christians for his satanic work. And the greater
their influence, the more elevated their position, the more knowledge
they profess of God and His service, the more successfully can
he use them. Whoever entices to sin is his agent.
While attending one of the Eastern camp
meetings I was introduced one Friday to a man who occupied a
tent with several women and children. That night I was unable
to sleep; my soul was deeply burdened. While pleading with God
in the night season a vision given years ago at the time when
the course of Nathan Fuller was reproved was distinctly revived
in my mind. At that time I was shown three men whom I should
meet who would be pursuing the same course of iniquity under
the profession of godliness. This man was one of the three. As
I bore my testimony in the morning meeting, the power and Spirit
of God rested upon me; but I did not mention individual cases.
Later in the day I felt clear in reference to my duty and bore
my testimony, referring to his case as most marked. By this course
of action this man was going exactly contrary to the direction
of the apostle to "abstain from all appearance of evil."
He was breaking the seventh commandment, while professedly keeping
the fourth. By his deception he was gathering around him a company
of women who followed him from place to place, as a faithful
wife would accompany her husband.
As a people, we are looked upon as peculiar.
Our position and faith distinguish us from every other denomination.
If we are in life and character no better than worldlings, they
will point the finger of scorn at us and say: "These are
Seventh-day Adventists." "We have here a sample of
the people who keep the seventh day for Sunday." The stigma
which should be rightfully attached to such a class is thus placed
upon all who are conscientiously keeping the seventh day. Oh,
how much better it would be if such a class would not make any
pretension to obey the truth!
I felt led out to rebuke this man in the
name of the Lord and to call upon the women who were with him
to separate from him and withdraw their misplaced confidence,
for unhappiness and ruin were in the path they had entered upon.
The Ledger of Heaven testifies of this man
thus: "A deceiver, an adulterer, creeping into houses and
leading captive silly women." How many souls he will destroy
with his satanic sophistry the judgment alone will reveal. Such
men ought to be rebuked and discountenanced at once, that they
may not bring a continual reproach upon the cause.
As we near the close of earth's history,
perils and dangers thicken around us. A mere profession of godliness
will not avail. There must be a living connection with God, that
we may have spiritual eyesight to discern the wickedness which
is in a most artful and secret manner creeping into our midst
through those who make a profession of our faith. The greatest
sins are brought in through those who profess to be sanctified
and claim that they cannot sin. Yet many of this class are sinning
daily and are corrupt in heart and life. Such are self-sufficient
and self-righteous, making their own standard of righteousness
and utterly failing to meet the Bible standard. Notwithstanding
their high claims, they are strangers to the covenant of promise.
It is in great mercy that God bears with their perversity and
that they are not cut down as cumberers of the ground, but still
remain within the possibilities of forgiveness. The forbearance
of God is continually presumed upon and His mercy abused. David
in his day thought that men had exceeded the boundaries of the
long-suffering of God, and that He must interfere to vindicate
His honor and restrain unrighteousness.
Mr. ----- is a teacher of doctrines that
defile the temple of God. There is scarcely a ray of hope for
him; he has deceived himself and deluded others so long that
Satan has almost entire control of his mind and body. If his
professed robe of righteousness can be torn from him and his
vile purposes and thoughts be exposed, so that he will not continue
to lead others in the paths of hell, it will be all we may expect.
The warnings of God he first hated and
then resisted because they brought
his own wicked course to be seen in the light of God's law. It
is one of the saddest evidences of the blinding influence of
sin that months and years roll on and there is no awaking to
repentance. With a firm persistence he has pursued his downward
course. He has no bitter feelings of remorse, no dread of heaven's
vengeance. If by lies and deception he can cover his sins from
observation he is content. All sense of right and wrong is dead
within him. A harvest is before him that he will be horrified
to reap.
The worst feature in this case is that
all his satanic work is done under pretense of being a representative
of Jesus Christ. One sinner dressed up as an angel of light can
do incalculable harm. Dark and fearful plans are deliberately
made to separate man and wife. Said the apostle: "Of this
sort are they which creep into houses, and lead captive silly
women laden with sins, led away with divers lusts." These
licentious characters even creep into respectable families and
by their deceptive wiles and intrigues lead astray the conscientious.
