"Ahaziah fell down through a lattice
in his upper chamber that was in Samaria, and was sick: and he
sent messengers, and said unto them, Go, inquire of Baal-zebub
the god of Ekron whether I shall recover of this disease. But
the angel of the Lord said to Elijah the Tishbite, Arise, go
up to meet the messengers of the king of Samaria, and say unto
them, Is it not because there is not a God in Israel, that ye
go to inquire of Baal-zebub the god of Ekron? Now therefore thus
saith the Lord, Thou shalt not come down from that bed on which
thou art gone up, but shalt surely die."
This narrative most strikingly displays the
divine displeasure against those who turn from God to satanic
agencies. A short time previous to the events above recorded
the kingdom of Israel had changed rulers. Ahab had fallen under
the judgment of God and had been succeeded by his son Ahaziah,
a worthless character, who did only evil in the sight of the
Lord, walking in the ways of his father and mother, and causing
Israel to sin. He served Baal and worshiped him and provoked
the Lord God of Israel to anger, as his father Ahab had done.
But judgments followed close upon the sins of the rebellious
king. A war with Moab, and then the accident by which his
own life was threatened, attested the wrath
of God against Ahaziah.
How much had the king of Israel heard and
seen in his father's time of the wondrous works of the Most High!
What terrible evidence of His severity and jealousy had God given
apostate Israel! Of all this, Ahaziah was cognizant; yet he acted
as though these awful realities, and even the fearful end of
his own father, were only an idle tale. Instead of humbling his
heart before the Lord he ventured upon the most daring act of
impiety which marked his life. He commanded his servants: "Go,
inquire of Baal-zebub the god of Ekron whether I shall recover
of this disease."
The idol of Ekron was supposed to give
information, through the medium of its priests, concerning future
events. It had obtained such general credence that it was resorted
to by large numbers from a considerable distance. The predictions
there uttered and the information given proceeded directly from
the prince of darkness. It is Satan who created and who maintains
the worship of idols, to divert the minds of men from God. It
is by his agency that the kingdom of darkness and falsehood is
supported.
The history of King Ahaziah's sin and punishment
has a lesson of warning which none can disregard with impunity.
Though we do not pay homage to heathen gods, yet thousands are
worshiping at Satan's shrine as verily as did the king of Israel.
The very spirit of heathen idolatry is rife today, though under
the influence of science and education it has assumed a more
refined and attractive form. Every day adds sorrowful evidence
that faith in the sure word of prophecy is fast decreasing, and
that in its stead superstition and satanic witchery are captivating
the minds of men. All who do not earnestly search the Scriptures
and submit every desire and purpose of life to that unerring
test, all who do not seek God in prayer for a knowledge of His
will, will surely wander from the right path and fall under the
deception of Satan.
The heathen oracles have their counterpart
in the spiritualistic mediums, the clairvoyants, and fortunetellers
of today. The mystic voices that spoke at Ekron and En-dor are
still by their lying words misleading the children of men. The
prince of darkness has but appeared under a new guise. The mysteries
of heathen worship are replaced by the secret associations and
seances, the obscurities and wonders, of the sorcerers of our
time. Their disclosures are eagerly received by thousands who
refuse to accept light from God's word or from His Spirit. While
they speak with scorn of the magicians of old, the great deceiver
laughs in triumph as they yield to his arts under a different
form.
His agents still claim to cure disease.
They attribute their power to electricity, magnetism, or the
so-called "sympathetic remedies." In truth, they are
but channels for Satan's electric currents. By this means he
casts his spell over the bodies and souls of men.
I have from time to time received letters
both from ministers and lay members of the church, inquiring
if I think it wrong to consult spiritualist and clairvoyant physicians.
I have not answered these letters for want of time. But just
now the subject is again urged upon my attention. So numerous
are these agents of Satan becoming, and so general is the practice
of seeking counsel from them, that it seems needful to utter
words of warning.
God has placed it in our power to obtain
a knowledge of the laws of health. He has made it our duty to
preserve our physical powers in the best possible condition,
that we may render to Him acceptable service. Those who refuse
to improve the light and knowledge that has been mercifully placed
within their reach are rejecting one of the means which God has
granted them to promote spiritual as well as physical life. They
are placing themselves where they will be exposed to the delusions
of Satan.
Not a few in this Christian age and Christian
nation resort to evil spirits rather
than trust to the power of the living God. The mother, watching
by the sickbed of her child, exclaims: "I can do no more.
Is there no physician who has power to restore my child?"
