"The great day of the Lord is near,
it is near, and hasteth greatly, even the voice of the day of
the Lord: the mighty man shall cry there bitterly. That day is
a day of wrath, a day of trouble and distress, a day of wasteness
and desolation, a day of darkness and gloominess, a day of clouds
and thick darkness, a day of the trumpet and alarm against the
fenced cities, and against the
high towers. And I will bring distress upon men, that they shall
walk like blind men, because they have sinned against the Lord."
"And it shall come to pass at that
time, that I will search Jerusalem with candles, and punish the
men that are settled on their lees: that say in their heart,
The Lord will not do good, neither will He do evil."
"Gather yourselves together, yea,
gather together, O nation not desired; before the decree bring
forth, before the day pass as the chaff, before the fierce anger
of the Lord come upon you, before the day of the Lord's anger
come upon you. Seek ye the Lord, all ye meek of the earth, which
have wrought His judgment; seek righteousness, seek meekness:
it may be ye shall be hid in the day of the Lord's anger."
We are near the close of time. I have been
shown that the retributive judgments of God are already in the
land. The Lord has given us warning of the events about to take
place. Light is shining from His word; yet darkness covers the
earth, and gross darkness the people. "When they shall say,
Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them; .
. . and they shall not escape."
It is our duty to inquire the cause of
this terrible darkness, that we may shun the course by which
men have brought upon themselves so great delusion. God has given
the world an opportunity to learn and to obey His will. He has
given them, in His word, the light of truth; He has sent them
warning, counsel, and admonition; but few will obey His voice.
Like the Jewish nation, the majority, even of professed Christians,
pride themselves on their superior advantages, but make no returns
to God for these great blessings. In infinite mercy a last warning
message has been sent to the world, announcing that Christ is
at the door and calling attention to God's broken law. But as
the antediluvians rejected with scorn the warning of Noah, so
will the pleasure lovers of today reject the message of God's faithful servants. The world
pursues its unvarying round, absorbed as ever in its business
and its pleasures, while the wrath of God is about to be visited
on the transgressors of His law.
Our compassionate Redeemer, foreseeing
the perils that would surround His followers at this time, has
given them special warning: "Take heed to yourselves, lest
at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting, and drunkenness,
and cares of this life, and so that day come upon you unawares.
For as a snare shall it come on all them that dwell on the face
of the whole earth. Watch ye therefore, and pray always, that
ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things that shall
come to pass, and to stand before the Son of man." If the
church pursue a course similar to that of the world, they will
share the same fate. Nay, rather, as they have received greater
light, their punishment will be greater than that of the impenitent.
We as a people profess to have truth in
advance of every other people upon the earth. Then our life and
character should be in harmony with such a faith. The day is
just upon us when the righteous shall be bound like precious
grain in bundles for the heavenly garner, while the wicked are,
like the tares, gathered for the fires of the last great day.
But the wheat and tares "grow together until the harvest."
In the discharge of life's duties the righteous will to the last
be brought in contact with the ungodly. The children of light
are scattered among the children of darkness, that the contrast
may be seen by all. Thus are the children of God to "show
forth the praises of Him who hath called you out of darkness
into His marvelous light." The divine love glowing in the
heart, the Christ like harmony manifested in the life, will be
as a glimpse of heaven granted to men of the world that they
may see and appreciate its excellence.
Like will attract like. Those who are drinking
from the same fountain of blessing
will draw nearer together. Truth dwelling in the hearts of believers
will lead to blessed and happy assimilation. Thus will be answered
the prayer of Christ that His disciples might be one even as
He is one with the Father. For this oneness every truly converted
heart will be striving.
With the ungodly there will be a deceptive
harmony that but partially conceals a perpetual discord. In their
opposition to the will and the truth of God they are united,
while on every other point they are rent with hatred, emulation,
jealousy, and deadly strife.
The pure and the base metal are now so
mingled that only the discerning eye of the infinite God can
with certainty distinguish between them. But the moral magnet
of holiness and truth will attract together the pure metal, while
it will repel the base and counterfeit.
"The great day of the Lord is near,
it is near, and hasteth greatly;" but where do we behold
the true advent spirit? Who are preparing to stand in that time
of temptation which is just before us? The people to whom God
has entrusted the sacred, solemn, testing truths for this time
are sleeping at their post. They say by their actions: We have
the truth; we are "rich, and increased with goods, and have
need of nothing;" while the True Witness declares: Thou
"knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and
poor, and blind, and naked."
With what fidelity do these words portray
the present condition of the church: "Knowest not that thou
art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked."
Messages of warning, dictated by the Holy Spirit, are borne by
the servants of God, defects of character are presented before
the erring; but they say: "That does not represent my case.
I do not accept the message you bring. I am doing the best I
can. I believe the truth."
That evil servant who said in his heart,
"My Lord delayeth His coming,"
professed to be waiting for Christ. He was a "servant,"
outwardly devoted to the service of God while at heart he had
yielded to Satan. He does not, like the scoffer, openly deny
the truth, but reveals in his life the sentiment of the heart--that
the Lord's coming is delayed. Presumption renders him careless
of eternal interests. He accepts the world's maxims and conforms
to its customs and practices. Selfishness, worldly pride, and
ambitions predominate. Fearing that his brethren may stand higher
than himself, he begins to disparage their efforts and impugn
their motives. Thus he smites his fellow servants. As he alienates
himself from the people of God he unites more and more with the
ungodly. He is found eating and drinking "with the drunken"--joining
with worldlings and partaking of their spirit. Thus he is lulled
into a carnal security and overcome by forgetfulness, indifference,
and sloth.