Damnable heresies are received as truth, and the most revolting
sins committed as acts of righteousness, for conscience becomes
confused and stupefied.
This man embraced the unpopular doctrine
that the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord, in order to
give to his religious experience a semblance of honesty. Our
views have been clearly defined in our publications, but, concealing
this fact, he mixed with truth his own defiling heresies and
tried to make others believe that God had given him new light
upon the Bible. By thus professing to have great light for the
people on the Sabbath of the fourth commandment and kindred truths
he had to the unsuspecting an appearance of really being led
of God. But when once the confidence is gained, he commences
his satanic work of wresting the Scriptures from their true meaning
by seeking to show that adultery
condemned in the law of God does not mean
what it is generally understood to mean. He really tries to make
sensible women believe it not offensive to God for wives to be
untrue to their marriage vows. He will not even admit that this
would be breaking the seventh commandment. Satan rejoices to
have sinners enter the church as professed Sabbathkeepers while
they allow him to control their minds and affections, using them
to deceive and corrupt others.
In this degenerate age many will be found
who are so blinded to the sinfulness of sin that they choose
a licentious life because it suits the natural and perverse inclination
of the heart. Instead of facing the mirror, the law of God, and
bringing their hearts and characters up to God's standard, they
allow Satan's agents to erect his standard in their hearts. Corrupt
men think it easier to misinterpret the Scriptures to sustain
them in their iniquity than to yield up their corruption and
sin and be pure in heart and life.
There are more men of this stamp than many
have imagined, and they will multiply as we draw near the end
of time. Unless they are rooted and grounded in the truth of
the Bible, and have a living connection with God, many will be
infatuated and deceived. Dangers unseen beset our path. Our only
safety is in constant watchfulness and prayer. The nearer we
live to Jesus, the more will we partake of His pure and holy
character; and the more offensive sin appears to us, the more
exalted and desirable will appear the purity and brightness of
Christ.
In order to cover his corrupt life and
make his sins appear harmless, this man will bring up instances
recorded in the Bible where good men have fallen under temptation.
Paul met with just such men in his day, and the church has been
cursed with them in all ages. At Miletus Paul called the elders
of the church together and warned them in regard to what
they would meet: "Take heed therefore
unto yourselves, and to all the flock, over the which the Holy
Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the church of God, which
He hath purchased with His own blood. For I know this, that after
my departing shall grievous wolves enter in among you, not sparing
the flock. Also of your own selves shall men arise, speaking
perverse things, to draw away disciples after them. Therefore
watch, and remember, that by the space of three years I ceased
not to warn everyone night and day with tears."
He who holds the truth in unrighteousness,
who declares his belief in it, and yet wounds it every day by
his inconsistent life, is surrendering himself to the service
of Satan and leading souls to ruin. This class hold intercourse
with fallen angels and are aided by them in gaining the control
of minds. When Satan's bewitching power controls a person, God
is forgotten, and man who is filled with corrupt purposes is
extolled. Secret licentiousness is practiced by these deceived
souls as a virtue. This is a species of witchcraft. The question
of the apostle to the Galatians may well be asked: "Who
hath bewitched you, that ye should not obey the truth, before
whose eyes Jesus Christ hath been evidently set forth, crucified
among you?" There is always a bewitching power in heresies
and in licentiousness. The mind is so deluded that it cannot
reason intelligently, and an illusion is continually leading
it from purity. The spiritual eyesight becomes blurred, and persons
of hitherto untainted morals become confused under the delusive
sophistry of those agents of Satan who profess to be messengers
of light. It is this delusion which gives these agents power.
Should they come out boldly and make their advances openly they
would be repulsed without a moment's hesitation; but they work
first to gain sympathy and secure confidence in themselves as
holy, self-sacrificing men of God. As His special messengers
they then begin their artful work of drawing away
souls from the path of rectitude by attempting
to make void the law of God.
When ministers thus take advantage of the
confidence the people place in them and lead souls to ruin, they
make themselves as much more guilty than the common sinner as
their profession is higher. In the day of God, when the great
Ledger of Heaven is opened, it will be found to contain the names
of many ministers who have made pretensions to purity of heart
and life and professed to be entrusted with the gospel of Christ,
but who have taken advantage of their position to allure souls
to transgress the law of God.
