Dear Brethren and Sisters of the Church
at -----: I have been shown that as a church you are not growing
in grace and in the knowledge of the truth. There is not that
consecration to God, that devotion to His service, and that disinterested
labor for the upbuilding of His cause which would make you a
prosperous and healthy church. You are not subject one to another.
There are too many among you who have their own ideas to maintain
and their own selfish plans to carry out, and some who occupy
prominent places in the church are of this number.
Brother K has not an eye single to the
glory of God; he does not view things from a right standpoint.
He is giving heed to suggestions of Satan and taking counsel
of his own unsanctified judgment, and he grasps at every word
that can be framed into a justification of his wrong course.
He is self-deceived; he does not see that he is shutting himself
away from the Spirit of God. When he entered upon this path he
did not know its dangers nor realize where it would lead him.
All who are walking in the same way would do well to turn their
feet at once into the path of safety.
We are living in an age of intemperance,
and catering to the appetite of the cider bibber is an offense
against God. With others you have
engaged in this work because you have not followed the light.
Had you stood in the light, you would not, you could not, have
done this. Every one of you who has acted a part in this work
will come under the condemnation of God unless you make an entire
change in your business. You need to be in earnest. You need
to commence the work at once to clear your souls from condemnation.
Some of you in ----- developed wonderful
zeal in denouncing the red-ribbon clubs. So far as you were actuated
by a desire to condemn the evil in these societies, you were
right; but when you acted as though it were a crime to speak
at all in their favor, or to show them the least good will, you
carried matters to extremes. You should be consistent in all
things. You have cherished a hatred for the very name "red-ribbon
club" that savors not of the Spirit of Christ, and your
feelings of bitterness have not helped you or anyone else.
You have taken the testimonies given in
reference to our people's mingling with the temperance societies
to the detriment of their spiritual interest, and by perverting
them have used them to oppress and burden souls. By this treatment
of the light given you have brought my work into disrepute. There
was not the least necessity for this, and some of you have a
work to do to make this matter right. You would make an iron
bedstead for others; if too short, they must be stretched; if
too long, they must be cut off. "Judge not, that ye be not
judged."
After you had taken a decided stand in
opposition to active participation in the work of the temperance
societies, you might still have retained an influence over others
for good, had you acted conscientiously in accordance with the
holy faith which you profess; but by engaging in the manufacture
of cider you have hurt your influence very much; and what is
worse, you have brought reproach upon the truth, and your own
souls have been injured. You have been building up a barrier
between yourselves and the temperance cause. Your course led
unbelievers to question your principles. You are not
making straight paths for your feet, and the
lame are halting and stumbling over you to perdition.
I cannot see how, in the light of the law
of God, Christians can conscientiously engage in the raising
of hops or in the manufacture of wine or cider for the market.
All these articles may be put to a good use and prove a blessing,
or they may be put to a wrong use and prove a temptation and
a curse. Cider and wine may be canned when fresh and kept sweet
a long time, and if used in an unfermented state they will not
dethrone reason. But those who manufacture apples into cider
for the market are not careful as to the condition of the fruit
used, and in many cases the juice of decayed apples is expressed.
Those who would not think of using the poisonous rotten apples
in any other way will drink the cider made from them and call
it a luxury; but the microscope would reveal the fact that this
pleasant beverage is often unfit for the human stomach, even
when fresh from the press. If it is boiled, and care is taken
to remove the impurities, it is less objectionable.
I have often heard people say: "Oh!
this is only sweet cider; it is perfectly harmless, and even
healthful." Several quarts, perhaps gallons, are carried
home. For a few days it is sweet; then fermentation begins. The
sharp flavor makes it all the more acceptable to many palates,
and the lover of sweet wine or cider is loath to admit that his
favorite beverage ever becomes hard or sour. Persons may become
just as really intoxicated on wine and cider as on stronger drinks,
and the worst kind of inebriation is produced by these so-called
milder drinks. The passions are more perverse; the transformation
of character is greater, more determined and obstinate. A few
quarts of cider or wine may awaken a taste for stronger drinks,
and in many cases those who have become confirmed drunkards have
thus laid the foundation of the drinking habit. For some persons
it is by no means safe to have wine or cider in the house. They
have inherited an appetite for stimulants, which Satan is continually
soliciting them to indulge. If they yield to his temptations
they do not stop; appetite clamors for indulgence
and is gratified to their ruin. The brain is benumbed and clouded;
reason no longer holds the reins, but they are laid on the neck
of lust. Licentiousness, adultery, and vices of almost every
type are committed as the result of indulging the appetite for
wine and cider. A professor of religion who loves these stimulants,
and accustoms himself to their use, never grows in grace. He
becomes gross and sensual; the animal passions control the higher
powers of the mind, and virtue is not cherished.
