Dear Brother and Sister P: My soul is exceedingly
sorrowful as I review your cases. Last night my mind was heavily
burdened. In dreams I was conversing with you, Brother P. Your
separation from God was so evident, and you were so blind in
regard to your true condition, that it seemed like saying to
a blind man, "See," to try to make you discern your
true standing.
I have not been able to sleep since three
o'clock, and have been pleading with God for a larger measure
of His Spirit. I inquire over and over again: Who is sufficient
for these things? I dare not hold my peace when light has been
given me of God. I must speak; and yet it is with trembling,
fearing that the message will be rejected, and the souls to whom
it is addressed will be enshrouded in darkness more dense than
before the light came to them. I must come close to Jesus. I
have laid my hand in His, with the earnest prayer: "Lead
me, guide me; I have not wisdom to go alone." Jesus seems
very near; and I am deeply impressed that He is about to do a
special work for His people, particularly for those that labor
in word and doctrine. He is willing to help you both if you will
receive help in His own appointed way, but I cannot speak one
word of encouragement to you while you remain in your present
position. The words of Christ to the Pharisees, "Ye will
not come to Me, that ye might have life," are applicable
to you.
I wish we could do something to help you;
but while you remain in the worldly channel in which you have
placed yourselves, what can be done for you? You love the world,
and the world loves you, because, so far as practical godliness
is concerned, there is no separation between yourselves and worldlings.
In their eyes you are agreeable, smart, and good; they find in
you both that which pleases them. They have praised you and spoken
to you smooth things, and thus have had an influence to soothe
and comfort you; and you, in your turn, have soothed and comforted
them in their careless indifference
to the claims of God. You have encouraged them in their pride
and love of pleasure; for your actions have said to the sinner:
"It shall be well with thee." By mingling with worldlings,
your judgment has become perverted; and sins which God abhors
are tame and harmless in your sight.
I greatly fear that by your self-righteousness
you are building around your souls barriers that nothing can
break down. You have been no nearer to God, no more working His
works, no more imbued with His Spirit, than the professors in
the nominal churches. You have had no real sense of the sacredness
of the Sabbath, and God has not accepted your observance of His
holy day. You have had no true consecration, no sincere devotion.
God has not been honored by either of you; you have not known
Him experimentally. You have walked apart from Him so long that
He is nearly a stranger to you. Spiritual things are spiritually
discerned; but you have so long cultivated worldly tastes and
habits that it will not be easy for you to bend your mind in
an opposite direction.
You will feel: "This is an hard saying;
who can hear it?" But the world cannot understand the people
of God. There is no harmony between the children of light and
the children of darkness. Paul asks: "And what concord hath
Christ with Belial? or what part hath he that believeth with
an infidel? And what agreement hath the temple of God with idols?
for ye are the temple of the living God; as God hath said, I
will dwell in them, and walk in them, and I will be their God,
and they shall be My people. Wherefore come out from among them,
and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean
thing; and I will receive you, and will be a Father unto you,
and ye shall be My sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty."
John testifies: "Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and
it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when
He shall appear, we shall be like Him; for we shall see Him as
He is. And every man that hath this hope in Him purifieth himself,
even as He is pure." "Know ye not that the friendship
of the world is enmity with God?" asks
James. "Whosoever therefore will be a friend of the world
is the enemy of God."
Jesus said to His disciples: "If ye
love Me, keep My commandments. And I will pray the Father, and
He shall give you another Comforter, that He may abide with you
forever [not a profession of the truth, not a form of godliness,
but]: even the Spirit of truth; whom the world cannot receive,
because it seeth Him not, neither knoweth Him: but ye know Him;
for He dwelleth with you, and shall be in you." "He
that hath My commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth
Me: and he that loveth Me shall be loved of My Father, and I
will love him, and will manifest Myself to him. Judas saith unto
Him, not Iscariot, Lord, how is it that Thou wilt manifest Thyself
unto us, and not unto the world? Jesus answered and said unto
him, If a man love Me, he will keep My words: and My Father will
love him, and We will come unto him, and make Our abode with
him. He that loveth Me not keepeth not My sayings."
The words of Christ find no response in
your hearts, for you have blinded your eyes and hardened your
hearts. In the books of heaven you are both accounted as of the
world. Your hearts are sometimes troubled, but not enough to
lead you to repent and change your course of action. The world
holds your affections, and its customs are more agreeable to
you than obedience to the heavenly Teacher.
Your example before your children is not
at all in accordance with the truth you profess to love. The
truth does not sanctify you or them. You love selfish enjoyment;
and the lessons taught your children, both by precept and example,
have not been of a character to foster in them humility, meekness,
and a Christlike disposition. You are molding them after the
world's standard. When Jesus shall open before you the book of
records, where day by day your words and actions have been faithfully
registered, you will see that with both of you life has been
a terrible failure.
