I have been shown that the youth of today
have no true sense of their great danger. There are many of the
young whom God would accept as laborers in the various branches
of His work, but Satan steps in and so entangles them in his
web that they become estranged from God and powerless in His
work. Satan is a sharp and persevering workman. He knows just
how to entrap the unwary, and it is an alarming fact that
but few succeed in escaping from his wiles.
They see no danger and do not guard against his devices. He prompts
them to fasten their affections upon one another without seeking
wisdom of God or of those whom He has sent to warn, reprove,
and counsel. They feel self-sufficient and will not bear restraint.
Your own case, Brother -----, is a forcible
illustration of this. You have become infatuated with the thought
of marriage. As is generally the case with those who have their
minds directed in this channel, the warnings of the servants
of God have but little influence upon you. I have been shown
how easily you are affected by surrounding influences. Should
you connect with associates whose minds are cast in an inferior
mold, you would become like them. Unless the love and fear of
God were before you, their thoughts would be your thoughts; if
they lacked reverence, you also would be come irreverent, if
they were frivolous and given to pleasure seeking, you would
follow in the same path with a zeal and perseverance worthy of
a better cause.
The young lady upon whom you have placed
your affections has not depth of thought or character. Her life
has been frivolous, and her mind is narrow and superficial. Yet
you have steadily refused to be cautioned by your father, your
loving sister, or by your friends in the church. I came to you
as Christ's ambassador; but your strong feelings, your self-confidence,
closed your eyes to danger and your ears to warnings. Your course
has been as persistent as though no one knew quite so much as
yourself or as though the salvation of your soul depended upon
your following your own judgment.
Should every young man who professes the
truth do as you have done, what would be the condition of families
and of the church? Consider the influence of the disrespect you
have shown for your parents by your self-will and self-sufficiency.
You are among the class described as heady, high-minded.
This infatuation has caused you to lose your
interest in religious things and to think only of yourself instead
of the glory of God. No good can come of this intimacy or attachment.
The blessing of God will not attend any such willful course as
you are pursuing. You should not be eager to enter the marriage
relation and assume the care of a family before you have thoroughly
established your own character. I regard you as in great darkness
but unable to realize your peril.
The truth was reforming your life and character,
and you were gaining the confidence of the brethren; but Satan
saw that he was losing you, and therefore he increased his efforts
to entangle you in his wily snare and has succeeded wonderfully.
The weakness of your nature, hitherto undiscovered, is now developed.
You do not see your condition, although it is very apparent to
others. Light does not come to a man who makes no effort to obtain
it. When you saw that your brethren and sisters were grieved
with your course, then it was time for you to stop and consider
what you were doing, to pray much, and to counsel with men of
experience in the church and gratefully accept their advice.
"But," say you, "should
I follow the judgment of the brethren independent of my own feelings?"
I answer: The church is God's delegated authority upon earth.
Christ has said: "Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall
be bound in heaven: and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall
be loosed in heaven." There is altogether too little respect
paid to the opinion of members of the same church. It is the
want of deference for the opinions of the church that causes
so much trouble among brethren. The eyes of the church may be
able to discern in its individual members that which the erring
may not see. A few persons may be as blind as the one in error,
but the majority of the church is a power which should control
its individual members.
The apostle Peter says: "Likewise,
ye younger, submit yourselves unto
the elder. Yea, all of you be subject one to another, and be
clothed with humility: for God resisteth the proud, and giveth
grace to the humble." Paul exhorts: "Be kindly affectioned
one to another with brotherly love; in honor preferring one another,"
"submitting yourselves one to another in the fear of God."
"Let nothing be done through strife or vainglory; but in
lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves."
Unless the advice and counsel of the church can be respected,
it is indeed powerless. God has placed a voice in the church
which must control its members.
If you are led by truth rather than error
you will be willing to obey your parents and sacredly regard
the voice of the church. Your prayers have been made with a determination
to carry out what you regarded as right, irrespective of the
wishes of your parents or of the church. All through your life
you have been actuated in a large degree by selfish feelings.
Ofttimes a great sacrifice of feeling has to be made in order
to comply with the conditions laid down in God's word and to
act from principle.
