By his baptismal vows every member of the
church has solemnly pledged himself to guard the interests of
his brethren. All will be tempted to cling to their own cherished
plans and ideas, which appear sound to them; but they should
watch and pray, and endeavor, to the utmost of their ability,
to build up the kingdom of Jesus in the world. Every Christian
is required by God, as far as it is in his power, to ward off
from his brethren and sisters every influence which will have
the least tendency to divide them or to separate their interests
from the work for this present time. He should not only have
a regard for his own spiritual interests, but should manifest
a burden for the souls of those to whom he stands related; and
he should, through Christ, have a constraining power over other
members of the church. His words and deportment should have an
influence to lead them to follow Christ's example in self-denial,
self-sacrifice, and love for others.
If there are any in the church who exert
an influence contrary to the love and disinterested benevolence
which Jesus manifested for us, if they draw apart from their
brethren, faithful men should deal with these cases in wisdom,
laboring for their souls, yet being careful that their influence
shall not leaven others, and that the church shall not be led
astray by their disaffection and false reports. Some are filled
with self-sufficiency. There are a few who they think are right,
but they question and find fault with every act of others. These
persons must not be allowed to imperil the interests of the church.
In order to raise the moral tone of the church, each should feel
it his duty to seek personal spiritual culture, through the practice
of strict Bible principles, as in the sight of a holy God.
Let each church member feel that he himself
must be right with God, that he must be sanctified through the
truth. Then he can represent Christian character to others and
can set an example of unselfishness. If each will do this, the
church will increase in spirituality and in favor with God.
Every church member should feel under obligation
to consecrate his tithe to God. None are to follow the sight
of their eyes or the inclination of their selfish hearts and
thus rob God. They should not use their means to gratify vanity
or for any other selfish indulgence, for in so doing they entangle
themselves in Satan's snares. God is the giver of tact, of ability
to accumulate wealth, and therefore all is to be laid upon His
altar. The requirement is: "Honor the Lord with thy substance."
The tendency to covetousness must be constantly restrained, else
it will eat into the hearts of men and women, and they will run
greedily after gain.
In the wilderness of temptation, Satan,
the adversary of souls, presented before Christ the glories of
this world and said: "If Thou therefore wilt worship me,
all shall be Thine." The Saviour repulsed Satan; but how
easily is man seduced by the representations of the great enemy!
Many are charmed with the attractions of the world; they serve
mammon rather than God, and so lose their souls.
In a little while we are to meet our Lord;
and what account shall we have to give Him of the use we have
made of our time, our talents of influence, and our possessions?
Our joy should be in the work of saving souls. I solemnly inquire
of the Healdsburg church: Is God among you of a truth? Says the
True Witness: "Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which
have not defiled their garments; and they shall walk with Me
in white: for they are worthy." Are you of this number?
Have you held fast your integrity? As drowning men, have you
clung to Jesus, who is your refuge? Are you obeying Him, living
for Him, loving Him? Is each member pure and holy and undefiled,
one in whose mouth there is no
guile? If so, you are most happy; for you are, in the sight of
God, "more precious than fine gold; even . . . than the
golden wedge of Ophir." While multitudes are devoted to
mammon, and serve not the Holy One of Israel, there are a few
who have not defiled their garments, but have kept them unspotted
from the world; and these few will be a power. This class will
have that faith which works by love and purifies the soul. They
will exemplify lofty Christian principles. They will seek for
personal connection with the Source of light and will endeavor
to make constant improvement, cultivating every faculty to its
fullest extent. God would have you bring into your life the most
unbending uprightness and integrity; this will distinguish you
before the world as children of the most high God. Jesus was
calm and gentle, not losing His self-command, even when in stormy
conflict, amid fiercest elements of opposition.
God says to you who have had great light:
"Come up higher." Draw nearer to God and heaven. Go
forward. You need faith, an unfeigned love for your brethren,
and a deeper interest in them. God has entrusted you with sacred
responsibilities. There is a mission field for every member of
the church, where he may exert an influence for good.
Our college is not what it should be nor
what it will be if our brethren and sisters will feel that it
is a sacred trust committed to them. If they will elevate the
standard of spirituality in the church, if they will set an example
of integrity in all their dealings, if all will cultivate godliness
and Christian dignity, then the influence of the college will
be widespread, and a light will go forth from it with rich blessings.
