Dear Brother E: I have just read the Review
and Herald and have seen your article giving a list of good books
for our youth. I was much surprised to read your recommendation
of Uncle Tom's Cabin, Robinson Crusoe, and such books. You are
in danger of becoming somewhat careless in your writing. It would
be well to give thought and careful study to whatever is to be
immortalized in print. I am really alarmed to see that your spiritual
eyesight is not more clear in the matter of selecting and recommending
reading for our youth. I know that the recommendation in our
papers of such infatuating books as Uncle Tom's Cabin will in
many minds justify the reading of other books which are nothing
but fiction. . . . This recommendation will make taxing work
for those who are laboring to persuade the youth to discard fictitious
reading. I have repeatedly seen the evil of reading such books
as you recommend, and have an article all prepared, cautioning
our youth in this very matter.
Be sure, my brother, not to lead away from
the searching of the Scriptures. It has been revealed to me that
the purchase and sale by our brethren of storybooks such as are
commonly circulated in Sunday schools is a snare to our people,
especially to our children. It leads them to expend money for
that class of reading which fevers the imagination and unfits
them for the real duties of practical life. You may be
assured that this recommendation of yours
will be acted upon. The youth need no such sanction or liberty,
for their taste and inclination are all in this direction. But
I hope no more such recommendations will appear. You must be
getting away from Jesus and His teachings and do not realize
it.
It is Satan's work to present to our youth
newspaper stories and storybooks that fascinate the senses and
thus destroy their relish for the word of God. Do not, my dear
brother, throw everything that comes into your mind into the
Review and Herald, but write guardedly. If the Spirit of Christ
moves you to write, then use your pen, feeling the burden of
souls, weeping between the porch and the altar, crying: "Spare
Thy people, O Lord, and give not Thine heritage to reproach."
But if it is only your own feelings and active mind that prompt
you to write, then refrain until the Lord's Spirit presses and
moves you. Do not think that because you pursue a certain course
and do certain things it is an evidence that they are right and
that you must present them to others as a rule or guide. It is
not best for you to feel at liberty to speak your mind upon such
matters as concern the welfare of our youth, recommending books
which do not tend to spirituality or piety. If you fancy that
such reading will develop firm, unspotted principle you are mistaken.
May the Lord help you to move cautiously and humbly, and not
throw out misleading statements in the papers; for they will
be considered as having been sanctioned by our people. You are
putting a burden upon others to counteract the influence of these
sentiments.
My brother, your safety is in walking
humbly with God. I tremble when I read your many articles, giving
counsel and rules for other ministers. It is hardly proper for
you to have so much to say in this direction. If you become self-sufficient
and self-confident, the Lord will certainly leave you to make
some mistake. You need carefully to guard your own soul
and to seek a daily, living experience in
the things of God. You should keep self out of sight and let
Jesus appear. Christ is your strength, your shield; you are a
weak, erring man and need to be very cautious, lest you stumble.
I entreat you to be on your guard that you do not in word or
in deed mar the sacred work of God.
I have felt so thankful for you that you
could act a part in this great work. Jesus loves you, and He
will work with your efforts if you have a living connection with
God. But you must live a life of watchfulness and prayer. Do
not become careless. Do not separate from Jesus, but bring Him
into your everyday life. Do not make work for yourself and others
by careless admissions and counsels; but know that unless Christ
is taken into your heart, unless your eye is single to the glory
of God, pride will come into your heart, self-esteem will prevail,
and you will, ere you are aware, be walking carelessly. "Make
straight paths for your feet, lest that which is lame be turned
out of the way."
There are many of our youth whom God has
endowed with superior capabilities. He has given them the very
best of talents; but their powers have been enervated, their
minds confused and enfeebled, and for years they have made no
growth in grace and in a knowledge of the reasons of our faith,
because they have gratified a taste for story reading. They have
as much difficulty to control the appetite for such superficial
reading as the drunkard has to control his appetite for intoxicating
drink. These might today be connected with our publishing houses
and be efficient workers to keep books, prepare copy for the
press, or to read proof; but their talents have been perverted
until they are mental dyspeptics, and consequently are unfitted
for a responsible position anywhere. The imagination is diseased.
They live an unreal life. They are unfitted for the practical
duties of life; and that which is the most sad and discouraging
is that they have lost all relish
for solid reading. They have become infatuated and charmed with
just such food for the mind as the intensely exciting stories
contained in Uncle Tom's Cabin. That book did good in its day
to those who needed an awakening in regard to their false ideas
of slavery; but we are standing upon the very borders of the
eternal world, where such stories are not needed in the preparation
for eternal life.
The only safety for any of us is to be
thoroughly converted and to be conversant with the truth as it
is revealed in the word of God, that we may be able to give to
every man that asks us, a reason of the hope that is in us, with
meekness and fear.
The special effort of ministers and of
workers all through our ranks for this time should be to turn
away the attention of the youth from all exciting stories to
the sure word of prophecy. The attention of every soul striving
for eternal life should center upon the Bible.
It seems wonderfully strange to me, considering
all I have written in regard to the reading of exciting stories,
to see a recommendation from your pen to read Robinson Crusoe,
Uncle Tom's Cabin, and Aesop's Fables. My brother, you made a
mistake in writing that article. If these books are among those
which you have for sale, I beg of you never to offer them again
to our youth. It is your duty to call their attention to the
Bible; do not become their tempter by offering to them attractive
storybooks, which will divert their minds from the study of the
Scriptures. We must ourselves be drinking of the water of life,
else we will be constantly hewing out for ourselves broken cisterns
which can hold no water.
There are a thousand ways and plans that
Satan has of creeping in to unsettle the minds of youth; and
unless the soul is firmly and fully stayed upon God, and conscientiously
guarded upon the very point of keeping the mind employed
in searching the Scriptures and becoming grounded
in our faith, they will surely be ensnared. We cannot be off
guard for a moment. We cannot allow ourselves to move from impulse.
We must set a guard about our minds and the minds of our children,
that they may not be allured by Satan's temptations.
We are in the great day of atonement, and
the sacred work of Christ for the people of God that is going
on at the present time in the heavenly sanctuary should be our
constant study. We should teach our children what the typical
Day of Atonement signified and that it was a special season of
great humiliation and confession of sins before God. The antitypical
day of atonement is to be of the same character. Everyone who
teaches the truth by precept and example will give the trumpet
a certain sound. You need ever to cultivate spirituality, because
it is not natural for you to be heavenly-minded. The great work
is before us of leading the people away from worldly customs
and practices, up higher and higher, to spirituality, piety,
and earnest work for God. It is your work to proclaim the message
of the third angel, to sound the last note of warning to the
world. May the Lord bless you with spiritual eyesight. I write
this in love, seeing your danger. Please consider these things
carefully and prayerfully.