Dear Brother and Sister H: In regard to
your present relations with the church I would advise that you
do all that can be done on your part to come into harmony with
your brethren. Cultivate a kind, conciliatory spirit, and let
no feeling of retaliation come into your minds and hearts. We
have but a little time in this world, and let us work for time
and for eternity. Be diligent to make your calling and election
sure. See that you make no mistake in regard to your title to
a home in Christ's kingdom. If your name is registered in the
Lamb's book of life, then all will be well with you. Be ready
and anxious to confess your faults and forsake them, that your
mistakes and sins may go beforehand to judgment and be blotted
out.
I believe that you are making improvement;
but let the work be deeper, more thorough, more earnest. Leave
nothing undone that you can do. Walk humbly with God, set your
heart in order, overcome self, and watch to
avoid every device of Satan. When the heart is in harmony with
Jesus, when in words, in spirit, and in deportment, you copy
the Pattern, the manners will be refined and elevated, convincing
all that there has been in you a radical change. You will then
be numbered among the virtuous, God-fearing followers of Jesus.
My brother, you have a very spotted record. God and your own soul know this. But no one will be more rejoiced than I to see you setting your feet in the way that Christ has walked, and to meet you in the kingdom of God. It is difficult for us to understand ourselves, to have a correct knowledge of our own characters. The word of God is plain, but often there is an error in applying it to one's self. There is liability to self-deception and to think its warnings and reproofs do not mean me. "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?" Self-flattery may be construed into Christian emotion and zeal. Self-love and confidence may give us assurance that we are right when we are far from meeting the requirements of God's word.
The Bible is full, clear, and explicit; the
character of the true disciple of Christ is marked out with exactness.
We must search the Scriptures with humble hearts, trembling at
the word of the Lord, if we would not be in any way deceived
in regard to our true character. There must be persevering effort
to overcome selfishness and self-confidence. Self-examination
must be thorough, that there be no danger of self-deception.
A little catechizing of self on special occasions is not sufficient.
Daily examine the foundation of your hope, and see whether you
are indeed in the love of Christ. Deal truly with your own hearts,
for you cannot afford to run any risk here. Count the cost of
being a wholehearted Christian, and then gird on the armor. Study
the Pattern; look to Jesus, and be like Him. Your peace of mind,
your hope of eternal salvation, depend on faithfulness in this
work. As Christians we are less
thorough in self-examination than in anything else; it is no
wonder, then, that we make such slow advancement in understanding
self.
I am writing these things to you because
I want you to be saved. I do not want to discourage you, but
to urge you to more earnest, vigorous effort. Self-love will
prompt you to make a superficial work of self-examination; but
let no vain confidence cheat you out of eternal life. Do not
build yourself up on the mistakes and errors of others, but between
God and your own soul settle the important question upon which
hangs your eternal destiny.
"Man looketh on the outward appearance,
but the Lord looketh on the heart,"--the human heart, with
its conflicting emotions of joy and sorrow,--the wandering, wayward
heart, which is the abode of so much impurity and deceit. He
knows its motives, its very intents and purposes. Go to Him with
your soul all stained as it is. Like the psalmist, throw its
chambers open to the all-seeing Eye, exclaiming: "Search
me, O God, and know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts: and
see if there be any wicked way in me, and lead me in the way
everlasting." Submit your heart to be refined and purified;
then you will become a partaker of the divine nature, having
escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust. Then
you will "be ready always to give an answer to every man
that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness
and fear." The peace of Christ will be yours. Your name
will stand registered in the book of life; your title to the
heavenly inheritance will bear the royal signet, which none on
earth dare question. No one can bar your way to the portals of
the city of God, but you will have free access to the royal presence
and to the temple of God on high.
A few words more press upon my mind. I
want you to be united with the church, not because I regard all
the church members perfect nor because I regard you perfect.