What your recent affliction may have done
for you, I am unable to say; but if it has had power to open
your eyes and convict your souls, you will certainly take a course
to make this evident. Without a
thorough conversion, you can never receive the crown of everlasting
life; and your children will never have part with the blood-washed
throng unless they first unlearn the lessons you have taught
them, which have become a part of their life and character. Your
example has led them to think that religion is like a garment
that may be worn or laid off as occasion requires or convenience
dictates; and unless there is an entire change in the influences
brought to bear upon them, these lax ideas of the claims of God
will cling to them. They do not know what constitutes the Christian
life; they have not learned what it is to live the truth and
bear the cross.
"If the world hate you," said
Christ, "ye know that it hated Me before it hated you."
You have entertained the opinion that the reason why the world
is so much opposed to us as a people is that we are too unsocial,
too plain in our dress, and too strict in regard to amusements,
withdrawing ourselves from them too much in practice as well
as in precept. You have thought that if we would be less exclusive
and would mingle more with the world, their opinions and impressions
of us would be greatly modified. But no greater mistake could
affect the human mind. Said Christ: "If ye were of the world,
the world would love his own: but because ye are not of the world,
but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth
you. Remember the word that I said unto you, The servant is not
greater than his lord. If they have persecuted Me, they will
also persecute you; if they have kept My saying, they will keep
yours also. But all these things will they do unto you for My
name's sake, because they know not Him that sent Me."
These are the words of One of whom even
His enemies were forced to admit: "Never man spake like
this Man." The words of men express their own human thoughts;
but those of Christ are spirit and life. "If ye continue
in My word," He says, "then are ye My disciples indeed."
"He that is of God heareth God's words," but these
divine utterances find no place in the heart of one who is of
the world and loves its pleasures.
God has given us specific directions so
that no one need err. "Man shall not live by bread alone,"
He says, "but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth
of God." The truth given by inspiration "is profitable
for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in
righteousness." Not by one word, not by many words, but
by every word that God has spoken, shall man live. You cannot
disregard one word, a single injunction that He has given, however
trifling it may seem to you, and be safe. "Whosoever therefore
shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach
men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven:
but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called
great in the kingdom of heaven." Whosoever will willfully
break one command cannot in spirit and in truth keep any of them.
He may claim that, with the exception of what he may regard as
slight deviations, he keeps them all; yet if he willingly offends
in one point he is guilty of all.
Brother and Sister P, while you have been
making a profession of Christianity you have been keeping back
part of the price. You have robbed God of thought and devotion;
you have robbed Him of your talents and influence. Your inclinations
have been a snare to you. You have not followed the light that
God has graciously given you in testimonies; and you have done
things that without repentance and reformation on your part will
exclude you from heaven. Had you heeded the reproofs sent to
you by the Holy Spirit you would now be strong in God and far
advanced in Christian experience, and you would have had an entirely
different record in the books of heaven.
"He that rejecteth Me," says
Christ, "and receiveth not My words, hath One that judgeth
him: the word that I have spoken, the same shall judge him in
the last day." In that day what shame and confusion of face
will cover those who have had such light and privileges, who
have had salvation brought within their reach by the infinite
sacrifice of the Son of God, and yet have not availed themselves
of these precious gifts. Through
His word God is constantly pointing out to us the right path,
even the high and glorious path of the just. The travelers in
this path do not walk in darkness, for it is illuminated by the
Sun of Righteousness; but you have rejected it because it was
too far separated from the world. Self-love and selfish ambition
cannot pass the strait gate and walk the narrow, upward way.
It will be found in the day of final
settlement that God was acquainted with everyone by name. There
is an unseen witness to every action of the life. "I know
thy works," says He that "walketh in the midst of the
seven golden candlesticks." It is known what opportunities
have been slighted, how untiring have been the efforts of the
Good Shepherd to search out those who were wandering in crooked
ways, and to bring them back to the path of safety and peace.
Again and again God has called after the pleasure lovers; again
and again He has flashed the light of His word across their path,
that they might see their peril, and escape. But on and on they
go, jesting and joking as they travel the broad road, until at
length their probation is ended. God's ways are just and equal;
and when sentence is pronounced against those who are found wanting,
every mouth will be stopped.
How different it would now be with you
both had you regarded in their true light the praise and honor
that come from men. You both thirst more for the praise of the
world than for the waters of life. The idea of being thought
of importance among men of the world has intoxicated you; their
words of esteem have deceived you. When you place a right estimate
on eternal things, the friendship and esteem of the rich and
the learned will have no influence over you. Pride, in whatever
form it may manifest itself, will no longer live in your heart.
But you have so long drunk of the turbid stream of worldliness
that you see no better way to live.
Again and again God has stretched out His
hand to save you by showing you your duties and obligations.
These duties change in character with the increase of light.
When the light shines, making manifest
and reproving the errors that were undiscovered, there must be
a corresponding change in the life and character. The mistakes
that are the natural result of blindness of mind are, when pointed
out, no longer sins of ignorance or errors of judgment; but unless
there are decided reforms in accordance with the light given,
they then become presumptuous sins. The moral darkness that surrounds
you will become more dense; your heart will become harder and
harder, and you will be more offensive in the sight of God. You
do not realize the great peril you are in, the danger there is
that in your case the light will become entirely obscured, veiled
in complete darkness. When the light is received and acted upon,
you will be crucified to sin, being dead indeed unto the world,
but alive to God. Your idols will be abandoned, and your example
will be on the side of self-denial rather than that of self-indulgence.
