Dear Brethren and Sisters in -----: My
mind has been exceedingly troubled in regard to your condition.
I have not been able to sleep, and I arise at twelve o'clock
to write to J, and to you as a church. I do not know what might
have been the condition of J at the present time had you pursued
a righteous, Christian course toward him--such a course as every
child of God should pursue in such a case. Some of you will
not be able to comprehend my words, for your
own course has placed you where you have not sanctified discernment.
You have allowed strong, hard feelings against him to come into
your hearts, and have justified yourselves in treating him with
indifference and even contempt. You have reasoned that by his
unbelief and his wrong course he was certainly injuring the church
and endangering souls, and you must have no fellowship with him.
But will you, in the light of God's great standard of righteousness,
critically examine every word and act of your own that you can
call to mind and compare these with the life of Christ? If you
have been doing the will of God, then His light and His approval
will second your efforts, and prosperity will attend you. I wish
the members of this once prosperous church would each begin to
build over against his own house. When they see their course
in its true light they will know that they have made a very great
mistake in allowing their own critical, pharisaical spirit to
control their tongues and develop itself in their treatment of
their brethren. This unchristian harshness has excluded Jesus
from the church and has brought in a spirit of dissension. It
has fostered a disposition to judge and condemn, a hatred of
those who do not see things as you see them. Even if your brethren
say and do many things that really injure you, will you push
them to one side, and say: "I am holier than thou"?
"By their fruits ye shall know them."
Christ has not been revealed in your deportment toward some who
were much nearer the kingdom of heaven than yourselves. The Lord
has opened before you your wrong toward His children--your want
of mercy and love, your determination to control minds and make
them see things just as you see them. And when light came to
you, what course did you take? Did you merely admit that you
were wrong, or did you heartily confess your error and humble
your proud hearts before God? Did you cast aside your ways and
accept God's teachings? Did you go to the very ones you had bruised
and wounded, and say: "I have
been wrong; I have sinned against you. Forgive me. I have failed;
I have worked in my own spirit. I had a zeal, but not according
to knowledge. It was the spirit of Jehu, rather than the meekness
and lowliness of Christ. The word of God directs: 'Confess your
faults one to another, and pray one for another, that ye may
be healed.' Will you pray for me that God will forgive me for
the distress and anguish I have caused you?"
If you who have engaged in this work of
bruising and condemning have not heartily repented, then light,
peace, and joy will not come into your souls. When you are careful,
kind, and tender to your brethren in the same degree that you
have been hard, unforgiving, and oppressive, you will confess
your faults and make restitution as far as possible; and when
you have done all on your part you may ask the Lord to do that
which it is impossible for you to do--heal the wounds you have
made, forgive you, and blot out your transgression. When there
is so great reluctance to confess a wrong which is laid open
and plain before the erring, it shows that they are controlled
by their own untamable, unsanctified natures rather than by the
spirit of the gospel of Christ.
If God has ever spoken by me, you have
most earnest work to do in zealous repentance for showing to
the erring the satanic element in your character, not in coldness
and indifference merely, but in neglect and contempt. If they
are indeed in darkness and doing things that imperil their souls,
you should manifest the greater interest in them. Show them that
while you will be true to principle and will not swerve from
the right, you love their souls. Let them know by your words
and actions that you have not a spirit of revenge and retaliation,
but that for their sakes you will sacrifice feeling and subdue
self. Represent Jesus, our pattern; manifest His spirit at all
times and under all circumstances, and let that mind be in you
which was in Christ Jesus. Your ways have not been God's ways;
your will has not been God's will. The precious plant of love
has not been cultivated, and watered by the
dews of grace. Self-love, self-righteousness, self-complacency,
have exerted a controlling power.
What has Jesus done for you, and
what is He continually doing for us individually? What have you
that you have not received? Said Christ: "I am the Vine,
ye are the branches." "Every branch in Me that beareth
not fruit He taketh away: and every branch that beareth fruit,
He purgeth it, that it may bring forth more fruit." The
branches do not sustain the vine, but the vine supports and nourishes
the branches. The church does not support Christ, but Christ,
by His vital power, supports the church. It is not enough to
be a branch; we are to be fruitful branches. "He that abideth
in Me," said Jesus, "and I in him, the same bringeth
forth much fruit." But if the fruit produced be that of
the thornbush, it is evident that we are not branches of the
living Vine.