God has precious ones in His church; there are also men and women
who are as tares among the wheat. But the Lord does not
give you or anyone else the office of saying
who are tares and who are wheat. We may see and condemn the faults
of others, while we have greater faults which we have never realized,
but which are distinctly seen by others. God requires you to
give to the world and the church a good example, a life that
represents Jesus. There are duties to be performed and responsibilities
to be borne. The world has not enough true Christians; the church
has need of them; society cannot spare them. Christ's prayer
for His disciples was: "I pray not that Thou shouldest take
them out of the world, but that Thou shouldest keep them from
the evil." Jesus knows we are in the world, exposed to its
temptations, but He loves us and will give us grace to triumph
over its corrupting influences. He would have us perfect in character,
that our waywardness may not occasion moral deformity in others.
You see that your brethren do not come
up to the Bible standard, that there are defects in them; and
you dwell upon these defects. You feed upon them instead of feeding
upon Christ, and by beholding you become changed into the same
image. But criticize no one; do not contrast your own exact course
with the deficiencies of others. You may be in danger of wanting
to correct others and make them feel their wrongs. Do not do
this. This is not the work God has given you to do. He has not
made you a church tinker. There are many things which you view
in the light of the Bible. But though you may be in the right
on some points, do not get the impression that your positions
are always correct; for on many points your ideas are distorted
and will not bear criticism.
Do not seek to exalt self, but learn in
the school of Christ meekness and lowliness of heart. You know
what Peter's character was, how strikingly his peculiar traits
were developed. Before his great fall he was always forward and
dictatorial, speaking unadvisedly from the impulse of the moment.
He was always ready to correct others and to express his mind
before he had a clear comprehension of himself or of what he
had to say. But Peter was converted, and the converted Peter
was very different from the rash, impetuous Peter. While he retained his former fervor, the grace
of Christ regulated his zeal. Instead of being impetuous, self-confident,
and self-exalted, he was calm, self-possessed, and teachable.
He could then feed the lambs as well as the sheep of Christ's
flock.
You, my brother, have a great work to do for
yourself day by day. You must make constant effort to curb bad
tempers and evil propensities. These have grown with your growth,
and Jesus alone can strengthen you to fully overcome them. You
should regard yourself as a servant of Christ and seek to be
like Him in character. Try to make yourself agreeable to others.
Even in your business relations, be courteous, kind, and forbearing,
showing the meekness of Jesus and that His spirit is ruling you.
You are related to humanity, and you must be patient, kind, and
pitiful. You need to cherish thoughtfulness and subdue selfishness.
Let your inquiry be: "What can I do to bless others?"
If your heart is yearning to do them good, even at inconvenience
to yourself, you will have the blessing of God. Love, lifted
out of the realm of passion and impulse, becomes spiritualized
and is revealed in words and acts. A Christian must have a sanctified
tenderness and love, in which there is no impatience or fretfulness;
the rude, harsh manners must be softened by the grace of Christ.
O my brother, my sister, educate yourselves
in the school of Christ. Let the spirit of controversy cease
at home and in the church. Let your hearts be drawn out in love
for the people of God. Hearts that are filled with the love of
Christ can never get very far apart. Religion is love, and a
Christian home is one where love reigns and finds expression
in words and acts of thoughtful kindness and gentle courtesy.
Let no harsh words be spoken. Let the family worship be made
pleasant and interesting. Be a Christian gentleman, my brother;
for the very same principles that characterize the home life
will be carried into the church. A lack of courtesy, a moment
of petulance, a single rough, thoughtless word, will mar your
reputation and may close the door to hearts so that you can never
reach them.
Now I have set before you your dangers,
and I tell you there are precious victories that you may gain.
We can never see the kingdom of heaven unless we have the mind
and spirit of Christ. Then copy the pattern at home, at your
work, and in the church. Do not try to teach others nor to see
how widely you can differ from your brethren, but try to see
how near you can come to them, how fully you can be in harmony
with them. While doing all that you can on your part to perfect
Christian character, give your heart to God for Him to mold according
to His pleasure. He will help you; I know He will. May God bless
you and your dear children; and may I meet you all around the
great white throne, is my prayer.