Brother and Sister P, had you heeded the
Testimonies of the Spirit of God, you would now be walking in
the light, in harmony with the people of God; but your unbelief
has shut you away from great good. Sister P has not risen up
against the Testimonies, neither has she shown confidence in
them as from the Lord by obeying them. She loves to have her
husband praised and honored by the world; it gratifies her pride,
which is by no means small. You may each appropriately inquire:
"Why am I so slow to come out from the world and take Christ
for my portion? Why should I love and honor those whom I know
do not love God nor respect His claims? Why should I wish to
retain the friendship of my Lord's enemies? Why should I follow
their customs or be influenced by their opinions?" You cannot,
my dear friends, serve both God and mammon. You must make an
unreserved surrender, or in the near future the light that shines
upon your pathway will go out in the darkness of despair. You
are on the enemy's ground. You have voluntarily placed yourselves
there, and the Lord will not protect you against his assaults.
In your present state you are doing far
more harm than good; for you have a form of godliness and profess
to believe the truth, while your
words and actions say: "Wide is the gate, and broad is the
way" that leads to life, "and many there be which go
in thereat." If your life is a confession of Christ, then
we may truly say that the world has gone after Him. Your profession
may be right; but have you humility and love, meekness and devotion?
"Whosoever shall confess Me before men," by a holy
life and godly conversation, "him shall the Son of man also
confess before the angels of God." No one can confess Christ
unless he has the mind and spirit of Christ; he cannot communicate
that which he does not possess. The daily life must be an expression
of the sanctifying power of the truth, and evidence that Christ
is abiding in the soul by faith. Whatever is opposed to the fruits
of the Spirit, or to the work of God in separating His people
from the world, is a denial of Christ; and His words are: "He
that denieth Me before men shall be denied before the angels
of God."
We may deny Christ by our worldly conversation
and by our pride of apparel. You have a circle of friends who
are a snare to you and to your children. You love their companionship.
Through association with them, you are led to dress yourselves
and your children after the fashions followed by those who have
no fear of God before their eyes. You thus show that you have
friendship with the world. "In the multitude of words there
wanteth not sin." Does your intercourse with these friends
incline you to visit the closet and ask divine love and grace,
or does it estrange your mind from God? And your dear children--what
is your neglect of their eternal interests doing for them? Your
example has encouraged them to hurry on the life journey with
heedless presumption or with blind self-confidence, having no
fixed religious principles to guide them. They have no conscientious
regard for the Sabbath, or for the claims of God in any respect;
they do not love Christian duties, and are straying further and
further from the Source of light, peace, and joy.
Without faith it is impossible to please
God; "for whatsoever is not of faith is sin." The faith
that is required is not a mere
assent to doctrines; it is the faith that works by love and purifies
the soul. Humility, meekness, and obedience are not faith; but
they are the effects, or fruit, of faith. These graces you have
yet to attain by learning in the school of Christ. You do not
know the sentiments and principles of heaven; its language is
almost a strange language to you both. The Spirit of God still
pleads in your behalf; but I have serious, painful doubts whether
you will heed that voice that has been appealing to you for years.
I hope you will, and that you will turn and live.
Do you feel that it is too great a sacrifice
to give your poor unworthy selves to Jesus? Will you choose the
hopeless bondage of sin and death rather than to have your life
severed from the world and united to Christ by bonds of love?
Jesus still lives to intercede for us. This should daily call
out the gratitude of our hearts. He that realizes his guilt and
helplessness may come just as he is and receive the blessing
of God. The promise belongs to him if he will grasp it by faith.
But he that in his own eyes is rich, and honorable, and righteous,
who sees as the world sees, and calls evil good and good evil,
cannot ask and receive, because he feels no need. He feels that
he is full; therefore he must go away empty.
Should you become alarmed for your own
souls, should you seek God diligently, He will be found of you;
but He will accept no halfhearted repentance. If you will forsake
your sins, He is ever ready to forgive. Will you just now surrender
to Him? Will you look to Calvary and inquire: "Did Jesus
make this sacrifice for me? Did He endure humiliation, shame,
and reproach, and suffer the cruel death of the cross because
He desired to save me from the sufferings of guilt and the horror
of despair, and make me unspeakably happy in His kingdom?"
Look upon Him whom your sins have pierced, and resolve: "The
Lord shall have the service of my life. I will no longer unite
with His enemies; I will no longer lend my influence to the rebels
against His government. All I have and am is too little to devote
to Him who so loved me that He gave His life for me--His whole
divine self for one so sinful and
erring." Separate from the world, be wholly on the Lord's
side, press the battle to the gates, and you will win glorious
victories.
Blessed is he who heeds the words of eternal
life. Guided by "the Spirit of truth," he will be led
into all truth. He will not be loved, honored, and praised by
the world; but he will be precious in the sight of heaven. "Behold,
what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we
should be called the sons of God: therefore the world knoweth
us not, because it knew Him not."