The fact that so large a number are associated
together in the church at Battle Creek, and that so many important
interests center there, makes it pre-eminently a missionary field.
People from all parts of the country come to the sanitarium,
and many youth from different states attend the college. That
field demands the most devoted, faithful workers and the very
best methods of labor in order that a strong influence for Christ
and the truth may be constantly exerted. When the work is conducted
as God would have it, the saving power of the grace of Christ
will be manifest among those who believe the truth, and they
will be a light to others.
But there is at Battle Creek a sad neglect
of the many advantages at hand to keep the heart of the work
in a healthy condition. Vigorous heartbeats from the center should
be felt in all parts of the body of believers. But if the heart
is sickly and weak in its action, all branches of the cause will
be enfeebled. It is positively essential that there should be
a sound, healthy working power at this central point in order
that the truth may be carried to all the world. The knowledge
of this last warning must be diffused through families and communities
everywhere, and it will require wise generalship both to devise
plans and to educate men to assist in the work.
As year by year the work extends, the need
of experienced and faithful workers becomes more urgent; and
if the people of the Lord walk in His counsel, such workers will
be developed. While we should rely firmly upon God for wisdom
and power, He would have us cultivate our ability to the fullest
extent. As the workers acquire mental and spiritual power, and
become acquainted with the purposes and dealings of God, they
will have more comprehensive views of the work for this time
and will be better qualified both to devise and to execute plans for its advancement. Thus they
may keep pace with the opening providence of God.
A constant effort should be put forth to
enlist new workers. Talent should be discerned and recognized.
Persons who possess piety and ability should be encouraged to
obtain the necessary education, that they may be fitted to assist
in spreading the light of truth. All who are competent to do
so should be led to engage in some branch of the work according
to their capabilities.
The solemn and momentous work for this
time is not to be carried forward to completion solely by the
efforts of a few chosen men who have heretofore borne the responsibilities
in the cause. When those whom God has called to aid in the accomplishment
of a certain work shall have carried it as far as they can, with
the ability He has given them, the Lord will not allow the work
to stop at that stage. In His providence He will call and qualify
others to unite with the first, that together they may advance
still further, and lift the standard higher.
But there are some minds that do not grow
with the work; instead of adapting themselves to its increasing
demands, they allow it to extend far beyond them, and thus they
find themselves unable to comprehend or to meet the exigencies
of the times. When men whom God is qualifying to bear responsibilities
in the cause take hold of it in a slightly different way from
that in which it has hitherto been conducted, the older laborers
should be careful that their course be not such as to hinder
these helpers or to circumscribe the work. Some may not realize
the importance of certain measures, simply because they do not
see the necessities of the work in all its bearings and do not
themselves feel the burden which God has specially laid upon
other men. Those who are not specially qualified to do a certain
work should beware that they do not stand in the way of others
and prevent them from fulfilling the purpose of God.
The case of David is to the point. He desired
to build the temple of the Lord, and gathered together rich stores
of material for this purpose. But the Lord told him that he was
not to do that work; it must devolve upon Solomon, his son. David's
large experience would enable him to counsel Solomon and encourage
him, but the younger man must build the temple. The weary, worn
minds of the older laborers may not always see the greatness
of the work, and they may not be inclined to keep pace with the
opening providence of God; therefore weighty responsibilities
should not rest wholly upon them. They might not bring into the
work all the elements essential to its advancement, hence it
would be retarded.
For the want of wise management the work
in Battle Creek and throughout the State of Michigan is far behind
what it should be. While it is necessary for us to understand
the situation and the needs of foreign missions, we should also
be able to comprehend the needs of the work at our very doors.
If rightly improved, the advantages which God has placed within
our reach would enable us to send forth a much larger number
of workers. There is need of vigorous work in our churches. The
special message showing the important issues now pending, the
duties and dangers of our time, should be presented before them,
not in a tame, lifeless manner, "but in demonstration of
the Spirit and of power." Responsibilities must be laid
upon the members of the church. The missionary spirit should
be awakened as never before, and workers should be appointed
as needed, who will act as pastors to the flock, putting forth
personal effort to bring the church up to that condition where
spiritual life and activity will be seen in all her borders.
