The Lord has made the diffusion of light
and truth in the earth dependent on the voluntary efforts and
offerings of those who have been partakers of the heavenly gifts.
Comparatively few are called to travel as ministers or missionaries,
but multitudes are to co-operate in spreading the truth with
their means.
The history of Ananias and Sapphira is
given us that we may understand the sin of deception in regard
to our gifts and offerings. They had voluntarily promised to
give a portion of their property for the promotion of the cause
of Christ; but when the means was
in their hands they declined to fulfill that obligation, at the
same time wishing it to appear to others that they had given
all. Their punishment was marked in order that it might serve
as a perpetual warning to Christians of all ages. The same sin
is fearfully prevalent at the present time, yet we hear of no
such signal punishment. The Lord shows men once with what abhorrence
He regards such an offense against His sacred claims and dignity,
and then they are left to follow the general principles of the
divine administration.
Voluntary offerings and the tithe constitute
the revenue of the gospel. Of the means which is entrusted to
man, God claims a certain portion--a tithe; but He leaves all
free to say how much the tithe is, and whether or not they will
give more than this. They are to give as they purpose in their
hearts. But when the heart is stirred by the influence of the
Spirit of God, and a vow is made to give a certain amount, the
one who vowed has no longer any right to the consecrated portion.
He has given his pledge before men, and they are called to witness
to the transaction. At the same time he has incurred an obligation
of the most sacred character to co-operate with the Lord in building
up His kingdom on earth. Promises of this kind made to men would
be considered binding. Are they not more sacred and binding when
made to God? Are promises tried in the court of conscience less
binding than written agreements with men?
When the divine light is shining into the
heart with unusual clearness and power, habitual selfishness
relaxes its grasp, and there is a disposition to give to the
cause of God. None need expect that they will be allowed to fulfill
the promises then made without a protest on the part of Satan.
He is not pleased to see the Redeemer's kingdom on earth built
up. He suggests that the pledge made was too much, that it may
cripple them in their efforts to acquire property or gratify
the desires of their families.
The power Satan has over the human mind is wonderful. He labors
most earnestly to keep the heart bound up in self.
The only means which God has ordained to
advance His cause is to bless men with property. He gives them
the sunshine and the rain; He causes vegetation to flourish;
He gives health and ability to acquire means. All our blessings
come from His bountiful hand. In turn He would have men and women
show their gratitude by returning Him a portion in tithes and
offerings_in thank offerings, in freewill offerings, in trespass
offerings.
The hearts of men become hardened through
selfishness, and, like Ananias and Sapphira, they are tempted
to withhold part of the price while pretending to come up to
the rules of tithing. Will a man rob God? Should means flow into
the treasury exactly according to God's plan,--a tenth of all
the increase,--there would be abundance to carry forward His
work.
Well, says one, the calls keep coming to
give to the cause; I am weary of giving. Are you? Then let me
ask: Are you weary of receiving from God's beneficent hand? Not
until He ceases to bless you will you cease to be under bonds
to return to Him the portion He claims. He blesses you that it
may be in your power to bless others. When you are weary of receiving,
then you may say: I am weary of so many calls to give. God reserves
to Himself a portion of all that we receive. When this is returned
to Him, the remaining portion is blessed, but when it is withheld,
the whole is sooner or later cursed. God's claim is first; every
other is secondary.
In every church there should be established
a treasury for the poor. Then let each member present a thank
offering to God once a week or once a month, as is most convenient.
This offering will express our gratitude for the gifts of health,
of food, and of comfortable clothing. And according as God has
blessed us with these comforts will we lay
by for the poor, the suffering, and the distressed. I would call
the attention of our brethren especially to this point. Remember
the poor. Forego some of your luxuries, yea, even comforts, and
help those who can obtain only the most meager food and clothing.
In doing for them you are doing for Jesus in the person of His
saints. He identifies Himself with suffering humanity. Do not
wait until your imaginary wants are all satisfied. Do not trust
to your feelings and give when you feel like it and withhold
when you do not feel like it. Give regularly, either ten, twenty,
or fifty cents a week, as you would like to see upon the heavenly
record in the day of God.
Your good wishes we will thank you for,
but the poor cannot keep comfortable on good wishes alone. They
must have tangible proofs of your kindness in food and clothing.
God does not mean that any of His followers should beg for bread.
