The true missionary spirit is the spirit
of Christ. The world's Redeemer was the great model missionary.
Many of His followers have labored earnestly and unselfishly
in the cause of human salvation; but no man's labor can bear
comparison with the self-denial, the sacrifice, the benevolence,
of our Exemplar.
The love which Christ has evinced for us
is without a parallel. How earnestly He labored! How often was
He alone in fervent prayer, on the mountainside or in the retirement
of the garden, pouring out His supplications with strong crying
and tears. How perseveringly He urged His petitions in behalf
of sinners! Even on the cross He forgot His own sufferings in
His deep love for those whom He came to save. How cold our love,
how feeble our interest, when compared with the love and interest
manifested by our Saviour! Jesus gave Himself to redeem our race;
and yet how ready are we to excuse ourselves from giving all
that we have for Jesus. Our Saviour submitted to wearing labor,
ignominy, and suffering. He was repulsed, mocked, derided, while
engaged in the great work which He came to earth to do.
Do you, my brethren and sisters, inquire:
What model shall we copy? I do not point you to great and good
men, but to the world's Redeemer. If we would have the true missionary
spirit we must be imbued with the love of Christ; we must look
to the Author and Finisher of our faith, study His character,
cultivate His spirit of meekness and humility, and walk in His
footsteps.
Many suppose that the missionary spirit,
the qualification for missionary work, is a special gift or endowment
bestowed upon the ministers and a few members of the church and
that all others are to be mere spectators.
Never was there a greater mistake. Every true Christian will
possess a missionary spirit, for to be a Christian is to be Christlike.
No man liveth to himself, and "if any man have not the Spirit
of Christ, he is none of His." Everyone who has tasted of
the powers of the world to come, whether he be young or old,
learned or unlearned, will be stirred with the spirit which actuated
Christ. The very first impulse of the renewed heart is to bring
others also to the Saviour. Those who do not possess this desire
give evidence that they have lost their first love; they should
closely examine their own hearts in the light of God's word,
and earnestly seek a fresh baptism of the Spirit of Christ; they
should pray for a deeper comprehension of that wondrous love
which Jesus manifested for us in leaving the realms of glory
and coming to a fallen world to save the perishing.
There is work for every one of us in the
vineyard of the Lord. We are not to seek that position which
will yield us the most enjoyment or the greatest gain. True religion
is free from selfishness. The missionary spirit is a spirit of
personal sacrifice. We are to work anywhere and everywhere, to
the utmost of our ability, for the cause of our Master.
Just as soon as a person is really converted
to the truth there springs up in his heart an earnest desire
to go and tell some friend or neighbor of the precious light
shining forth from the sacred pages. In his unselfish labor to
save others he is a living epistle, known and read of all men.
His life shows that he has been converted to Christ and has become
a colaborer with Him.
As a class, Seventh-day Adventists are
a generous and warmhearted people. In the proclamation of the
truth for this time we can rely upon their strong and ready sympathy.
When a proper object for their liberality is presented, appealing
to their judgment and conscience, it calls forth a hearty response.
Their gifts in support of the cause testify that they believe
it to be the cause of truth. There are, indeed, exceptions among
us. Not all who profess to accept the faith are earnest and
true-hearted believers. But the same was true
in the days of Christ. Even among the apostles there was a Judas;
but that did not prove all to be of the same character. We have
no reason for discouragement while we know that there are so
many who are devoted to the cause of truth, and are ready to
make noble sacrifices for its advancement. But there is still
a great lack, a great need among us. There is too little of the
true missionary spirit. All missionary workers should possess
that deep interest for the souls of their fellow men that will
unite heart to heart in sympathy and in the love of Jesus. They
should plead earnestly for divine aid and should work wisely
to win souls to Christ. A cold, spiritless effort will accomplish
nothing. There is need that the spirit of Christ fall upon the
sons of the prophets. Then will they manifest such love for the
souls of men as Jesus exemplified in His life.
The reason why there is no deeper religious
fervor and no more earnest love for one another in the church
is that the missionary spirit has been dying out. Little is now
said concerning Christ's coming, which was once the theme of
thought and of conversation. There is an unaccountable reluctance,
a growing disrelish for religious conversation; and in its stead,
idle, frivolous chitchat is indulged in, even by the professed
followers of Christ.
