Those employed in our various institutions--our
publishing houses, our schools, and our health institutions--should
have a living connection with God. Especially is it very important
that those who have the management of these great branches of
the work be men who make the kingdom of God and His righteousness
the first consideration. They are not fit for their positions
of trust unless they take counsel of God and bear fruit to His
glory. They should pursue a course of life that will honor their Creator, ennoble themselves,
and bless their fellow men. All have natural traits which must
be cultivated or repressed, as they shall help or hinder in obtaining
a growth in grace, a depth of religious experience.
Those engaged in the work of God cannot
serve His cause acceptably unless they make the best use possible
of the religious privileges they enjoy. We are as trees planted
in the garden of the Lord; and He comes to us seeking the fruit
He has a right to expect. His eye is upon each of us; He reads
our hearts and understands our lives. This is a solemn search,
for it has reference to duty and to destiny; and with what interest
is it prosecuted. Let each of those to whom are committed sacred
trusts inquire: "How do I meet the inspecting eye of God?
Is my heart cleansed from its defilement? or have its temple
courts become so desecrated, so occupied with buyers and sellers,
that Christ finds no room?" The bustle of business, if continuous,
will dry up spirituality and leave the soul Christless. Although
they may profess the truth, yet if men pass along day by day
with no living connection with God, they will be led to do strange
things; decisions will be made not in accordance with the will
of God. There is no safety for our leading brethren while they
shall go forward according to their own impulses. They will not
be yoked up with Christ, and so will not move in harmony with
Him. They will be unable to see and realize the wants of the
cause, and Satan will move upon them to take positions that will
embarrass and hinder.
My brethren, are you cultivating devotion?
Is love of religious things prominent? Are you living by faith
and overcoming the world? Do you attend the public worship of
God? and are your voices heard in the prayer and social meeting?
Is the family altar established? Do you gather your children
together morning and evening, and present their cases to God?
Do you instruct them how to become followers of the Lamb? Your
families, if irreligious, testify to your neglect and unfaithfulness.
If, while you are connected with the sacred cause of God, your
children are careless, irreverent, and
have no love for religious meetings or sacred truth, it is a
sad thing. Such a family exerts an influence against Christ and
against the truth; and "he that is not with Me is against
Me," says Christ. The neglect of home religion, the neglect
to train your children, is most displeasing to God. If one of
your children were in the river, battling with the waves and
in imminent danger of drowning, what a stir there would be! What
efforts would be made, what prayers offered, what enthusiasm
manifested, to save the human life! But here are your children
out of Christ, their souls unsaved. Perhaps they are even rude
and uncourteous, a reproach to the Adventist name. They are perishing
without hope and without God in the world, and you are careless
and unconcerned.
What example do you give your children?
What order do you have at home? Your children should be educated
to be kind, thoughtful of others, gentle, easy to be entreated,
and, above everything else, to respect religious things and feel
the importance of the claims of God. They should be taught to
respect the hour of prayer; they should be required to rise in
the morning so as to be present at family worship.
Fathers and mothers who make God first
in their households, who teach their children that the fear of
the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, glorify God before angels
and before men by presenting to the world a well-ordered, well-disciplined
family, a family that love and obey God instead of rebelling
against Him. Christ is not a stranger in their homes; His name
is a household name, revered and glorified. Angels delight in
a home where God reigns supreme, and the children are taught
to reverence religion, the Bible, and their Creator. Such families
can claim the promise: "Them that honor Me I will honor."
As from such a home the father goes forth to his daily duties,
it is with a spirit softened and subdued by converse with God.
He is a Christian, not only in his profession, but in trade,
in all his business relations. He does his work with fidelity,
knowing that the eye of God is upon him.
In the church his voice is not silent.
He has words of gratitude and encouragement to utter; for he
is a growing Christian, with a fresh experience every day. He
is a helpful, active worker in the church, laboring for the glory
of God and the salvation of his fellow men. He would feel condemned
and guilty before God were he to neglect to attend public worship,
thus failing to improve the privileges that would enable him
to do better and more effective service in the cause of truth.