She is told of the wonderful cures performed by some clairvoyant
or magnetic healer, and she trusts her dear one to his charge,
placing it as verily in the hands of Satan as if he were standing
by her side. In many instances the future life of the child is
controlled by a satanic power which it seems impossible to break.
Many are unwilling to put forth the needed
effort to obtain a knowledge of the laws of life and the simple
means to be employed for the restoration of health. They do not
place themselves in right relation to life. When sickness is
the result of their transgression of natural law, they do not
seek to correct their errors and then ask the blessing of God,
but they resort to the physicians. If they recover health they
give to drugs and doctors all the honor. They are ever ready
to idolize human power and wisdom, seeming to know no other God
than the creature--dust and ashes.
I have heard a mother pleading with some
infidel physician to save the life of her child; but when I entreated
her to seek help from the Great Physician who is able to save
to the uttermost all who come unto Him in faith, she turned away
with impatience. Here we see the same spirit that was manifested
by Ahaziah.
It is not safe to trust to physicians who
have not the fear of God before them. Without the influence of
divine grace the hearts of men are "deceitful above all
things, and desperately wicked." Self-aggrandizement is
their aim. Under the cover of the medical profession what iniquities
have been concealed, what delusions supported! The physician
may claim to possess great wisdom and marvelous skill, when his
character is abandoned and his practice contrary to the laws
of life. The Lord our God assures
us that He is waiting to be gracious; He invites us to call upon
Him in the day of trouble. How can we turn from Him to trust
in an arm of flesh?
Go with me to yonder sickroom. There lies
a husband and father, a man who is a blessing to society and
to the cause of God. He has been suddenly stricken down by disease.
The fire of fever seems consuming him. He longs for pure water
to moisten the parched lips, to quench the raging thirst, and
cool the fevered brow. But, no; the doctor has forbidden water.
The stimulus of strong drink is given and adds fuel to the fire.
The blessed, heaven-sent water, skillfully applied, would quench
the devouring flame; but it is set aside for poisonous drugs.
For a time nature wrestles for her rights;
but at last, overcome, she gives up the contest, and death sets
the sufferer free. God desired that man to live, to be a blessing
to the world; Satan determined to destroy him, and through the
agency of the physician he succeeded. How long shall we permit
our most precious lights to be thus extinguished?
Ahaziah sent his servants to inquire of
Baal-zebub, at Ekron; but instead of a message from the idol,
he heard the awful denunciation from the God of Israel: "Thou
shalt not come down from that bed on which thou art gone up,
but shalt surely die." It was Christ that bade Elijah speak
these words to the apostate king. Jehovah Immanuel had cause
to be greatly displeased at Ahaziah's impiety. What had Christ
not done to win the hearts of sinners and to inspire them with
unwavering confidence in Himself? For ages He had visited His
people with manifestations of the most condescending kindness
and unexampled love. From the times of the patriarchs He had
shown how His "delights were with the sons of men."
He had been a very present help to all who sought Him in sincerity.
"In all their affliction He was afflicted, and the
angel of His presence saved them: in His love
and in His pity He redeemed them." Yet Israel had revolted
from God and turned for help to the Lord's worst enemy.
The Hebrews were the only nation favored
with a knowledge of the true God. When the king of Israel sent
to inquire of a pagan oracle, he proclaimed to the heathen that
he had more confidence in their idols than in the God of his
people, the Creator of the heavens and the earth. In the same
manner do those who profess to have a knowledge of God's word
dishonor Him when they turn from the Source of strength and wisdom
to ask help or counsel from the powers of darkness. If God's
wrath was kindled by such a course on the part of a wicked, idolatrous
king, how can He regard a similar course pursued by those who
profess to be His servants?
Why is it that men are so unwilling to
trust Him who created man, and who can by a touch, a word, a
look, heal all manner of disease? Who is more worthy of our confidence
than the One who made so great a sacrifice for our redemption?
Our Lord has given us definite instruction through the apostle
James as to our duty in case of sickness. When human help fails,
God will be the helper of His people. "Is any sick among
you? let him call for the elders of the church; and let them
pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord:
and the prayer of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall
raise him up." If the professed followers of Christ would,
with purity of heart, exercise as much faith in the promises
of God as they repose in satanic agencies, they would realize
in soul and body the life-giving power of the Holy Spirit.