Moderate drinking is the school in which
men are receiving an education for the drunkard's career. So
gradually does Satan lead away from the strongholds of temperance,
so insidiously do the harmless wine and cider exert their influence
upon the taste, that the highway to drunkenness is entered upon
all unsuspectingly. The taste for stimulants is cultivated; the
nervous system is disordered; Satan keeps the mind in a fever
of unrest; and the poor victim, imagining himself perfectly secure,
goes on and on, until every barrier is broken down, every principle
sacrificed. The strongest resolutions are undermined; and eternal
interests are not strong enough to keep the debased appetite
under the control of reason.
Some are never really drunk, but are always
under the influence of cider or fermented wine. They are feverish,
unbalanced in mind, not really delirious, but in fully as bad
a condition; for all the noble powers of the mind are perverted.
A tendency to disease of various kinds, as dropsy, liver complaint,
trembling nerves, and a determination of blood to the head, results
from the habitual use of sour cider. By its use many bring upon
themselves permanent disease. Some die of consumption or fall
under the power of apoplexy from this cause alone. Some suffer
from dyspepsia. Every vital function is deadened and the physicians
tell them that they have liver complaint, when if they would
break open the cider barrel and never replace it, their abused
life forces would recover their vigor.
Cider drinking leads to the use of stronger
drinks. The stomach loses its natural
vigor, and something stronger is needed to arouse it to action.
On one occasion, when my husband and myself were traveling, we
were obliged to spend several hours waiting for the train. While
we were in the depot, a red-faced, bloated farmer came into the
restaurant connected with it, and in a loud, rough voice asked:
"Have you first-class brandy?" He was answered in the
affirmative, and ordered half a tumbler. "Have you pepper
sauce?" "Yes," was the answer. "Well, put
in two large spoonfuls." He next ordered two spoonfuls of
alcohol added, and concluded by calling for "a good dose
of black pepper." The man who was preparing it asked: "What
will you do with such a mixture?" He replied: "I guess
that will take hold," and, placing the full glass to his
lips, drank the whole of this fiery compound. That man had used
stimulants until he had deadened the tender coats of the stomach.
Many, as they read this, will laugh at
the warning of danger. They will say: "Surely the little
wine or cider that I use cannot hurt me." Satan has marked
such as his prey; he leads them on step by step, and they perceive
it not until the chains of habit and appetite are too strong
to be broken. We see the power that appetite for strong drink
has over men; we see how many of all professions and of heavy
responsibilities, men of exalted station, of eminent talents,
of great attainments, of fine feeling, of strong nerves, and
of good reasoning powers, sacrifice everything for the indulgence
of appetite, until they are reduced to the level of the brutes;
and in very many cases their downward course commenced with the
use of wine or cider.
When intelligent men and women who are
professedly Christians plead that there is no harm in making
wine or cider for the market because when unfermented it will
not intoxicate, I feel sad at heart. I know there is another
side to this subject that they refuse to look upon; for selfishness
has closed their eyes to the terrible evils that may result from
the use of these stimulants. I do not see how our brethren can
abstain from all appearance of evil and engage largely in the
business of hop raising, knowing
to what use the hops are put. Those who help to produce these
beverages that encourage and educate the appetite for stronger
stimulants will be rewarded as their works have been. They are
transgressors of the law of God, and they will be punished for
the sins which they commit and for those which they have influenced
others to commit through the temptations which they have placed
in their way.