He has given you an abundance that you may supply those of their
necessities which by industry and economy they are not able to
supply. Do not wait for them to call your attention to their
needs. Act as did Job. The thing that he knew not he searched
out. Go on an inspecting tour and learn what is needed and how
it can be best supplied.
I have been shown that many of our people
are robbing the Lord in tithes and in offerings, and as the result
His work is greatly hindered. The curse of God will rest upon
those who are living upon God's bounties and yet close their
hearts and do nothing or next to nothing to advance His cause.
Brethren and sisters, how can the beneficent Father continue
to make you His stewards, furnishing you with means to use for
Him, when you grasp it all, selfishly claiming that it is yours!
Instead of rendering to God the means He
has placed in their hands, many invest it in more land. This
evil is growing with our brethren. They had before all they could
well care for, but the love of money or a desire to be counted
as well off as their neighbors
leads them to bury their means in the world and withhold from
God His just dues. Can we be surprised if they are not prospered?
if God does not bless their crops and they are disappointed?
Could our brethren remember that God can bless twenty acres of
land and make them as productive as one hundred, they would not
continue to bury themselves in lands, but would let their means
flow into God's treasury. "Take heed," said Christ,
lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting,
and drunkenness, and cares of this life." Satan is pleased
to have you increase your farms and invest your means in worldly
enterprises, for by so doing you not only hinder the cause from
advancing, but by anxiety and overwork lessen your prospect for
eternal life.
We ought now to be heeding the injunction
of our Saviour: "Sell that ye have, and give alms; provide
yourselves bags which wax not old, a treasure in the heavens
that faileth not." It is now that our brethren should be
cutting down their possessions instead of increasing them. We
are about to move to a better country, even a heavenly. Then
let us not be dwellers upon the earth, but be getting things
into as compact a compass as possible.
The time is coming when we cannot sell
at any price. The decree will soon go forth prohibiting men to
buy or sell of any man save him that hath the mark of the beast.
We came near having this realized in California a short time
since; but this was only the threatening of the blowing of the
four winds. As yet they are held by the four angels. We are not
just ready. There is a work yet to be done, and then the angels
will be bidden to let go, that the four winds may blow upon the
earth. That will be a decisive time for God's children, a time
of trouble such as never was since there was a nation. Now is
our opportunity to work.
There is among many professing the truth
a spirit of unrest. Some want to
go to another county or state, buy large lands, and carry on
an extensive business; others want to go into the city. Thus
little churches are left in weakness and discouragement to die,
when, had the ones who left them been content to work on a smaller
scale, doing their little with fidelity, they might have made
their families comfortable and been free to keep their own souls
in the love of God. Many who move are disappointed. They lose
what little property they had, lose health, and finally give
up the truth.
The Lord is coming. Let everyone show his
faith by his works. Faith in Christ's near advent is dying out
of the churches, and selfishness is causing them to rob God to
serve their own personal interests. When Christ is abiding in
us, we shall be self-denying like Him.
In times past there has been great liberality
on the part of our people. They have not been backward to respond
to calls for help in the various branches of the work. But of
late a change has come. There has been, especially with our Eastern
brethren, a withholding of means, while worldliness and love
of possessions have been increasing. There is a growing disregard
of promises made to help our various institutions and enterprises.
Subscriptions to build a church, to endow a college, or to assist
in the missionary work are looked upon as promises which persons
are under no obligation to fulfill if it is not convenient. These
promises were made under the holy impressions of the Spirit of
God. Then do not rob Him by withholding what rightfully belongs
to Him. Brethren and sisters, look over your past life and see
if you have dealt faithfully with God. Have you any unredeemed
pledges? If so, resolve that you will pay them if it is within
your power.
Listen to the counsel of the Lord: "Bring
ye all the tithes into the storehouse, that there may be meat
in Mine house, and prove Me now herewith, . . . if I will not
open you the windows of heaven,
and pour you out a blessing, that there shall not be room enough
to receive it. And I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes,
and he shall not destroy the fruits of your ground; neither shall
your vine cast her fruit before the time in the field."
"And all nations shall call you blessed: for ye shall be
a delightsome land."
Are you not willing to accept the promises
which the Lord here makes and to put selfishness from you and
begin to work earnestly to advance His cause? Do not strengthen
your hold on this world by taking advantage of your poorer neighbor,
for God's eye is upon you; He reads every motive and weighs you
in the balances of the sanctuary.