God has granted to this people great light,
yet we are not placed beyond the reach of temptation. Who among
us are seeking help from the gods of Ekron? Look on this picture--not
drawn from imagination. In how many, even among Seventh-day Adventists,
may its leading characteristics be seen? An invalid--apparently
very conscientious, yet bigoted and self-sufficient--freely
avows his contempt for the laws of health and life, which divine
mercy has led us as a people to accept. His food must be prepared
in a manner to satisfy his morbid cravings. Rather than sit at
a table where wholesome food is provided, he will patronize restaurants,
because he can there indulge appetite without restraint. A fluent
advocate of temperance, he disregards its foundation principles.
He wants relief, but refuses to obtain it at the price of self-denial.
That man is worshiping at the shrine of perverted appetite. He
is an idolater. The powers which, sanctified and ennobled, might
be employed to honor God, are weakened and rendered of little
service. An irritable temper, a confused brain, and unstrung
nerves are among the results of his disregard of nature's laws.
He is inefficient, unreliable.
Whoever has the courage and honesty to
warn him of danger thereby incurs his displeasure. The slightest
remonstrance or opposition is sufficient to rouse his combative
spirit. But now an opportunity is presented to seek help from
one whose power comes through the medium of witchcraft. To this
source he applies with eagerness, freely expending time and money
in hope of securing the proffered boon. He is deceived, infatuated.
The sorcerer's power is made the theme of praise, and others
are influenced to seek his aid. Thus the God of Israel is dishonored,
while Satan's power is revered and exalted.
In the name of Christ I would address His
professed followers: Abide in the faith which you have received
from the beginning. Shun profane and vain babblings. Instead
of putting your trust in witchcraft, have faith in the living
God. Cursed is the path that leads to En-dor or to Ekron. The
feet will stumble and fall that venture upon the forbidden ground.
There is a God in Israel, with whom is deliverance for all that
are oppressed. Righteousness is the habitation of His throne.
There is danger in departing in the least
from the Lord's
instruction. When we deviate from the plain
path of duty, a train of circumstances will arise that seems
irresistibly to draw us further and further from the right. Needless
intimacies with those who have no respect for God will seduce
us ere we are aware. Fear to offend worldly friends will deter
us from expressing our gratitude to God or acknowledging our
dependence upon Him. We must keep close to the word of God. We
need its warnings and encouragement, its threatenings and promises.
We need the perfect example given only in the life and character
of our Saviour.
Angels of God will preserve His people
while they walk in the path of duty, but there is no assurance
of such protection for those who deliberately venture upon Satan's
ground. An agent of the great deceiver will say and do anything
to gain his object. It matters little whether he calls himself
a spiritualist, an "electric physician," or a "magnetic
healer." By specious pretenses he wins the confidence of
the unwary. He pretends to read the life history and to understand
all the difficulties and afflictions of those who resort to him.
Disguising himself as an angel of light, while the blackness
of the pit is in his heart, he manifests great interest in women
who seek his counsel. He tells them that all their troubles are
due to an unhappy marriage. This may be too true, but such a
counselor does not better their condition. He tells them that
they need love and sympathy. Pretending great interest in their
welfare, he casts a spell over his unsuspecting victims, charming
them as the serpent charms the trembling bird. Soon they are
completely in his power; sin, disgrace, and ruin are the terrible
sequel.
These workers of iniquity are not few.
Their path is marked by desolated homes, blasted reputations,
and broken hearts. But of all this the world knows little; still
they go on making fresh victims, and Satan exults in the ruin
he has wrought.
The visible and the invisible world are
in close contact. Could the veil be lifted, we would see evil
angels pressing their darkness around us and working with all
their power to deceive and destroy. Wicked men are surrounded,
influenced, and aided by evil spirits. The man of faith and prayer
has yielded his soul to divine guidance, and angels of God bring
to him light and strength from heaven.
No man can serve two masters. Light and
darkness are no more opposites than are the service of God and
the service of Satan. The prophet Elijah presented the matter
in the true light when he fearlessly appealed to apostate Israel:
"If the Lord be God, follow Him: but if Baal, then follow
him."
Those who give themselves up to the sorcery
of Satan may boast of great benefit received thereby, but does
this prove their course to be wise or safe? What if life should
be prolonged? What if temporal gain should be secured? Will it
pay in the end to disregard the will of God? All such apparent
gain will prove at last an irrecoverable loss. We cannot with
impunity break down a single barrier which God has erected to
guard His people from Satan's power.
Our only safety is in preserving the ancient
landmarks. "To the law and to the testimony: if they speak
not according to this word, it is because there is no light in
them."