When men and women fall under the corrupting
power of Satan, it is almost impossible to recover them out of
the horrible snare so that they will ever again have pure thoughts
and clear conceptions of God's requirements. Sin, to their deluded
minds, has been sanctified by the minister, and it is never again
regarded in the loathsome light that God looks upon it. After
the moral standard has been lowered in the minds of men, their
judgment becomes perverted, and they look upon sin as righteousness,
and righteousness as sin. By associating with these, whose inclinations
and habits are not elevated and pure, others become like them.
Their tastes and principles are almost unconsciously adopted.
If the society of a man of impure mind
and licentious habits is chosen in preference to that of the
virtuous and pure, it is a sure indication that the tastes and
inclinations harmonize, that a low level of morals is reached.
This level is called by these deceived, infatuated souls, a high
and holy affinity of spirit--a spiritual harmony. But the apostle
terms it "spiritual wickedness in high places," against
which we are to institute a vigorous warfare.
When the deceiver commences his work of
deception, he frequently finds dissimilarity of tastes and habits;
but by great pretensions to godliness he gains the confidence,
and when this is done, his wily, deceptive power is exercised
in his own way to carry out his devices. By associating with
this dangerous element, women become accustomed to breathe the
atmosphere of impurity and almost insensibly become permeated
with the same spirit. Their identity is lost; they become the
shadow of their seducer.
Men professing to have new light, claiming
to be reformers, will have great influence over a certain class
who are convinced of the heresies that exist in the present age
and who are not satisfied with the spiritual condition of the
churches. With true, honest hearts, these desire to see a change
for the better, a coming up to a higher standard. If the faithful
servants of Christ would present the truth, pure and unadulterated,
to this class, they would accept it, and purify themselves by
obeying it. But Satan, ever vigilant, sets upon the track of
these inquiring souls. Someone making high profession as a reformer
comes to them, as Satan came to Christ disguised as an angel
of light, and draws them still further from the path of right.
The unhappiness and degradation that follow
in the train of licentiousness cannot be estimated. The world
is defiled under its inhabitants. They have nearly filled up
the measure of their iniquity; but that which will bring the
heaviest retribution is the practice of iniquity under the cloak
of godliness. The Redeemer of the world never spurned true repentance,
however great the guilt; but He hurls burning denunciations against
Pharisees and hypocrites. There is more hope for the open sinner
than for this class.
"And for this cause [not receiving
the love of the truth] God shall send them strong delusion, that
they should believe a lie: that they all might be damned who
believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness."
This man and those deceived by him love not the truth but have
pleasure in unrighteousness. And what stronger delusion could
come upon them than that there
is nothing displeasing to God in licentiousness and adultery?
The Bible contains many warnings against these sins. Paul writes
to Titus of those who "profess that they know God; but in
works they deny Him, being abominable, and disobedient, and unto
every good work reprobate." "But there were false prophets
also among the people, even as there shall be false teachers
among you, who privily [not openly] shall bring in damnable heresies,
even denying the Lord that bought them, and bring upon themselves
swift destruction. And many shall follow their pernicious ways;
by reason of whom the way of truth shall be evil spoken of."
The ones here referred to are not those who openly claim to have
no faith in Christ, but those who profess to believe the truth
and by their vileness of character bring a reproach upon it,
causing it to be evil spoken of.
"And through covetousness shall they
with feigned words make merchandise of you: whose judgment now
of a long time lingereth not, and their damnation slumbereth
not." "But these, as natural brute beasts, made to
be taken and destroyed, speak evil of the things that they understand
not; and shall utterly perish in their own corruption; and shall
receive the reward of unrighteousness, as they that count it
pleasure to riot in the day time. Spots they are and blemishes,
sporting themselves with their own deceivings while they feast
with you; having eyes full of adultery, and that cannot cease
from sin; beguiling unstable souls: an heart they have exercised
with covetous practices; cursed children: which have forsaken
the right way, and are gone astray, following the way of Balaam
the son of Bosor, who loved the wages of unrighteousness."