Let all who profess to believe the truth
for this time, and to be reformers, act in accordance with their
faith. If one whose name is on the church book manufactures wine
or cider for the market, he should be faithfully labored with,
and, if he continues the practice, he should be placed under
censure of the church. Those who will not be dissuaded from doing
this work are unworthy of a place and a name among the people
of God. We are to be followers of Christ, to set our hearts and
our influence against every evil practice. How should we feel
in the day when God's judgments are poured out, to meet men who
have become drunkards through our influence? We are living in
the antitypical day of atonement, and our cases must soon come
in review before God. How shall we stand in the courts of heaven
if our course of action has encouraged the use of stimulants
that pervert reason and are destructive of virtue, purity, and
the love of God?
The lawyer asked Christ: "Master,
what shall I do to inherit eternal life? He said unto him, What
is written in the law? how readest thou? And he answering said,
Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with
all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind;
and thy neighbor as thyself. And He said unto him, Thou hast
answered right: this do, and thou shalt live." Eternal life
is the prize at stake, and Christ tells us how we may gain it.
He directs us to the written word: "How readest thou?"
The way is there pointed out; we are to love God supremely and
our neighbor as ourselves. But if we love our neighbor as ourselves
we shall not throw upon the market anything that will be a snare
to him.
To love God and man is the Christian's
whole duty. The law of love is
written upon the tablets of the soul, the Spirit of God dwells
in him, and his character appears in good works. Jesus became
poor that through His poverty we might be made rich. What sacrifices
are we willing to make for His sake? Have we His love enshrined
in our hearts? Do we love our neighbor as Christ loved us? If
we have this love for souls, it will lead us to consider carefully
whether by our words, our acts, our influence in any way, we
are placing temptation before those who have little moral power.
We shall not censure the weak and suffering, as the Pharisees
were continually doing, but we shall endeavor to remove every
stone of stumbling from our brother's path lest the lame be turned
out of the way.
As a people we profess to be reformers,
to be light bearers in the world, to be faithful sentinels for
God, guarding every avenue whereby Satan could come in with his
temptations to pervert the appetite. Our example and influence
must be a power on the side of reform. We must abstain from any
practice which will blunt the conscience or encourage temptation.
We must open no door that will give Satan access to the mind
of one human being formed in the image of God. If all would be
vigilant and faithful in guarding the little openings made by
the moderate use of the so-called harmless wine and cider, the
highway to drunkenness would be closed up. What is needed in
every community is firm purpose, and a will to touch not, taste
not, handle not; then the temperance reformation will be strong,
permanent, and thorough.
The love of money will lead men to violate
conscience. Perhaps that very money may be brought to the Lord's
treasury, but He will not accept any such offering; it is an
offense to Him. It was obtained by transgressing His law, which
requires that a man love his neighbor as himself. It is no excuse
for the transgressor to say that if he had not made wine or cider,
somebody else would, and his neighbor might have become a drunkard
just the same. Because some will place the bottle to their neighbor's
lips, will Christians venture to stain their garments with the
blood of souls,--to incur the curse pronounced upon these who place this temptation in the way of
erring men? Jesus calls upon His followers to stand under His
banner and aid in destroying the works of the devil.
The world's Redeemer, who knows well the
state of society in the last days, represents eating and drinking
as the sins that condemn this age. He tells us that as it was
in the days of Noah, so shall it be when the Son of man is revealed.
"They were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage,
until the day that Noah entered into the ark, and knew not until
the Flood came, and took them all away." Just such a state
of things will exist in the last days, and those who believe
these warnings will use the utmost caution not to take a course
that will bring them under condemnation.
Brethren, let us look at this matter in the
light of the Scriptures and exert a decided influence on the
side of temperance in all things. Apples and grapes are God's
gifts; they may be put to excellent use as healthful articles
of food, or they may be abused by being put to a wrong use. Already
God is blighting the grapevine and the apple crop because of
men's sinful practices. We stand before the world as reformers;
let us give no occasion for infidels or unbelievers to reproach
our faith. Said Christ: "Ye are the salt of the earth,"
"the light of the world." Let us show that our hearts
and consciences are under the transforming influence of divine
grace, and that our lives are governed by the pure principles
of the law of God, even though these principles may require the
sacrifice of temporal interests.