"Many now despise the faithful reproof
given of God in testimony. I have been shown that some in these
days have even gone so far as to burn the written words of rebuke
and warning, as did the wicked king of Israel. But opposition
to God's threatenings will not hinder their execution. To defy
the words of the Lord, spoken through His chosen instruments,
will only provoke His anger and eventually bring certain ruin
upon the offender. Indignation often kindles in the heart of
the sinner against the agent whom God chooses to deliver His
reproofs. It has ever been thus, and the same spirit exists today
that persecuted and imprisoned Jeremiah for obeying the word
of the Lord." [VOL. 4, P. 180 (1876).]
From the beginning of my work, as I have
been called to bear a plain, pointed testimony, to reprove wrongs,
and to spare not, there have been those who have stood in opposition
to my testimony and have followed after to speak smooth
things, to daub with untempered mortar, and
to destroy the influence of my labors. The Lord would move upon
me to bear reproof, and then individuals would step in between
me and the people to make my testimony of no effect.
"In almost every case where reproof
is necessary, there will be some who entirely overlook the fact
that the Spirit of the Lord has been grieved and His cause reproached.
These will pity those who deserved reproof, because personal
feelings have been hurt. All this unsanctified sympathy places
the sympathizers where they are sharers in the guilt of the one
reproved. In nine cases out of ten if the one reproved had been
left under a sense of his wrongs, he might have been helped to
see them and thereby have been reformed. But meddlesome, unsanctified
sympathizers place altogether a wrong construction upon the motives
of the reprover and the nature of the reproof given, and by sympathizing
with the one reproved lead him to feel that he has been really
abused; and his feelings rise up in rebellion against the one
who has only done his duty. Those who faithfully discharge their
unpleasant duties under a sense of their accountability to God
will receive His blessing." [VOL. 3, P. 359 (1875).]
"There are some in these last days
who will cry: 'Speak unto us smooth things, prophesy deceits.'
But this is not my work. God has set me as a reprover of His
people; and just so surely as He has laid upon me the heavy burden,
He will make those to whom this message is given responsible
for the manner in which they treat it. God will not be trifled
with, and those who despise His work will receive according to
their deeds. I have not chosen this unpleasant labor for myself.
It is not a work which will bring to me the favor or praise of
men. It is a work which but few will appreciate. But those who
seek to make my labor doubly hard by their misrepresentations,
jealous suspicions, and unbelief, thus creating prejudice in
the minds of others against the Testimonies God has given me,
and limiting my work, have the
matter to settle with God, while I shall go forward as Providence
and my brethren may open the way before me. In the name and strength
of my Redeemer I shall do what I can. . . . My duty is not to
please myself, but to do the will of my heavenly Father, who
has given me my work." [VOL. 4, PP. 231, 232 (1876).]
If God has given me a message to bear to His people, those who would hinder me in the work and lessen the faith of the people in its truth are not fighting against the instrument, but against God. "It is not the instrument whom you slight and insult, but God, who has spoken to you in these warnings and reproofs." "It is hardly possible for men to offer a greater insult to God than to despise and reject the instrumentalities that He has appointed to lead them." [VOL. 5, P. 235; VOL. 3, P. 355.]