Some have found difficulty in reconciling
a statement in Testimonies for the Church, volume I, page 292,
with one in Great Controversy, volume I, page 184. [THE ACCOUNT
PRESENTED IN THIS NOW-OUT-OF-PRINT VOLUME WAS REWRITTEN AND AMPLIFIED
BY ELLEN G. WHITE AND PUBLISHED IN 1890 AS PATRIARCHS AND PROPHETS.
SEE PAGE 264 OF THAT VOLUME FOR THE STATEMENT PARALLELING THE
ONE REFERRED TO HERE. [WHITE TRUSTEES.]]
These passages refer to the work of the sorcerers in counterfeiting
the miracle performed by Aaron, of turning the rod to a serpent.
The testimony says: "The magicians could not perform all
those miracles which God wrought through Moses. Only a few of
them could they do. The magicians' rods did become serpents,
but Aaron's rod swallowed them up." This last sentence,
which is the one in question, is substantially the same as the
Bible statement: "They cast down every man his rod, and
they became serpents: but Aaron's rod swallowed up their rods."
The statement in volume I, of the Controversy, is: "The
magicians seemed to perform several things with their enchantments
similar to those things which God wrought by the hand of Moses
and Aaron. They did not really cause their rods to become serpents,
but by magic, aided by the great deceiver, made them appear like
serpents, to counterfeit the work
of God." This statement, instead of contradicting the former,
is simply explanatory of it.
There is not, in the Testimony, a full
expression of the thought which I wished to convey. On page 293
is a sentence which makes the meaning clearer: "The magicians
wrought not by their own science alone, but by the power of their
god, the devil, who ingeniously carried out his deceptive work
of counterfeiting the work of God." Moses, by the power
of God, had changed the rod to a living serpent. Satan, through
the magicians, counterfeited this miracle. He could not produce
living serpents, for he has not power to create or to give life.
This power belongs to God alone. But all that Satan could do
he did--he produced a counterfeit. By his power, working through
the magicians, he caused the rods to assume the appearance of
serpents.
The statement that they did become serpents,
simply means that they were such in appearance; such they were
believed to be by Pharaoh and his court. There was nothing in
their appearance to distinguish them from the serpent produced
by Moses and Aaron; but while one was real, the others were spurious.
And the Lord caused the living serpent to swallow up the pretended
ones.
Pharaoh desired to justify his stubbornness
in resisting the divine command; he was seeking some excuse to
disregard the miracle which God had wrought through Moses. Satan
gave him just what he wanted. By the work which he wrought through
the magicians he made it appear to the Egyptians that Moses and
Aaron were only magicians and sorcerers, and hence that the message
which they brought would not claim respect as coming from a superior
being.
Even the swallowing up of the counterfeit
serpents was not regarded by Pharaoh as the special work of God's
power, but as accomplished by a kind of magic superior to that
of his servants. Thus this counterfeit work emboldened him in
his rebellion, causing him to fortify himself against conviction.
It was by the display of supernatural power,
in making the serpent his medium, that Satan caused the fall
of Adam and Eve in Eden. Before the close of time he will work
still greater wonders. So far as his power extends, he will perform
actual miracles. Says the Scripture: "He ... deceiveth them
that dwell on the earth by the means of those miracles which
he had power to do," not merely those which he pretends
to do. Something more than mere impostures is brought to view
in this scripture. But there is a limit beyond which Satan cannot
go, and here he calls deception to his aid and counterfeits the
work which he has not power actually to perform. In the last
days he will appear in such a manner as to make men believe him
to be Christ come the second time into the world. He will indeed
transform himself into an angel of light. But while he will bear
the appearance of Christ in every particular, so far as mere
appearance goes, it will deceive none but those who, like Pharaoh,
are seeking to resist the truth.