I saw that many withhold from the cause
while they live, quieting their consciences that they will be
charitable at death; they hardly dare exercise faith and trust
in God to give anything while living. But this deathbed charity
is not what Christ requires of His followers; it cannot excuse
the selfishness of the living. Those who hold fast their property
till the last moment, surrender it to death rather than to the
cause. Losses are occurring continually. Banks fail, and property
is consumed in very many ways. Many purpose to do something,
but they delay the matter, and Satan works to prevent the means
from coming into the treasury at all. It is lost before it is
returned to God, and Satan exults that it is so.
If you would do good with your means, do
it at once lest Satan get it in his hands and thus hinder the
work of God. Many times, when the Lord has opened the way for
brethren to handle their means to advance His cause, the agents
of Satan have presented some enterprise by which they were positive
the brethren could double their means. They take the bait; their
money is invested, and the cause, and frequently themselves,
never receive a dollar.
Brethren, remember the cause; and when
you have means at your command lay up for yourselves a good foundation
against the time to come, that you may lay
hold on eternal life. Jesus for your sakes became poor, that
you through His poverty might be made rich in heavenly treasure.
What will you give for Jesus, who has given all for you?
It will not do for you to depend on making
your charity gifts in testamentary bequests at death. You cannot
calculate with the least degree of surety that the cause will
ever be benefited by them. Satan works with acute skill to stir
up the relatives, and every false position is taken to gain to
the world that which was solemnly dedicated to the cause of God.
Much less than the sum willed is always received. Satan even
puts it into the hearts of men and women to protest against their
relatives' doing what they wish in the bestowment of their property.
They seem to regard everything given to the Lord as robbing the
relatives of the deceased. If you want your means to go to the
cause, appropriate it, or all that you do not really need for
a support, while you live. A few of the brethren are doing this
and enjoying the pleasure of being their own executors. Will
the covetousness of men make it necessary that they shall be
deprived of life in order that the property which God has lent
them shall not be useless forever? Let none of you draw upon
yourselves the doom of the unprofitable servant who hid his Lord's
money in the earth.
Dying charity is a poor substitute for
living benevolence. Many will to their friends and relatives
all except a very small pittance of their property. This they
leave for their supreme Friend, who became poor for their sakes,
who suffered insult, mockery, and death, that they might become
sons and daughters of God. And yet they expect when the righteous
dead shall come forth to immortal life that this Friend will
take them into His everlasting habitations.
The cause of Christ is robbed, not by a
mere passing thought, not by an unpremeditated act. No. By your
own deliberate act you made your will, placing your property
at the disposal of unbelievers.
After having robbed God during your lifetime, you continue to
rob Him after your death, and you do this with the full consent
of all your powers of mind, in a document called your will. What
do you think will be your Master's will toward you for thus appropriating
His goods? What will you say when an account is demanded of your
stewardship?
Brethren, awake from your life of selfishness,
and act like consistent Christians. The Lord requires you to
economize your means and let every dollar not needed for your
comfort flow into the treasury. Sisters, take that ten cents,
that twenty cents, that dollar which you were about to spend
for candies, for ruffles, or for ribbons, and donate it to God's
cause. Many of our sisters earn good wages, but it is nearly
all spent in gratifying their pride of dress.
The wants of the cause will continually
increase as we near the close of time. Means is needed to give
young men a short course of study in our schools, to prepare
them for efficient work in the ministry and in different branches
of the cause. We are not coming up to our privilege in this matter.
All schools among us will soon be closed up. How much more might
have been done had men obeyed the requirements of Christ in Christian
beneficence! What an influence would this readiness to give all
for Christ have had upon the world! It would have been one of
the most convincing arguments in favor of the truth we profess
to believe--an argument which the world could not misunderstand
nor gainsay. The Lord would have distinguished us with His blessing
even before the eyes of the world.
The first Christian church had not the
privileges and opportunities we have. They were a poor people,
but they felt the power of the truth. The object before them
was sufficient to lead them to invest all. They felt that the
salvation or the loss of a world depended upon their instrumentality.
They cast in their all and held
themselves in readiness to go or come at the Lord's bidding.
We profess to be governed by the same principles,
to be influenced by the same spirit. But instead of giving all
for Christ many have taken the golden wedge and a goodly Babylonish
garment and hid them in the camp. If the presence of one Achan
was sufficient to weaken the whole camp of Israel, can we be
surprised at the little success which attends our efforts when
every church and almost every family has its Achan? Let us individually
go to work to stimulate others by our example of disinterested
benevolence. The work might have gone forward with far greater
power had all done what they could to supply the treasury with
means.