Life is disciplinary. While in the world,
the Christian will meet with adverse influences. There will be
provocations to test the temper; and it is by meeting these in
a right spirit that the Christian graces are developed. If injuries
and insults are meekly borne, if insulting words are responded
to by gentle answers, and oppressive acts by kindness, this is
evidence that the Spirit of Christ dwells in the heart, that
sap from the living Vine is flowing to the branches. We are in
the school of Christ in this life, where we are to learn to be
meek and lowly of heart; and in the day of final accounts we
shall see that all the obstacles we meet, all the hardships and
annoyances that we are called to bear, are practical lessons
in the application of principles of Christian life. If well endured,
they develop the Christlike in the character and distinguish
the Christian from the worldling.
There is a high standard to which we are
to attain if we would be children of God, noble, pure, holy,
and undefiled; and a pruning process is necessary if we would
reach this standard. How would this pruning be accomplished if
there were no difficulties to meet, no obstacles to surmount,
nothing to call out patience and endurance? These trials are
not the smallest blessings in our
experience. They are designed to nerve us to determination to
succeed. We are to use them as God's means to gain decided victories
over self instead of allowing them to hinder, oppress, and destroy
us.
Character will be tested. Christ will be
revealed in us if we are indeed branches of the living Vine.
We shall be patient, kind, and forbearing, cheerful amid frets
and irritations. Day by day and year by year we shall conquer
self and grow into a noble heroism. This is our allotted task;
but it cannot be accomplished without continual help from Jesus,
resolute decision, unwavering purpose, continual watchfulness,
and unceasing prayer. Each one has a personal battle to fight.
Each must win his own way through struggles and discouragements.
Those who decline the struggle lose the strength and joy of victory.
No one, not even God, can carry us to heaven unless we make the
necessary effort on our part. We must put features of beauty
into our lives. We must expel the unlovely natural traits that
make us unlike Jesus. While God works in us to will and to do
of His own good pleasure, we must work in harmony with Him. The
religion of Christ transforms the heart. It makes the worldly-minded
man heavenly-minded. Under its influence the selfish man becomes
unselfish because this is the character of Christ. The dishonest,
scheming man becomes upright, so that it is second nature to
him to do unto others as he would have others do unto him. The
profligate is changed from impurity to purity. He forms correct
habits, for the gospel of Christ has become to him a savor of
life unto life.
Now, while probation lingers, it does not
become one to pronounce sentence upon others and look to himself
as a model man. Christ is our model; imitate Him, plant your
feet in His steps. You may professedly believe every point of
present truth, but unless you practice these truths it will avail
you nothing. We are not to condemn others; this is not our work;
but we should love one another and pray for one another. When
we see one err from the truth, then we may weep over him as Christ wept over Jerusalem. Let us
see what our heavenly Father in His word says about the erring:
"If a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual,
restore such an one in the spirit of meekness; considering thyself,
lest thou also be tempted." "If any of you do err from
the truth, and one convert him; let him know, that he which converteth
the sinner from the error of his way shall save a soul from death,
and shall hide a multitude of sins." What a great missionary
work is this! how much more Christlike than for poor, fallible
mortals to be ever accusing and condemning those who do not exactly
meet their minds. Let us remember that Jesus knows us individually
and is touched with the feeling of our infirmities. He knows
the wants of each of His creatures and reads the hidden, unspoken
grief of every heart. If one of the little ones for whom He died
is injured, He sees it and calls the offender to account. Jesus
is the Good Shepherd. He cares for His feeble, sickly, wandering
sheep. He knows them all by name. The distress of every sheep
and every lamb of His flock touches His heart of sympathizing
love, and the cry for aid reaches His ear. One of the greatest
sins of the shepherds of Israel is thus pointed out by the prophet:
"The diseased have ye not strengthened, neither have ye
healed that which was sick, neither have ye brought again that
which was driven away, neither have ye sought that which was
lost; but with force and with cruelty have ye ruled them. And
they were scattered, because there is no shepherd: and they became
meat to all the beasts of the field, when they were scattered.