Much talent has been lost to the cause
because men in responsible positions did not discern it. Their
vision was not far-reaching enough to discover that the work
was becoming altogether too extended to be carried forward by
the workers then engaged. Much,
very much, which should have been accomplished is still undone
because men have held things in their own hands instead of distributing
the work among a larger number and trusting that God would help
them in their efforts. They have tried to carry forward all branches
of the work, fearing that others would prove less efficient.
Their will and judgment have controlled in these various departments,
and because of their inability to grasp all the wants of the
cause in its different parts, great losses have been sustained.
The lesson must be learned that when God
appoints means for a certain work we are not to lay these aside
and then pray and expect that He will work a miracle to supply
the lack. If the farmer fails to plow and sow, God does not by
a miracle prevent the results of his neglect. Harvesttime finds
his fields barren--there is no grain to be reaped, there are
no sheaves to be garnered. God provided the seed and the soil,
the sun and the rain; and if the husbandman had employed the
means that were at his hand, he would have received according
to his sowing and his labor.
There are great laws that govern the world
of nature, and spiritual things are controlled by principles
equally certain. The means for an end must be employed if the
desired results are to be attained. God has appointed to every
man his work according to his ability. It is by education and
practice that persons are to be qualified to meet any emergency
which may arise, and wise planning is needed to place each one
in his proper sphere, that he may obtain an experience which
will fit him to bear responsibility.
But while education, training, and the
counsel of those of experience are all essential, the workers
should be taught that they are not to rely wholly upon any man's
judgment. As God's free agents, all should ask wisdom of Him.
When the learner depends wholly upon another's thoughts, and
goes no further than to accept his plans, he sees only through
that man's eyes and is, so far,
only an echo of another. God deals with men as responsible beings.
He will work by His Spirit through the mind He has put in man,
if man will only give Him a chance to work and will recognize
His dealings. He designs that each shall use his mind and conscience
for himself. He does not intend that one man shall become the
shadow of another, uttering only another's sentiments.
All should love their brethren and respect
and esteem their leaders, but they should not make them their
burden bearers. We are not to pour all our difficulties and perplexities
into the minds of others, to wear them out. "If any of you
lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally,
and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him. But let him ask
in faith, nothing wavering." Jesus invites us: "Come
unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy-laden, and I will give
you rest. Take My yoke upon you, and learn of Me; for I am meek
and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For
My yoke is easy, and My burden is light."
The foundation of Christianity is Christ
our righteousness. Men are individually accountable to God, and
each must act as God moves upon him, not as he is moved by the
mind of another; for if this manner of labor is pursued, souls
cannot be impressed and directed by the Spirit of the great I
am. They will be kept under a restraint which allows no freedom
of action or of choice.
It is not the will of God that His people
in Battle Creek should remain in their present condition of coldness
and inaction until by some mighty miracle-working power the church
shall be aroused to life and activity. If we would be wise, and
use diligently, prayerfully, and thankfully the means whereby
light and blessing are to come to God's people, then no power
upon earth would be able to withhold these gifts from us. But
if we refuse God's means we need not look for Him to work a miracle
to give us light and vigor and power, for this will never be
done.
The Lord has shown me that men in responsible
positions are standing directly in the way of His work because
they think the work must be done and the blessing must come in
a certain way, and they will not recognize that which comes in
any other way. My brethren, may the Lord place this matter before
you as it is. God does not work as men plan, or as they wish;
He "moves in a mysterious way His wonders to perform."
Why reject the Lord's methods of working, because they do not
coincide with our ideas? God has His appointed channels of light,
but these are not necessarily the minds of any particular set
of men. When all shall take their appointed place in God's work,
earnestly seeking wisdom and guidance from Him, then a great
advance will have been made toward letting light shine upon the
world. When men shall cease to place themselves in the way, God
will work among us as never before.
While extensive plans should be laid, great
care must be taken that the work in each branch of the cause
be harmoniously united with that in every other branch, thus
making a perfect whole. But too often it has been the reverse
of this; and, as the result, the work has been defective. One
man who has the oversight of a certain branch of the work magnifies
his responsibilities until, in his estimation, that one department
is above every other. When this narrow view is taken, a strong
influence is exerted to lead others to see the matter in the
same light. This is human nature, but it is not the spirit of
Christ. Just in proportion as this policy is followed, Christ
is crowded out of the work, and self appears prominent.
The principles that should actuate us as
workers in God's cause are laid down by the apostle Paul. He
says: "We are laborers together with God." "Whatsoever
ye do, do it heartily, as to the Lord, and not unto men."