I have seen that if the college is properly conducted, many youth
will go forth from it to be active laborers in the cause of God.
But let all take heed lest in word or action they cast an influence
against it or against the truth by an unconsecrated life, by
evil surmising, or by evil report; for God will surely
mark it against them. The college will always
be obliged to struggle against difficulties because some men
lack faith and are not controlled by the mind of Christ. If Satan
can find persons among us who will watch for evil and speak disparagingly
of our institutions, picking up every little unpleasant thing
that happens, he is well pleased. He will not cease his efforts
to lead persons to depreciate the college because it does not
in every particular meet their ideas. If he sees that youth can
be benefited he will press every influence into the church to
discourage rather than to strengthen and build up.
That these elements are in Healdsburg as
well as in other places none will deny; and if Satan did not
use them, he would use some other influence to the same end.
But "woe to that man by whom the offense cometh;" for
it were "better for him that a millstone were hanged about
his neck, and he were cast into the sea." God has His means
of working. Men cannot always discern them, and by attaching
so much importance to their own efforts they not only give the
Lord no room to work, but are found working against Him. "Let
him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall." "Ye
therefore, beloved, seeing ye know these things before, beware
lest ye also, being led away with the error of the wicked, fall
from your own steadfastness. But grow in grace, and in the knowledge
of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ."
We are nearing the end of time. Trials
will be abundant from without, but let them not come from within
the church. Let God's professed people deny self for the truth's
sake, for Christ's sake. "For we must all appear before
the judgment seat of Christ; that everyone may receive the things
done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it
be good or bad." Everyone who truly loves God will have
the spirit of Christ and a fervent love for his brethren. The
more a person's heart is in communion with God, and the more
his affections are centered in Christ, the less will he be disturbed
by the roughness and hardships he meets in
this life. Those who are growing up to the full stature of men
and women in Christ Jesus, will become more and more like Christ
in character, rising above the disposition to murmur and be discontented.
They will despise to be faultfinders.
The church at this time should have the
faith once delivered to the saints, which will enable them to
say boldly: "God is mine helper;" "I can do all
things through Christ which strengtheneth me." The Lord
bids us arise and go forward. Whenever the church at any period
have forsaken their sins, and believed and walked in the truth,
they have been honored of God. There is in faith and humble obedience
a power that the world cannot withstand. The order of God's providence
in relation to His people is progression--continual advancement
in the perfection of Christian character, in the way of holiness,
rising higher and higher in the clear light and knowledge and
love of God, to the very close of time. Oh! why are we ever learning
only the first principles of the doctrine of Christ?
The Lord has rich blessings for the church
if its members will seek earnestly to arouse from this perilous
lukewarmness. A religion of vanity, words devoid of vitality,
a character destitute of moral strength,--these are pointed out
in the solemn message addressed by the True Witness to the churches,
warning them against pride, worldliness, formalism, and self-sufficiency.
To him that says, "I am rich, and increased with goods,
and have need of nothing," the Lord of heaven declares,
Thou "knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable,
and poor, and blind, and naked." But to the lowly, the suffering,
the faithful, the patient, who are alive to their weakness and
insufficiency, are given words of encouragement: "Behold,
I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear My voice, and
open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him,
and he with Me." The True Witness says
to all: "I know thy works." This close scrutiny is
over the churches in California. Nothing escapes His searching
gaze; their faults and errors, their neglects and failures, their
sinful departure from the truth, their declensions and shortcomings--all
are "opened unto the eyes of Him with whom we have to do."
I hope and pray that you may walk in all
lowliness of mind, that you may be a blessing to one another.
"Yet a little while, and He that shall come will come, and
will not tarry." The bridal lamps must be kept trimmed and
burning. Our Lord delays because of His long-suffering to usward,
"not willing that any should perish, but that all should
come to repentance." But when we, with all the redeemed,
shall stand upon the sea of glass, with harps of gold and crowns
of glory, and before us the immensity of eternity, then we shall
see how short was the waiting period of probation. "Blessed
are those servants, whom the Lord when He cometh shall find watching."