My sheep wandered through all the mountains, and upon every high
hill: yea, My flock was scattered upon all the face of the earth,
and none did search or seek after them."
Jesus cares for each one as though there
were not another individual on the face of the earth. As Deity
He exerts mighty power in our behalf, while as our Elder Brother
He feels for all our woes. The Majesty of heaven held not Himself
aloof from degraded, sinful humanity. We have not a
high priest who is so high, so lifted up,
that He cannot notice us or sympathize with us, but one who was
in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin.
How different from this spirit is the feeling
of indifference and contempt that has been manifested by some
in ----- toward J and those who have been affected by his influence.
If ever the transforming grace of God was needed, it is needed
in this church. In judging and condemning a brother, they have
undertaken to do a work that God never put into their hands.
A hardness of heart, a censorious, condemnatory spirit that would
destroy individuality and independence, has been woven into their
Christian experience, and they have lost the love of Jesus out
of their hearts. Make haste, brethren, to get these things off
your soul before it shall be said in heaven: "He that is
unjust, let him be unjust still: and he which is filthy, let
him be filthy still: and he that is righteous, let him be righteous
still and he that is holy, let him be holy still."
You will have many perplexities to meet
in your Christian life in connection with the church, but do
not try too hard to mold your brethren. If you see that they
do not meet the requirements of God's word, do not condemn; if
they provoke, do not retaliate. When things are said that would
exasperate, quietly keep your soul from fretting. You see many
things which appear wrong in others, and you want to correct
these wrongs. You commence in your own strength to work for a
reform, but you do not go about it in the right way. You must
labor for the erring with a heart subdued, softened by the Spirit
of God, and let the Lord work through you, the agent. Roll your
burden on Jesus. You feel that the Lord must take up the case
where Satan is striving for the mastery over some soul; but you
are to do what you can in humility and meekness, and put the
tangled work, the complicated matters, into the hands of God.
Follow the directions in His word, and leave the outcome of the
matter to His wisdom. Having done all you can to save your brother,
cease worrying, and go calmly about
other pressing duties. It is no longer your matter, but God's.
Do not, through impatience, cut the knot
of difficulty, making matters hopeless. Let God untangle the
snarled-up threads for you. He is wise enough to manage the complications
of our lives. He has skill and tact. We cannot always see His
plans; we must wait patiently their unfolding and not mar and
destroy them. He will reveal them to us in His own good time.
Seek for unity; cultivate love and conformity to Christ in all
things. He is the source of unity and strength; but you have
not sought for Christian unity that you might knit hearts together
in love.
There is work for you to do in the church
and out of the church. "Herein is My Father glorified, that
ye bear much fruit." The fruit we bear is the only test
of the character of the tree before the world. This is the proof
of our discipleship. If our works are of such a character that
as branches of the living Vine we bear rich clusters of precious
fruit, then we wear before the world God's own badge as His sons
and daughters. We are living epistles, known and read of all
men.
Now, I fear that you will fail in doing
the work you must do to redeem the past and become living, fruit-bearing
branches. If you do as God would have you, His blessing will
come into the church. You have not yet been humble enough to
make thorough work and meet the mind of the Spirit of God. There
has been self-justification, self-pleasing, self-vindication,
when there should have been humiliation, contrition, and repentance.
You should remove every stumbling block and make "straight
paths for your feet, lest that which is lame be turned out of
the way." It is not too late for wrongs to be righted; but
you must not feel that you are whole and have no need of a physician,
for you need help. When you come to Jesus with a broken heart,
He will help and bless you, and you will go forth in the Master's
work with courage and energy. The best evidence that you are
in Christ is the fruit you bear. If you are not truly united
to Him, your light and privileges will condemn and ruin you.