"Should parents," you ask, "select
a companion with out regard to the mind or feelings of son or
daughter?" I put the question to you as it should be: Should
a son or daughter select a companion without first consulting
the parents, when such a step must materially affect the happiness
of parents if they have any affection for their children? And
should that child, notwithstanding the counsel and entreaties
of his parents, persist in following his own course? I answer
decidedly: No; not if he never marries. The fifth commandment
forbids such a course. "Honor thy father and thy mother:
that thy days may be long upon the land which the Lord thy God
giveth thee." Here is a commandment with a promise which
the Lord will surely fulfill to those who obey.
Wise parents will never select companions
for their children without respect
to their wishes. No one has ever proposed to do this in your
case. But most of that which the youth of our day term love is
only blind impulse, which originates with Satan to compass their
destruction.
Should you, my brother, go to our college
now, as you have planned, I fear for your course there. Your
expressed determination to have a lady's company wherever you
should go shows me that you are far from being in a position
to be benefited by going to Battle Creek. The infatuation which
is upon you is more satanic than divine. I do not wish to have
you disappointed in regard to Battle Creek. The rules are strict
there. No courting is allowed. The school would be worth nothing
to students were they to become entangled in love affairs as
you have been. Our college would soon be demoralized. Parents
do not send their children to our college or to our offices to
commence a lovesick, sentimental life, but to be educated in
the sciences or to learn the printer's trade. Were the rules
so lax that the youth were allowed to become bewildered and infatuated
with the society of the opposite sex as you have been for some
months past, the object of their going to Battle Creek would
be lost. If you cannot put this entirely out of your mind and
go there with the spirit of a learner and with a purpose to arouse
yourself to the most earnest, humble, sincere efforts, praying
that you may have a close connection with God, it would be better
for you to remain at home.
Should you go you ought to be prepared
to withstand temptation and to hold up the hands of professors
and teachers, letting your influence be wholly on the side of
discipline and order. God designs that all who work in His cause
shall be subject one to another, ready to receive advice and
instruction. They should train themselves by the severest mental
and moral discipline, that by the assisting grace of God they
may be fitted in mind and heart to train others. Fervent prayer,
humility, and earnestness must be combined with God's help,
for human frailties and human feelings are
continually striving for the mastery. Every man must purify his
soul through obedience to the truth, and with an eye single to
God's glory he must abase self and exalt Jesus and His grace.
By thus continually advancing toward the light he will become
acquainted with God and receive His help.
Some of those who attend the college do
not properly improve their time. Full of the buoyancy of youth,
they spurn the restraint that is brought to bear upon them. Especially
do they rebel against the rules that will not allow young gentlemen
to pay their attentions to young ladies. Full well is known the
evil of such a course in this degenerate age. In a college where
so many youth are associated, imitating the customs of the world
in this respect would turn the thoughts in a channel that would
hinder them in their pursuit of knowledge and in their interest
in religious things. The infatuation on the part of both young
men and women in thus placing the affections upon each other
during school days shows a lack of good judgment. As in your
own case, blind impulse controls reason and judgment. Under this
bewitching delusion the momentous responsibility felt by every
sincere Christian is laid aside, spirituality dies, and the judgment
and eternity lose their awful significance.
Every faculty of those who become affected
by this contagious disease--blind love--is brought in subjection
to it. They seem to be devoid of good sense, and their course
of action is disgusting to all who behold it. My brother, you
have made yourself a subject of talk and have lowered yourself
in the estimation of those whose approval you should prize. With
many the crisis of the disease is reached in an immature marriage,
and when the novelty is past and the bewitching power of love-making
is over, one or both parties awake to their true situation. They
then find themselves ill-mated, but united for life. Bound to
each other by the most solemn vows, they look with sinking hearts upon the miserable life they must
lead. They ought then to make the best of their situation, but
many will not do this. They will either prove false to their
marriage vows or make the yoke which they persisted in placing
upon their own necks so very galling that not a few cowardly
put an end to their existence.
Associating with the vain, the superficial,
and the skeptical will be productive of moral depravity and ruin.