We are living in an age when all should
especially give heed to the injunction of the Saviour: "Watch
and pray, that ye enter not into temptation." Let everyone
bear in mind that he should be true and loyal to God, believing
the truth, growing in grace and in the knowledge of Jesus Christ.
The Saviour's invitation is: "Learn of Me; for I am meek
and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls."
The Lord is willing to help us, to strengthen and bless us; but
we must pass through the refining process until all the impurities
in our character are burned away. Every member of the church
will be subjected to the furnace, not to consume, but to purify.
The Lord has wrought among you, but Satan
has also intruded himself, to bring in fanaticism. There are
other evils also to be avoided. Some are in danger of being satisfied
with the glimpses they have had of the light and love of God,
and so ceasing to advance. Watchfulness and prayer have not
been maintained. At the very time when the
acclamation is made, "The temple of the Lord, The temple
of the Lord, are these," temptations come in, and darkness
gathers about the soul--earthliness, selfishness, and self-glorification.
There is a necessity for the Lord Himself to communicate His
own ideas to the soul. What a thought!--that instead of our poor,
earthly, contracted ideas and plans the Lord will communicate
to us His own ideas, His own thought, noble, broad, far-reaching,
always leading heavenward!
Here is your danger, in failing to press
forward "toward the mark for the prize of the high calling
of God in Christ Jesus." Has the Lord given you light? Then
you are responsible for that light; not merely while its rays
are shining upon you, but for all which it has revealed to you
in the past. You are to surrender your will to God daily; you
are to walk in the light, and to expect more; for the light from
the dear Saviour is to shine forth in clearer, more distinct
rays amid the moral darkness, increasing in brightness more and
more unto the perfect day.
Are all the members of your church seeking
to gather fresh manna every morning and evening? Are you seeking
divine enlightenment? or are you devising means whereby you can
glorify yourselves? Are you, with your whole soul, might, mind,
and strength, loving and serving God in blessing others around
you by leading them to the Light of the world? Are you satisfied
with past blessings? or are you walking as Christ walked, working
as He worked, revealing Him to the world in your words and actions?
Are you, as obedient children, living a pure and holy life? Christ
must be brought into your life. He alone can cure you of envy,
of evil surmising against your brethren; He alone can take away
from you the self-sufficient spirit that some of you cherish
to your own spiritual detriment. Jesus alone can make you feel
your weakness, your ignorance, your corrupt nature. He alone
can make you pure, refine you,
fit you for the mansions of the blessed.
"Through God we shall do valiantly."
What an amount of good you can do by being loyal to God and to
your brethren, by repressing every unkind thought, every feeling
of envy or self-importance! Let your life be filled with the
ministry of kindness to others. How soon you may be called to
lay off the armor, you know not. Death may claim you suddenly,
giving you no time to prepare for your last change, no physical
strength or mental power to fix your thoughts on God and make
your peace with Him. Some, erelong, will know by experience how
vain is the help of man, how worthless is the self-important,
self-sufficient righteousness which has satisfied them.
I feel urged by the Spirit of the Lord
to tell you that now is your day of privilege, of trust, of blessing.
Will you improve it? Are you working for the glory of God, or
for selfish interests? Are you keeping before your mind's eye
brilliant prospects of worldly success, whereby you may obtain
self-gratification and financial gain? If so, you will be most
bitterly disappointed. But if you seek to live a pure and holy
life, to learn daily in the school of Christ the lessons that
He has invited you to learn, to be meek and lowly in heart, then
you have a peace which no worldly circumstances can change.
A life in Christ is a life of restfulness.
Uneasiness, dissatisfaction, and restlessness reveal the absence
of the Saviour. If Jesus is brought into the life, that life
will be filled with good and noble works for the Master. You
will forget to be self-serving, and will live closer and still
closer to the dear Saviour; your character will become Christlike,
and all around you will take knowledge that you have been with
Jesus and learned of Him. Each one possesses in himself the source
of his own happiness or wretchedness. If he will, he may rise
above the low, sentimental feeling which makes up the
experience of many; but so long as he is self-inflated,
the Lord can do nothing for him. Satan will present ambitious
projects to daze the senses, but we must ever keep before us
"the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ
Jesus." Crowd all the good works you possibly can into this
life. "They that be wise shall shine as the brightness of
the firmament; and they that turn many to righteousness as the
stars for ever and ever."
