Some of you have been stumbling over your
pledges. The Spirit of the Lord came into the ----- meeting in
answer to prayer, and while your hearts were softened under its
influence, you pledged. While the streams of salvation were pouring
upon your hearts, you felt that you must follow the
example of Him who went about doing good and
who cheerfully gave His life to ransom man from sin and degradation.
Under the heavenly, inspiring influence you saw that selfishness
and worldliness were not consistent with Christian character
and that you could not live for yourselves and be Christlike.
But when the influence of His abundant love and mercy was not
felt in so marked a manner in your hearts, you withdrew your
offerings, and God withdrew His blessing from you.
Adversity came upon some. There was a failure
in their crops, so that they could not redeem their pledges;
and some were even brought into straitened circumstances. Then,
of course, they could not be expected to pay. But had they not
murmured and withdrawn their hearts from their pledges, God would
have worked for them and would have opened ways whereby every
one could have paid what he had promised. They did not wait in
faith, trusting God to open the way so that they could redeem
their pledges. Some had means at their command; and had they
possessed the same willing mind as when they pledged, and had
they heartily rendered to God in tithes and offerings that which
He had lent them for this purpose, they would have been greatly
blessed. But Satan came in with his temptations and led some
to question the motives and the spirit which actuated the servant
of God in presenting the call for means. Some felt that they
had been deceived and defrauded. In spirit they repudiated their
vows, and whatever they did afterward was with reluctance, and
therefore they received no blessing.
In the parable of the talents the man to whom
was entrusted one talent manifested a grudging spirit and hid
his money so that his lord could not be benefited by it. When
his master required him to give an account of his stewardship,
he excused his neglect by laying blame upon his lord. "I
knew thee [he professes to be acquainted with his lord] that
thou art an hard man, reaping where thou hast not sown, and gathering
where thou hast not strewed: and I was afraid [that all my improvements
would not be mine, but that you would claim them], and went and
hid thy talent in the earth: lo,
there thou hast that is thine. His lord answered and said unto
him, Thou wicked and slothful servant, thou knewest that I reap
where I sowed not, and gather where I have not strewed: thou
oughtest therefore to have put my money to the exchangers, and
then at my coming I should have received mine own with usury.
Take therefore the talent from him, and give it unto him which
hath ten talents. For unto everyone that hath [made a right use
of my goods] shall be given, and he shall have abundance [for
I can trust him, knowing that he will make right improvement
of what is lent him]: but from him that hath not [who has been
fearful to trust me] shall be taken away even that which he hath.
[I shall deprive him of what he claims as his; he shall forfeit
all right of trust; I will take away his talents and give them
to one who will improve them.] And cast ye the unprofitable servant
into outer darkness: there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth."
The spirit manifested by the brethren in
regard to their pledges has been very offensive to God. Had they
seen the cause prospering in the fields already entered they
would have felt differently. There was no deception practiced
upon them, and the charge of deception which they made was against
the Spirit of God and not against the servant He sent. Had Brother
A occupied the right position in this matter, had he cherished
the spirit which influenced him to make the pledge, he would
not have felt such an unwillingness to invest in the cause of
God. But he thought how much he could do with his means by investing
it in worldly enterprises. Avarice, worldliness, and covetousness
are defects in character which are opposed to the exercise of
the Christian graces. Said the apostle: "Let your conversation
[your very deportment and habits of life] be without covetousness;
and be content with such things as ye have: for He hath said,
I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee."
It was evident that many who vowed had
no faith and believed themselves wronged. They talked of it and
dwelt upon it until it seemed a reality to them. They felt that
they ought not to have aided the General Conference, and urged
that they ought to have had the
means to use in their own field. The Lord worked for them according
to their limited faith. Satan, who had been holding their minds
in deception, caused them to think that they had done a liberal
thing in sending means to the General Conference, when, upon
investigation, the facts showed that they still lacked a considerable
of returning to the conference the amount that had been paid
out in sending them laborers and in helping them in various ways
to start the work and carry it forward. Yet these persons have
been grieved, dissatisfied, unhappy, and have backslidden from
God, because they thought they were doing such great things.
This only shows what a terrible deception can come upon minds
when they are not under the special control of the Spirit of
God. Their doubting, their suspicions, their prejudice in regard
to the General Conference, were all prompted by Satan. The cause
of God is one the world over. Every branch of the work centers
in Christ. No one portion of the field is independent of the
rest.
Dear brethren, you have let Satan into
your hearts, and he will never be fully vanquished until you
repent of your wicked doubts and the withdrawal of your pledges.
The Lord's messenger was despised and charged with bringing an
undue pressure upon the people. God was displeased with Brother
B because he did not bear a decided testimony against everything
of that sort and show you your sin as it really was.
"When thou vowest a vow unto God,
defer not to pay it; for He hath no pleasure in fools: pay that
which thou hast vowed. Better is it that thou shouldest not vow,
than that thou shouldest vow and not pay. Suffer not thy mouth
to cause thy flesh to sin; neither say thou before the angel,
that it was an error; wherefore should God be angry at thy voice,
and destroy the work of thine hands?"
Here the matter is presented in its true
light. Your work was done before the angel of God. Your words
were not only heard by men, but the angel of God listened to
them, and can you be surprised that God was angry with you? Can
you wonder that He has not blessed you and made you able
to pay your pledges? When you have grumbled
and murmured and withdrawn your pledges and felt that God's servants
had deceived you and extorted from you pledges that were not
just, the enemy has exulted. Could you see your course as it
is you would never make one semblance of an excuse for it.
Be careful how you speak one word to lessen
the influence of God's messengers. There may sometimes have been
too much urging for means. But when the light and love of Jesus
illuminates the hearts of His followers, there will be no occasion
for urging or begging their money or their service. When they
become one with Jesus, and realize that they are not their own,
that they are bought with a price and are therefore the Lord's
property, and that all they have is simply entrusted to them
as His stewards, they will with cheerful heart and unswerving
fidelity render to God the things that are His. The Lord will
not accept an offering that is made unwillingly, grudgingly.
With your present feelings there would be no virtue in making
more pledges. When you recover from this snare of the enemy,
when you heal the breach that you have made, and realize that
the wants of God's cause are as continual as are His gifts to
the children of men, your works will correspond with your faith,
and you will receive a rich blessing from the Lord.