God is not glorified when influential men
make themselves mere businessmen, ignoring their eternal interests,
that are so much more enduring, so much more noble and elevated,
than the temporal. Where should the greatest tact and skill be
exercised, if not upon those things that are imperishable, as
enduring as eternity? Brethren, develop your talent in the direction
of serving the Lord; manifest as much tact and ability in working
for the upbuilding of the cause of Christ as you do in worldly
enterprises.
There is, I am sorry to say, a great want
of earnestness and interest in spiritual things on the part of
the heads of many families. There are some who are seldom found
in the house of worship. They make one excuse, then another,
and still another, for their absence; but the real reason is
that their hearts are not religiously inclined. A spirit of devotion
is not cultivated in the family. The children are not brought
up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. These men are not
what God would have them. They have no living connection with
Him; they are purely businessmen. They have not a conciliatory
spirit; there is such a lack of meekness, kindness, and courtesy
in their deportment that their motives are misconstrued, and
the good they really do possess is evil spoken of. If they could
realize how offensive their course is in the sight of God, they
would make a change.
The work of God should be carried forward
by men who have a daily, living experience in the religion of
Christ. "Without Me," says Christ, "ye can do
nothing." None of us are beyond the power of temptation.
All who are connected with our
institutions, our conferences, and our missionary enterprises
may ever have the assurance that they have a powerful foe, whose
constant aim is to separate them from Christ, their strength.
The more responsible the position they occupy, the more fierce
will be Satan's attacks; for he knows that if he can move them
to take an objectionable course, others will follow their example.
But those who are continually learning in the school of Christ
will be able to pursue the even tenor of their way, and Satan's
efforts to throw them off their balance will be signally defeated.
Temptation is not sin. Jesus was holy and pure; yet He was tempted
in all points as we are, but with a strength and power that man
will never be called upon to endure. In His successful resistance
He has left us a bright example, that we should follow His steps.
If we are self-confident or self-righteous we shall be left to
fall under the power of temptation; but if we look to Jesus and
trust in Him we call to our aid a power that has conquered the
foe on the field of battle, and with every temptation He will
make a way of escape. When Satan comes in like a flood, we must
meet his temptations with the sword of the Spirit, and Jesus
will be our helper and will lift up for us a standard against
him. The father of lies quakes and trembles when the truth of
God, in burning power, is thrown in his face.
Satan makes every effort to lead people
away from God; and he is successful in his purpose when the religious
life is drowned in business cares, when he can so absorb their
minds in business that they will not take time to read their
Bibles, to pray in secret, and to keep the offering of praise
and thanksgiving burning on the altar of sacrifice morning and
evening. How few realize the wiles of the archdeceiver! how many
are ignorant of his devices! When our brethren voluntarily absent
themselves from religious meetings, when God is not thought of
and reverenced, when He is not chosen as their counselor and
their strong tower of defense, how soon secular thoughts and
wicked unbelief come in, and vain confidence and philosophy take
the place of humble, trusting faith.
Often temptations are cherished as the voice of the True Shepherd
because men have separated themselves from Jesus. They cannot
be safe a moment unless right principles are cherished in the
heart and carried into every business transaction.
"If any of you lack wisdom, let him
ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth
not; and it shall be given him." Such a promise is of more
value than gold or silver. If with a humble heart you seek divine
guidance in every trouble and perplexity, His word is pledged
that a gracious answer will be given you. And His word can never
fail. Heaven and earth may pass away, but His word will never
pass away. Trust in the Lord, and you will never be confounded
or ashamed. "It is better to trust in the Lord than to put
confidence in man. It is better to trust in the Lord than to
put confidence in princes."