If our lives are filled with holy fragrance,
if we honor God by having good thoughts toward others, and doing
good deeds to bless others, it matters not whether we live in
a cottage or a palace. Circumstances have but little to do with
the experiences of the soul. It is the spirit cherished which
gives coloring to all our actions. A man at peace with God and
his fellow men cannot be made miserable. Envy will not be in
his heart; evil surmising will find no room there; hatred cannot
exist. The heart in harmony with God is lifted above the annoyances
and trials of this life. But a heart where the peace of Christ
is not, is unhappy, full of discontent; the person sees defects
in everything, and he would bring discord into the most heavenly
music. A life of selfishness is a life of evil. Those whose hearts
are filled with love of self will store away evil thoughts of
their brethren and will talk against God's instrumentalities.
Passions kept warm and fierce by Satan's promptings are a bitter
fountain, ever sending forth bitter streams to poison the life
of others. . . .
Let each one who claims to follow Christ
esteem himself less and others more. Press together, press together!
In union there is strength and victory; in discord and division
there is weakness and defeat. These words have been spoken to
me from heaven. As God's ambassador I speak them to you.
Let everyone seek to answer the prayer
of Christ: "That they all may be one; as Thou, Father, art
in Me, and I in
Thee." Oh, what unity is this! and says
Christ: "By this shall all men know that ye are My disciples,
if ye have love one to another."
When death claims one of our number, what
are our memories of the treatment he has received? Are the pictures
upon memory's walls pleasant to reflect upon? Are they memories
of kind words spoken, of sympathy given at the right time? Have
his brethren turned away the evil surmisings of indiscreet meddlers?
Have they vindicated his cause? Have they been faithful to the
inspired injunction: "Comfort the feeble-minded, support
the weak"? "Behold, thou hast instructed many, and
thou hast strengthened the weak hands." "Strengthen
ye the weak hands, and confirm the feeble knees. Say to them
that are of a fearful heart, Be strong, fear not."
When he with whom we have associated in
the church is dead, when we know that his account in the books
of heaven is fixed, and that he must meet that record in the
judgment, what are the reflections of his brethren as to the
course they have pursued toward him? What has been their influence
upon him? How clearly now every harsh word, every unadvised act,
is called to mind! How differently they would conduct themselves
if they had another trial!
The apostle Paul thanked God for the comfort
given him in sorrow, saying: "Blessed be . . . the God of
all comfort; who comforteth us in all our tribulation, that we
may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble, by the
comfort wherewith we ourselves are comforted of God." As
Paul felt the comfort and warmth of God's love breaking into
his soul, he reflected the blessing upon others. Let us so order
our conduct that the pictures hung upon the walls of our memory
may not be of such a character that we cannot endure to reflect
upon them.
After those with whom we associate are
dead, there will never be an opportunity
to recall any word spoken to them, or to wipe from the memory
any painful impression. Then let us take heed to our ways, that
we do not offend God with our lips. Let all coldness and variance
be put away. Let the heart melt into tenderness before God, as
we recall His merciful dealings with us. Let the Spirit of God,
like a holy flame, burn away the rubbish that is piled up at
the door of the heart, and let Jesus in; then His love will flow
out to others through us, in tender words and thoughts and acts.
Then if death parts us from our friends, to meet no more till
we stand at the bar of God, we shall not be ashamed to have the
record of our words appear.
When death closes the eyes, when the hands
are folded upon the silent breast, how quickly feelings of variance
change! There is no grudging, no bitterness; slights and wrongs
are forgiven, forgotten. How many loving words are spoken of
the dead! How many good things in their life are brought to mind!
Praise and commendation are now freely expressed; but they fall
upon ears that hear not, hearts that feel not. Had these words
been spoken when the weary spirit needed them so much, when the
ear could hear and the heart could feel, what a pleasant picture
would have been left in the memory! How many, as they stand awed
and silent beside the dead, recall with shame and sorrow the
words and acts that brought sadness to the heart now forever
still! Let us now bring all the beauty, love, and kindness we
can into our life. Let us be thoughtful, grateful, patient, and
forbearing in our intercourse with one another. Let the thoughts
and feelings which find expression around the dying and the dead
be brought into the daily association with our brethren and sisters
in life.