And Peter exhorts the believers: "As every man hath received
the gift, even so minister the same one to another, as good stewards
of the manifold grace of God. If any man speak,
let him speak as the oracles of God; if any man minister, let
him do it as of the ability which God giveth: that God in all
things may be glorified through Jesus Christ."
When these principles control our hearts,
we shall realize that the work is God's, not ours; that He has
the same care for every part of the great whole. When Christ
and His glory are made first and love of self is swallowed up
in love for souls for whom Christ died, then no worker will be
so entirely absorbed in one branch of the cause as to lose sight
of the importance of every other. It is selfishness which leads
persons to think that the particular part of the work in which
they are engaged is the most important of all.
It is selfishness also that prompts the
feeling, on the part of workers, that their judgment must be
the most reliable and their methods of labor the best or that
it is their privilege in any way to bind the conscience of another.
Such was the spirit of the Jewish leaders in Christ's day. In
their self-exaltation the priests and rabbis brought in such
rigid rules and so many forms and ceremonies as to divert the
minds of the people from God and leave Him no chance to work
for them. Thus His mercy and love were lost sight of. My brethren,
do not follow in the same path. Let the minds of the people be
directed to God. Leave Him a chance to work for those who love
Him. Do not impose upon the people rules and regulations, which,
if followed, would leave them as destitute of the Spirit of God
as were the hills of Gilboa of dew or rain.
There is a deplorable lack of spirituality
among our people. A great work must be done for them before they
can become what Christ designed they should be--the light of
the world. For years I have felt deep anguish of soul as the
Lord has presented before me the want in our churches of Jesus
and His love. There has been a spirit of self-sufficiency and
a disposition to strive for position and supremacy. I have
seen that self-glorification was becoming
common among Seventh-day Adventists and that unless the pride
of man should be abased and Christ exalted we should, as a people,
be in no better condition to receive Christ at His second advent
than were the Jewish people to receive Him at His first advent.
Jews were looking for the Messiah; but
He did not come as they had predicted that He would, and if He
were accepted as the Promised One, their learned teachers would
be forced to acknowledge that they had erred. These leaders had
separated themselves from God, and Satan worked upon their minds
to lead them to reject the Saviour. Rather than yield their pride
of opinion, they closed their eyes to all the evidences of His
Messiahship, and they not only rejected the message of salvation
themselves, but they steeled the hearts of the people against
Jesus. Their history should be a solemn warning to us. We need
never expect that when the Lord has light for His people, Satan
will stand calmly by and make no effort to prevent them from
receiving it. He will work upon minds to excite distrust and
jealousy and unbelief. Let us beware that we do not refuse the
light God sends, because it does not come in a way to please
us. Let not God's blessing be turned away from us because we
know not the time of our visitation. If there are any who do
not see and accept the light themselves, let them not stand in
the way of others. Let it not be said of this highly favored
people, as of the Jews when the good news of the kingdom was
preached to them: "Ye entered not in yourselves, and them
that were entering in ye hindered."
We are taught in God's word that this is the
time, above all others, when we may look for light from heaven.
It is now that we are to expect a refreshing from the presence
of the Lord. We should watch for the movings of God's providence
as the army of Israel watched for "the sound of a going
in the tops of the mulberry trees"--the appointed signal
that heaven would work for them.
God cannot glorify His name through His
people while they are leaning upon man and making flesh their
arm. Their present state of weakness will continue until Christ
alone shall be exalted; until, with John the Baptist, they shall
say from a humble and reverent heart: "He must increase,
but I must decrease." Words have been given me to speak
to the people of God: "Lift Him up, the Man of Calvary.
Let humanity stand back, that all may behold Him in whom their
hopes of eternal life are centered. Says the prophet Isaiah:
'Unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given: and the government
shall be upon His shoulder: and His name shall be called Wonderful,
Counselor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince
of Peace.' Let the church and the world look upon their Redeemer.
Let every voice proclaim with John: 'Behold the Lamb of God,
which taketh away the sin of the world.'"
It is to the thirsting soul that the fountain
of living waters is open. God declares: "I will pour water
upon him that is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground."
To souls that are earnestly seeking for light and that accept
with gladness every ray of divine illumination from His holy
word, to such alone light will be given. It is through these
souls that God will reveal that light and power which will lighten
the whole earth with His glory.