My brethren and sisters, do you desire
to break the spell that holds you? Would you arouse from this
sluggishness that resembles the torpor of death? Go to work,
whether you feel like it or not. Engage in personal effort to
bring souls to Jesus and the knowledge of the truth. In such
labor you will find both a stimulus and a tonic; it will both
arouse and strengthen. By exercise your spiritual powers will
become more vigorous, so that you can with better success work
out your own salvation. The stupor of death is upon many who
profess Christ. Make every effort to arouse them. Warn, entreat,
expostulate. Pray that the melting love of God may warm and soften
their icebound natures. Though they may refuse to hear, your
labor will not be lost. In the effort to bless others your own
souls will be blessed.
We have the theory of the truth, and now
we need to seek most earnestly for its sanctifying power. I dare
not hold my peace in this time of peril. It is a time of temptation,
of despondency. Everyone is beset by the wiles of Satan, and
we should press together to resist his power. We should be of
one mind, speaking the same things, and with one mouth glorifying
God. Then may we successfully enlarge our plans and by vigilant
missionary effort take advantage of every talent we can use in
the various departments of the work.
The light of truth is shedding its bright
beams upon the world through missionary effort. The press is
an instrumentality by which many are reached whom it would be
impossible to reach by ministerial effort. A great work can be
done by presenting to the people the Bible just as it reads.
Carry the word of God to every man's door, urge its plain statements
upon every man's conscience, repeat to all the Saviour's command:
"Search the Scriptures." Admonish them to take the
Bible as it is, to implore divine enlightenment, and then, when
the light shines, to gladly accept each precious ray and fearlessly
abide the consequences.
The downtrodden law of God is to be exalted
before the people; as soon as they turn with earnestness and
reverence to the Holy Scriptures, light from heaven will reveal
to them wondrous things out of God's law. Great truths that have
long been obscured by superstition and false doctrine will blaze
forth from the illuminated pages of the Sacred Word. The living
oracles pour forth their treasures new and old, bringing light
and joy to all who will receive them. Many are roused from their
slumber. They rise as it were from the dead and receive the light
and life which Christ alone can give. Truths which have proved
an overmatch for giant intellects are understood by babes in
Christ. To these is plainly revealed that which has clouded the
spiritual perception of the most learned expositors of the word,
because, like the Sadducees of old, they were ignorant of the
Scriptures and of the power of God.
Those who study the Bible with a sincere
desire to know and do the will of God will become wise unto salvation.
The Sabbath school is an important branch of the missionary work,
not only because it gives to young and old a knowledge of God's
word, but because it awakens in them a love for its sacred truths
and a desire to study it for themselves; above all, it teaches
them to regulate their lives by its holy teachings.
All who take the word of God as their rule
of life are brought into close relationship with one another.
The Bible is their bond of union. But their companionship will
not be sought or desired by those who do not bow to the Sacred
Word as the one unerring guide. They will be at variance, both
in faith and practice. There can be no harmony between them;
they are unreconcilable. As Seventh-day Adventists we appeal
from custom and tradition to the plain "Thus saith the Lord;"
and for this reason we are not, and cannot be, in harmony with
the multitudes who teach and follow the doctrines and commandments
of men.
All who are born of God will become co-workers
with Christ. Such are the salt of the earth. "But if the
salt have lost his savor, wherewith shall it be salted?"
If the religion we profess fails to renew our hearts and sanctify
our lives, how shall it exert a saving power upon unbelievers?
"It is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be cast out,
and to be trodden underfoot of men." That religion which
will not exert a regenerating power upon the world is of no value.
We cannot trust it for our own salvation. The sooner we cast
it away the better, for it is powerless and spurious.
We are to serve under our great Leader, to
press against every opposing influence, to be laborers together
with God. The work appointed us is to sow the gospel seed beside
all waters. In this work everyone must act a part. The manifold
grace of Christ imparted to us constitutes us stewards of talents
which we must increase by putting them out to the exchangers,
that when the Master calls for them, He may receive His own with
usury.