The very beginning of the evil was a neglect
of watchfulness and secret prayer, then came a neglect of other
religious duties, and thus the way was opened for all the sins
that followed. Every Christian will be assailed by the allurements
of the world, the clamors of the carnal nature, and the direct
temptations of Satan. No one is safe. No matter what our experience
has been, no matter how high our station, we need to watch and
pray continually. We must be daily controlled by the Spirit of
God or we are controlled by Satan.
The Saviour's instructions to His disciples
were given for the benefit of His followers in every age. He
had those in view who were living near the close of time, when
He said: "Take heed to yourselves." It is our work,
each for himself, to cherish in the heart the precious graces
of the Holy Spirit.
Satan is working with unfailing perseverance
and intense energy to draw into his ranks the professed followers
of Christ. He is working "with all deceivableness of unrighteousness
in them that perish." But Satan is not the only worker by
whom the kingdom of darkness is
supported. Whoever solicits to sin is a tempter. Whoever imitates
the great deceiver becomes his aid. Those who give their influence
to sustain an evil work are doing Satan's drudgery.
Actions reveal principles and motives.
The fruit borne by many who claim to be plants in the Lord's
vineyard shows them to be but thorns and briers. A whole church
may sanction the wrong course of some of its members, but that
sanction does not prove the wrong to be right. It cannot make
grapes of thorn berries.
If some who profess to believe present
truth could understand their true position, they would despair
of the mercy of God. They have been exerting all their influence
against the truth, against the voice of warning, against the
people of God. They have been doing the work of Satan. Many have
become so infatuated by his deceptions that they will never recover.
Such a state of backsliding cannot exist without causing the
loss of many souls.
The church has received warning after warning.
The duties and dangers of God's people have been plainly revealed.
But the worldly element has proved too strong for them. Customs,
practices, and fashions which lead the soul away from God have
been for years gaining ground in defiance of the warnings and
entreaties of the Holy Spirit, until at last their ways have
become right in their own eyes, and the Spirit's voice is scarcely
heard. No man can tell how far he may go in sin when once he
yields himself to the power of the great deceiver. Satan entered
into Judas Iscariot and induced him to betray his Lord. Satan
led Ananias and Sapphira to lie to the Holy Ghost. Those who
are not wholly consecrated to God may be led to do the work of
Satan, while yet they flatter themselves that they are in the
service of Christ.
Brethren and sisters, I entreat you to
"examine yourselves, whether ye be in the faith; prove your
own selves." To maintain the
warmth and purity of Christian love requires a constant supply
of the grace of Christ. Have you employed every means that your
"love may abound yet more and more," "that ye
may approve things that are excellent," and be filled with
the fruits of righteousness "which are by Jesus Christ,
unto the glory and praise of God"?
Many who should stand firm for righteousness
and truth have manifested weakness and indecision that have encouraged
the assaults of Satan. Those who fail to grow in grace, not seeking
to reach the highest standard in divine attainments, will be
overcome.
This world is to the Christian a land of
strangers and enemies. Unless he shall take for his defense the
divine panoply and wield the sword of the Spirit he will become
the prey of the powers of darkness. The faith of all will be
tested. All will be tried as gold is tried in the fire.
The church is composed of imperfect, erring
men and women, who call for the continual exercise of charity
and forbearance. But there has been a long period of general
lukewarmness; a worldly spirit coming into the church has been
followed by alienation, faultfinding, malice, strife, and iniquity.
Should there be less sermonizing by men
who are unconsecrated in heart and life, and were more time devoted
to humbling the soul before God, then might we hope that the
Lord would appear to your help and heal your backslidings. Much
of the preaching of late begets a false security. Important interests
in the cause of God cannot be wisely managed by those who have
had so little real connection with God as some of our ministers
have had. To entrust the work to such men is like setting children
to manage great vessels at sea. Those who are destitute of heavenly
wisdom, destitute of living power with God, are not competent
to steer the gospel ship amid icebergs and tempests. The church
is passing through severe conflicts, but in her peril many would
trust her to hands that will surely wreck
her. We need a pilot on board now, for we are nearing the harbor.
As a people we should be the light of the world. But how many
are foolish virgins, having no oil in their vessels with their
lamps. May the Lord of all grace, abundant in mercy, full of
forgiveness, pity and save us, that we perish not with the wicked!
In this season of conflict and trial we
need all the support and consolation we can derive from righteous
principles, from fixed religious convictions, from the abiding
assurance of the love of Christ, and from a rich experience in
divine things. We shall attain to the full stature of men and
women in Christ Jesus only as the result of a steady growth in
grace.
Oh, what can I say to open blind eyes, to enlighten the spiritual understanding! Sin must be crucified. A complete moral renovation must be wrought by the Holy Spirit. We must have the love of God, with living, abiding faith. This is the gold tried in the fire. We can obtain it only of Christ. Every sincere and earnest seeker will become a partaker of the divine nature. His soul will be filled with intense longing to know the fullness of that love which passes knowledge; as he advances in the divine life he will be better able to grasp the elevated, ennobling truths of the word of God, until by beholding he becomes changed and is enabled to reflect the likeness of his Redeemer.