Some have taken the position that the warnings,
cautions, and reproofs given by the Lord through His servant,
unless they come through special vision for each individual case,
should have no more weight than counsels and warnings from other
sources. In some cases it has been represented that in giving
a testimony for churches or individuals I have been influenced
to write as I did by letters received from members of the church.
There have been those who claimed that testimonies purporting
to be given by the Spirit of God were merely the expression of
my own judgment, based upon information gathered from human sources.
This statement is utterly false. If, however, in response to
some question, statement, or appeal from churches or individuals,
a testimony is written presenting the light which God has given
concerning them, the fact that
it has been called forth in this manner in nowise detracts from
its validity or importance. I quote from Testimony 31 a few paragraphs
bearing directly upon this point:
"How was it with the apostle Paul?
The news he received through the household of Chloe concerning
the condition of the church at Corinth was what caused him to
write his first epistle to that church. Private letters had come
to him stating the facts as they existed, and in his answer he
laid down general principles which if heeded would correct the
existing evils. With great tenderness and wisdom he exhorts them
to all speak the same things, that there be no divisions among
them.
"Paul was an inspired apostle, yet
the Lord did not reveal to him at all times just the condition
of His people. Those who were interested in the prosperity of
the church, and saw evils creeping in, presented the matter before
him, and from the light which he had previously received he was
prepared to judge of the true character of these developments.
Because the Lord had not given him a new revelation for that
special time, those who were really seeking light did not cast
his message aside as only a common letter. No, indeed. The Lord
had shown him the difficulties and dangers which would arise
in the churches, that when they should develop, he might know
just how to treat them.
"He was set for the defense of the
church. He was to watch for souls as one that must render account
to God, and should he not take notice of the reports concerning
their state of anarchy and division? Most assuredly; and the
reproof he sent them was written just as much under the inspiration
of the Spirit of God as were any of his epistles. But when these
reproofs came, some would not be corrected. They took the position
that God had not spoken to them through Paul, that he had merely
given them his opinion as a man, and they regarded their own
judgment as good as that of Paul. So it is with many among our people who have drifted away from
the old landmarks and who have followed their own understanding."
[VOL. 5, PP. 65, 66 (1882).]
When this position is taken by our people,
then the special warnings and counsels of God through the Spirit
of prophecy can have no influence with them to work a reformation
in life and character. The Lord does not give a vision to meet
each emergency which may arise in the different attitudes of
His people in the development of His work. But He has shown me
that it has been His way of dealing with His church in past ages,
to impress the minds of His chosen servants with the needs and
dangers of His cause and of individuals, and to lay upon them
the burden of counsel and warning.
So in many cases God has given me light
in regard to peculiar defects of character in members of the
church and the dangers to the individual and the cause if these
defects are not removed. Under certain circumstances wrong tendencies
are liable to become strongly developed and confirmed, and to
work injury to the cause of God and ruin to the individual. Sometimes,
when special dangers threaten the cause of God or particular
individuals, a communication comes to me from the Lord, either
in a dream or a vision of the night, and these cases are brought
vividly to my mind. I hear a voice saying to me: "Arise
and write; these souls are in peril." I obey the movings
of the Spirit of God, and my pen traces their true condition.
As I travel, and stand before the people in different places,
the Spirit of the Lord brings before me clearly the cases I have
been shown, reviving the matter previously given me.
For the last forty-five years the Lord
has been revealing to me the needs of His cause and the cases
of individuals in every phase of experience, showing where and
how they have failed to perfect Christian character. The history
of hundreds of cases has been presented to me, and that which
God approves, and that which He
condemns, has been plainly set before me. God has shown me that
a certain course, if followed, or certain traits of character,
if indulged, would produce certain results. He has thus been
training and disciplining me in order that I might see the dangers
which threaten souls, and instruct and warn His people, line
upon line, precept upon precept, that they might not be ignorant
of Satan's devices, and might escape his snares.
The work which the Lord has laid out before
me especially is to urge young and old, learned and unlearned,
to search the Scriptures for themselves; to impress upon all
that the study of God's word will expand the mind and strengthen
every faculty, fitting the intellect to wrestle with problems
of truth, deep and far-reaching; to assure all that the clear
knowledge of the Bible outdoes all other knowledge in making
man what God designed he should be. "The entrance of Thy
words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple."