Whatever position in life we may
occupy, whatever our business, we must be humble enough to feel
our need of help; we must lean implicitly on the teachings of
God's word, acknowledge His providence in all things, and be
faithful in pouring out our souls in prayer. Lean to your own
understanding, dear brethren, as you make your way through the
world, and you will reap sorrow and disappointment. Trust in
the Lord with all your heart, and He will guide your steps in
wisdom, and your interests will be safe for this world and for
the next. You need light and knowledge. You will take counsel
either of God or your own heart; you will walk in the sparks
of your own kindling, or will gather to yourself divine light
from the Sun of Righteousness.
Do not act from motives of policy. The
great danger of our businessmen and those in responsible positions
is that they will be turned from Christ to secure some help aside
from Him. Peter would not have been left to show such weakness
and folly had he not sought by the use of policy to avoid reproach
and scorn, persecution and abuse. His highest hopes centered
in Christ; but when he saw Him in humiliation, unbelief came
in and was entertained. He fell under the power of temptation, and, instead of showing his fidelity
in a crisis, he wickedly denied his Lord.
For the sake of making money, many divorce
themselves from God and ignore their eternal interests. They
pursue the same course as the scheming, worldly man, but God
is not in this; it is an offense to Him. He would have them prompt
to devise and execute plans; but all business matters should
be transacted in harmony with the great moral law of God. The
principles of love to God and our neighbor must be carried out
in all the acts of the daily life, the least as well as the greatest.
There must be a spirit to do more than pay tithes on mint, anise,
and cummin; the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy,
and the love of God, must not be neglected; for the personal
character of each one connected with the work leaves its impress
upon it.
There are men and women who have left all
for Christ's sake. Their own temporal interests, their own enjoyment
of society and of family and friends, are made of less importance
than the interests of the kingdom of God. They have not made
houses and lands, and relatives and friends however dear, first
in their affections, and God's cause second. And those who do
this, who devote their lives to the advancement of the truth,
to bringing many sons and daughters to God, have the promise
that they shall have a hundredfold in this life and in the world
to come life everlasting. Those who work from a noble standpoint
and with unselfish motives will be consecrated to God, body,
soul, and spirit. They will not exalt self; they will not feel
competent to take responsibilities; but they will not refuse
to bear burdens, for they will have a desire to do all that they
are capable of doing. These will not study their own convenience;
the question with them will be: What is duty?
The more responsible the position, the
more essential that the influence be right. Every man whom God
has chosen to do a special work becomes a target for Satan. Temptations
press thick and fast upon him; for our vigilant foe knows that
his course of action has a molding influence upon others.
We are amid the perils of the last days, and
Satan has come down in great wrath, knowing that he has but a
short time. He works with all deceivableness of unrighteousness;
but heaven is open to everyone who makes God his trust. The only
safety for any of us is in clinging to Jesus and letting nothing
separate the soul from the mighty Helper.
Those who have merely a form of godliness,
and yet are connected with the cause in business relations, are
to be feared. They will surely betray their trust. They will
be overcome by the devices of the tempter and will imperil the
cause of God. There will be temptations to allow self to control;
an overbearing, critical spirit will arise, and in many cases
compassion and consideration for those who need to be dealt with
in thoughtful tenderness will be wanting.
"Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall
he also reap." What seed are we scattering? What will be
our harvest for time and for eternity? To every man the Master
has assigned his work in accordance with his ability. Are we
sowing the seed of truth and righteousness, or that of unbelief,
disaffection, evil surmising, and love of the world? The one
who scatters evil seed may discern the nature of his work, and
repent and be forgiven. But the pardon of the Master does not
change the character of the seed sown, and make of briers and
thistles precious wheat. He himself may be saved so as by fire;
but when the time of harvest comes, there will be only poisonous
weeds where there should be fields of waving grain. That which
was sown in wicked heedlessness will do its work of death. This
thought pains my heart and fills me with sadness. If all who
profess to believe the truth would sow the precious seeds of
kindness, love, faith, and courage, they would make melody to
God in their hearts as they travel the upward way, rejoicing
in the bright beams of the Sun of Righteousness, and in the great
gathering day they would receive an eternal reward.