Bold, forward young gentlemen or ladies may have something pleasing
in their address; they may have brilliant powers of mind and
skill to make the bad appear even preferable to the good. Such
persons will enchant and bewilder a certain class, and souls
will be lost in consequence. The influence of every man's thoughts
and actions surrounds him like an invisible atmosphere, which
is unconsciously breathed in by all who come in contact with
him. This atmosphere is frequently charged with poisonous influences,
and when these are inhaled, moral degeneracy is the sure result.
My young brother, would that I could impress
upon you your true condition. You must repent or you can never
see the kingdom of heaven. Many young men and women who profess
godliness do not know what it is to follow Christ. They do not
imitate His example in doing good. Love and gratitude toward
God are not springing up in the heart nor expressed in their
words and deportment. They do not possess the spirit of self-denial,
neither do they encourage each other in the way of holiness.
We do not want young people to engage in the solemn work of God
who profess Christ but have not the moral strength to take their
position with those who are sober and watch unto prayer and who
have their conversation in heaven, whence they look for the Saviour.
We do not feel overanxious for youth to go to Battle Creek who
profess to be Sabbath-keepers but who indicate by their choice
of companions their low state of morals.
The door of our college will ever be open
to those who are not professors of religion, and the youth coming
to Battle Creek may have this irreligious society if it is their
choice. If they have right motives in associating with these
and sufficient spiritual strength to withstand their influence
they may be a power for good; while they are learners they may
become teachers. The true Christian does not choose the company
of the unconverted for love of the atmosphere surrounding their
irreligious lives or to excite admiration and secure applause,
but for the purpose of communicating light and knowledge, and
bringing them up to a noble, elevated standard, the broad platform
of eternal truth.
One person with pure motives, intent on
becoming intelligent that he may make a right use of his abilities,
will be a power for good in the school. He will have a molding
influence. When parents justify the complaints of their children
against the authority and discipline of the school, they do not
see that they are increasing the demoralizing power which now
prevails to such a fearful extent. Every influence surrounding
the youth needs to be on the right side, for youthful depravity
is increasing.
With worldly youth, the love of society
and pleasure becomes an absorbing passion. To dress, to visit,
to indulge the appetite and passions, and to whirl through the
round of social dissipation appears to be the great end of existence.
They are unhappy if left in solitude. Their chief desire is to
be admired and flattered, and to make a sensation in society;
and when this desire is not gratified, life seems unendurable.
Those who will put on the whole armor of
God and devote some time every day to meditation and prayer and
to the study of the Scriptures will be connected with heaven
and will have a saving, transforming influence upon those around
them. Great thoughts, noble aspirations, clear perceptions of
truth and duty to God, will be theirs. They will be yearning
for purity, for light, for love,
for all the graces of heavenly birth. Their earnest prayers will
enter into that within the veil. This class will have a sanctified
boldness to come into the presence of the Infinite One. They
will feel that heaven's light and glories are for them, and they
will become refined, elevated, ennobled by this intimate acquaintance
with God. Such is the privilege of true Christians.
Abstract meditation is not enough; busy
action is not enough; both are essential to the formation of
Christian character. Strength acquired in earnest, secret prayer
prepares us to withstand the allurements of society. And yet
we should not exclude ourselves from the world, for our Christian
experience is to be the light of the world. The society of unbelievers
will do us no harm if we mingle with them for the purpose of
connecting them with God and are strong enough spiritually to
withstand their influence.
Christ came into the world to save it, to
connect fallen man with the infinite God. Christ's followers
are to be channels of light. Maintaining communion with God,
they are to transmit to those in darkness and error the choice
blessings which they receive of heaven. Enoch did not become
polluted with the iniquities existing in his day; why need we
in our day? But we may, like our Master, have compassion for
suffering humanity, pity for the unfortunate, and a generous
consideration for the feelings and necessities of the needy,
the troubled, and the despairing.
Those who are Christians indeed will seek
to do good to others and at the same time will so order their
conversation and deportment as to maintain a calm, hallowed peace
of mind. God's word requires that we should be like our Saviour,
that we should bear His image, imitate His example, live His
life. Selfishness and worldliness are not fruits of a Christian
tree. No man can live for himself and yet enjoy the approbation
of God.
Sept. 5, 1879.