With the light communicated through the study of His word, with
the special knowledge given of individual cases among His people
under all circumstances and in every phase of experience, can
I now be in the same ignorance, the same mental uncertainty and
spiritual blindness, as at the beginning of this experience?
Will my brethren say that Sister White has been so dull a scholar
that her judgment in this direction is no better than before
she entered Christ's school, to be trained and disciplined for
a special work? Am I no more intelligent in regard to the duties
and perils of God's people than are those before whom these things
have never been presented? I would not dishonor my Maker by admitting
that all this light, all the display of His mighty power in my
work and experience, has been valueless, that it has not educated
my judgment or better fitted me for His work.
When I see men and women taking the very
course, or cherishing the very traits, which have imperiled other
souls and wounded the cause of God, and which the Lord has
reproved again and again, how can I but be
alarmed? When I see timid souls, burdened with a sense of their
imperfections, yet conscientiously striving to do what God has
said is right, and know that the Lord looks down and smiles on
their faithful efforts, shall I not speak a word of encouragement
to these poor trembling hearts? Shall I hold my peace because
each individual case has not been pointed out to me in direct
vision?
"But if the watchman see the sword
come, and blow not the trumpet, and the people be not warned;
if the sword come, and take any person from among them, he is
taken away in his iniquity; but his blood will I require at the
watchman's hand. So thou, O son of man, I have set thee a watchman
unto the house of Israel; therefore thou shalt hear the word
at My mouth, and warn them from Me. When I say unto the wicked,
O wicked man, thou shalt surely die; if thou dost not speak to
warn the wicked from his way, that wicked man shall die in his
iniquity; but his blood will I require at thine hand. Nevertheless,
if thou warn the wicked of his way to turn from it; if he do
not turn from his way, he shall die in his iniquity; but thou
hast delivered thy soul."
In a recent dream I was brought before
an assembly of people, some of whom were making efforts to remove
the impression of a most solemn testimony of warning that I had
given them. They said: "We believe Sister White's testimonies;
but when she tells us things that she has not directly seen in
vision in the particular case under consideration, her words
are of no more account to us than the words of any other person."
The Spirit of the Lord came upon me, and I arose and rebuked
them in the name of the Lord. I repeated in substance that which
I have presented above in regard to the watchman. This, I said,
is appropriate to your case and to mine.
Now if those to whom these solemn warnings
are addressed say, "It is only Sister White's individual
opinion, I shall still follow my
own judgment," and if they continue to do the very things
they were warned not to do, they show that they despise the counsel
of God, and the result is just what the Spirit of God has shown
me it would be--injury to the cause of God and ruin to themselves.
Some who wish to strengthen their own position will bring forward
from the Testimonies statements which they think will support
their views, and will put the strongest possible construction
upon them; but that which questions their course of action, or
which does not coincide with their views, they pronounce Sister
White's opinion, denying its heavenly origin and placing it on
a level with their own judgment.
If you, my brethren, who have been acquainted
with me and my work for many years, take the position that my
counsel is of no more value than the counsel of those who have
not been specially educated for this work, then do not ask me
to unite with you in labor; for while you occupy this position,
you will inevitably counteract the influence of my work. If you
feel just as safe in following your own impulses as in following
the light given by God's delegated servant, the peril is your
own; you will be condemned because you rejected the light which
heaven had sent you.
While at -----, the Lord came to me in
the night season and spoke precious words of encouragement concerning
my work, repeating the same message that had been given me several
times before. With regard to those who have turned from the light
sent them, He said: "In slighting and rejecting the testimony
that I have given you to bear, it is not you, but Me, your Lord,
that they have slighted."
If those who are headstrong and full of
self-esteem go on unchecked in their course, what will be the
condition of things in the church? How are the wrongs to be corrected
which exist in these strong-willed, ambitious ones? By what means
will God reach them? How will He set His church in order? Differences
of opinion are constantly arising, and apostasies often afflict
the church. When controversy or division
comes in, all parties claim to be right and to have a conscience
void of offense; and they will not be instructed by those who
have long borne the burden of the work and who, they have reason
to know, have been guided by the Lord. Light has been sent to
dispel their darkness, but they are too proud of heart to accept
it, and they choose the darkness. They despise the counsel of
God because it does not coincide with their views and plans,
and favor their wrong traits of character. The work of the Spirit
of God, which would bring them into the right position if they
would accept it, has not come in a way to please them, and to
flatter their self-righteousness. The light which God has given
is no light to them, and they wander in darkness. They claim
that no more confidence is to be placed in the judgment of one
who has had such a long experience, and whom the Lord has taught
and used to do a special work, than in that of any other person.