"These are wells without water, clouds
that are carried with a tempest; to whom the mist of darkness
is reserved forever. For when they speak great swelling words
of vanity," boasting of their light, their knowledge and
their love of the truth, "they allure through the lusts
of the flesh, through much wantonness,
those that were clean escaped from them who live in error."
In this age of corruption when our adversary
the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about seeking whom he may
devour, I see the necessity of lifting my voice in warning. "Watch
ye and pray, lest ye enter into temptation." There are many
who possess brilliant talents who wickedly devote them to the
service of Satan. What warning can I give to a people who profess
to have come out from the world and to have left its works of
darkness? to a people whom God has made the repositories of His
law, but who, like the pretentious fig tree, flaunt their apparently
flourishing branches in the very face of the Almighty, yet bear
no fruit to the glory of God? Many of them cherish impure thoughts,
unholy imaginations, unsanctified desires, and base passions.
God hates the fruit borne upon such a tree. Angels, pure and
holy, look upon the course of such with abhorrence, while Satan
exults. Oh, that men and women would consider what is to be gained
by transgressing God's law! Under any and every circumstance,
transgression is a dishonor to God and a curse to man. We must
regard it thus, however fair its guise, and by whomsoever committed.
As Christ's ambassador, I entreat you who
profess present truth to promptly resent any approach to impurity
and forsake the society of those who breathe an impure suggestion.
Loathe these defiling sins with the most intense hatred. Flee
from those who would, even in conversation, let the mind run
in such a channel; "for out of the abundance of the heart
the mouth speaketh."
As those who practice these defiling sins
are steadily increasing in the world and would intrude themselves
into our churches, I warn you to give no place to them. Turn
from the seducer. Though a professed follower of Christ, he is
Satan in the form of man; he has borrowed the livery of heaven
that he may the better serve his master. You should not for one
moment give place to an impure, covert suggestion;
for even this will stain the soul, as impure water defiles the
channel through which it passes.
Choose poverty, reproach, separation from
friends, or any suffering rather than to defile the soul with
sin. Death before dishonor or the transgression of God's law
should be the motto of every Christian. As a people professing
to be reformers, treasuring the most solemn, purifying truths
of God's word, we must elevate the standard far higher than it
is at the present time. Sin and sinners in the church must be
promptly dealt with, that others may not be contaminated. Truth
and purity require that we make more thorough work to cleanse
the camp from Achans. Let those in responsible positions not
suffer sin in a brother. Show him that he must either put away
his sins or be separated from the church.
When the individual members of the church
shall act as true followers of the meek and lowly Saviour, there
will be less covering up and excusing of sin. All will strive
to act as if in God's presence. They will realize that His all-seeing
eye is ever upon them and that the most secret thought is known
to Him. The character, the motives, the desires and purposes,
are as clear as the light of the sun to the eye of the Omnipotent.
But few bear this in mind. The larger class by far do not realize
what a fearful account must be rendered at the bar of God by
all the transgressors of His law.
Can you who have professed to receive such
great light be content with a low level? Oh, how earnestly and
constantly should we seek for the divine presence and a realization
of the solemn truths that the end of all things is at hand and
that the Judge of all the earth stands at the door! How can you
disregard His just and holy requirements? How can you transgress
in the very face of Jehovah? How can you cherish unholy thoughts
and base passions in full view of the pure angels and of the
Redeemer, who gave Himself for you that He might redeem you from all iniquity and purify unto
Himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works? As you contemplate
the matter in the light which shines from the cross of Christ,
will not sin appear too mean, too perilous, to be indulged when
standing upon the very borders of the eternal world?
I speak to our people. If you draw close to
Jesus and seek to adorn your profession by a well-ordered life
and godly conversation, your feet will be kept from straying
into forbidden paths. If you will only watch, continually watch
unto prayer, if you will do everything as if you were in the
immediate presence of God, you will be saved from yielding to
temptation, and may hope to be kept pure, spotless, and undefiled
till the last. If you hold the beginning of your confidence firm
unto the end, your ways will be established in God; and what
grace has begun, glory will crown in the kingdom of our God.
The fruits of the Spirit are "love, joy, peace, long-suffering,
gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance: against such
there is no law." If Christ be within us, we shall crucify
the flesh with the affections and lusts.