Is it God's plan that they should do thus, or is it the special
working of the enemy of all righteousness to hold souls in error,
to bind them in strong delusions that cannot be broken, because
they have placed themselves beyond the reach of means that God
has ordained to deal with His church?
The reproofs, the cautions, the corrections
of the Lord, have been given to His church in all ages of the
world. These warnings were despised and rejected in Christ's
day by the self-righteous Pharisees, who claimed that they needed
no such reproof and were unjustly dealt with. They would not
receive the word of the Lord through His servants because it
did not please their inclinations. Should the Lord give a vision
right before this class of people in our day, pointing out their
mistakes, rebuking their self-righteousness and condemning their
sins, they would rise up in rebellion, like the inhabitants of
Nazareth when Christ showed them their true condition.
If these persons do not humble their hearts
before God, if they harbor the suggestions of Satan, doubt and
infidelity will take possession of the soul, and they will see
everything in a false light. Let
the seeds of doubt once be sown in their hearts and they will
have an abundant harvest to reap. They will come to mistrust
and disbelieve truths which are plain and full of beauty to others
who have not educated themselves in unbelief. Those who train
the mind to seize upon everything which they can use as a peg
to hang a doubt upon, and suggest these thoughts to other minds,
will always find occasion to doubt. They will question and criticize
everything that arises in the unfolding of truth, criticize the
work and position of others, criticize every branch of the work
in which they have not themselves a part. They will feed upon
the errors and mistakes and faults of others, "until,"
said the angel, the Lord Jesus shall rise up from His mediatorial
work in the heavenly sanctuary and shall clothe Himself with
the garments of vengeance and surprise them at their unholy feast,
and they will find themselves unprepared for the marriage supper
of the Lamb." Their taste has been so perverted that they
would be inclined to criticize even the table of the Lord in
His kingdom.
Has God ever revealed to these self-deceived
ones that no reproofs or corrections from Him are to have any
weight with them unless they come through direct vision? I dwell
upon this point because the position that many are now taking
upon it is a delusion of Satan to ruin souls. When he has ensnared
and weakened them through his sophistry, so that when they are
reproved they persist in making of none effect the workings of
God's Spirit, his triumph over them will be complete. Some who
profess righteousness will, like Judas, betray their Lord into
the hands of His bitterest enemies. These self-confident ones,
determined to have their own way and to advocate their own ideas,
will go on from bad to worse, until they will pursue any course
rather than to give up their own will. They will go on blindly
in the way of evil, but, like the deluded Pharisees, so self-deceived
that they think they are doing
God's service. Christ portrayed the course which a certain class
will take when they have a chance to develop their true character:
"And ye shall be betrayed both by parents, and brethren,
and kinsfolks, and friends; and some of you shall they cause
to be put to death."
God has given me a marked, solemn experience
in connection with His work; and you may be assured that so long
as my life is spared, I shall not cease to lift a warning voice
as I am impressed by the Spirit of God, whether men will hear
or whether they will forbear. I have no special wisdom in myself;
I am only an instrument in the Lord's hands to do the work He
has set for me to do. The instructions that I have given by pen
or voice have been an expression of the light that God has given
me. I have tried to place before you the principles that the
Spirit of God has for years been impressing upon my mind and
writing on my heart.
And now, brethren, I entreat you not to
interpose between me and the people, and turn away the light
which God would have come to them. Do not by your criticisms
take out all the force, all the point and power, from the Testimonies.
Do not feel that you can dissect them to suit your own ideas,
claiming that God has given you ability to discern what is light
from heaven and what is the expression of mere human wisdom.
If the Testimonies speak not according to the word of God, reject
them. Christ and Belial cannot be united. For Christ's sake do
not confuse the minds of the people with human sophistry and
skepticism, and make of none effect the work that the Lord would
do. Do not, by your lack of spiritual discernment, make of this
agency of God a rock of offense whereby many shall be caused
to stumble and fall, "and be snared, and be taken."