There is an element in the church at -----
that is detrimental to its spiritual interests. There is a great
want of vital godliness, of experimental religion. I call no
names. Let each search his own heart and understand his own imperfections.
There are some who are ever leaning toward the world, ever lowering
the standard of religion by their worldly conversation. They
have not the love of God in their hearts. They are weak-handed
when real help is needed in the church. This spiritual weakness
is the result of their own unwillingness to bear burdens when
and where they can help the most. When, however, there is any
plan or device of their own to carry out, they are willing to
assume any responsibility; to have their own way is their purpose.
If that were a sanctified way, it would not be so bad; but it
is not.
There is great need of zealous, disinterested
workers in God's cause. One Christ-loving, devoted member will
do more good in a church than one hundred half-converted, unsanctified,
self-sufficient workers. It is impossible for the church to be
a living, active church unless its members shall be willing to
bear burdens and assume responsibilities. In church relationship
are brought together different temperaments and dispositions.
In the -----church there are a few devoted, God-fearing, faithful
souls who pray much, who carry the burden of the church, and
whose happiness is in the prosperity of its members. Here, as
elsewhere, Satan is constantly at work to drag down and demoralize.
It is the business of the adversary of souls to weaken and destroy
every organization which, if prospered, would glorify God.
Young men have received the truth and run
well for a season, but Satan has woven his meshes about them
in unwise attachments and poor marriages. This he saw would
be the most successful way he could allure
them from the path of holiness. For a while some of these youth
bore the gospel armor with dignity and grace. Just as long as
the heart and mind were in subjection to the divine will, there
was prosperity; but when the eye was diverted from Jesus and
attracted to unworthy objects, then it was that self asserted
the sway, that carnal reason overbore wise judgment and integrity,
and the Christian armor was thought too weighty to be borne by
those so young in years. It would do for old, experienced soldiers
of the gospel, but it was too heavy for youth. The tempter offered
many suggestions calculated to cause inconstancy and vacillation
in the Christian course.
The injunction of the Captain of their
salvation was, "Take ye heed, watch and pray," "lest
ye enter into temptation;" but it was too much trouble to
faithfully guard the soul, and the deceptive power of Satan and
the deceitful heart allured away from Christ. If these young
men and young women had considered the words of the apostle,
"Ye are not your own, for ye are bought with a price,"
they would not have felt at liberty to keep back from God that
which He had purchased at an infinite cost.
There is not one youth in one hundred who
feels his God-given responsibility. Every physical and mental
capability should be carefully preserved and put to the best
and highest use to advance the glory of God. Those youth who
permit their powers to be perverted, thus abusing God's gifts,
will be called to strict account for the good they might have
done had they availed themselves of the provision made through
Jesus Christ. God claims the working of every faculty.
There are youth in the ----- church who
should be cultivating the grace of Christian steadfastness and
growing up to be men of faith. They should become firm, unwavering,
rooted and grounded in the truth. The church needs the very
help which God designed they should give.
Those professing His name have not consecrated their powers fully
and entirely to Him, but have yielded them, in a measure, to
the service of Satan. Such have been, and still are, robbing
God. Like the unfaithful steward to whom were entrusted talents,
they have hid the gifts of God in the world
Another great detriment to the church at
----- has been the material which has come into it. This material
needs to be melted over by the Spirit of God. The dross is seen
in crude, sharp traits of character, which might have been removed
had these individuals been learners of Christ. But they have
not fully separated themselves from the spirit and influences
of the world. They rob God by daily mingling His time, His talents,
and His strength with a worldly element. These powers cannot
be withheld from God without resulting in eternal ruin. You have
been bought with a price, even if you perish because you will
not be saved in God's appointed way.
Holy angels are watching with intense interest,
to see if the individual members of the church will honor their
Redeemer, to see if they will place themselves in connection
with heaven and no longer defraud the Lord, whom they profess
to love, honor, and serve. God calls for His own. You are His
by creation, and doubly His by redemption. But when you suffer
the fires of unhallowed passion to light up the eye, when you
speak words that drive the holy angels from you, when you think
evil of your brethren, when you profane your hands with the gains
of ungodliness, you are yielding your members as instruments
of unrighteousness.
Brother -----, I saw that "Wanting"
was written against your name in the Ledger of Heaven--wanting
in patience, in forbearance, in self-control, in lowliness and
meekness. The want of these heavenly graces will surely close
the gates of heaven against you. Your body, your soul, your entire
being with all its capabilities, God claims
as His. That hasty, uncontrolled temper must be overcome. Spiritual
disease is the sure result of giving way to this fretting, complaining,
murmuring spirit. And this disease of soul will be your own fault.
Cease to fret, cease to be stubborn, cease to pet self, and be
a noblehearted, valiant man for God. Jesus loves you. Has He
not made ample provision for you, that you should have help when
brought into difficult places? "What," He says, "could
have been done more to My vineyard, that I have not done in it?
wherefore, when I looked that it should bring forth grapes, brought
it forth wild grapes?" The fruit Christ claims, after the
patient care bestowed upon His church, is faith, patience, love,
forbearance, heavenly-mindedness, meekness. These are clusters
of fruit which mature amid storm and cloud and darkness, as well
as in the sunshine.
Brother ----- is joined to the church,
but not to the Lord. He has a dyspeptic religion. He is not right
with God; he is filled with self. He has lost much by uniting
with individuals who have not the spirit of Christ. He is lacking
in almost every grace. He is useless to himself, and a great
stumbling block to the church. Dear brother, Satan has controlled
you to a great extent; your thoughts are unsanctified, your actions
are not in accordance with the spirit of a true Christian. You
have brought on your own disease; you must be your own restorer
through the help of the divine Physician. Your moral powers are
weak for want of nourishment. You are starving spiritually for
Bible truth--the bread of life. You need to draw daily nourishment
from the living Vine. The church receives no strength from you
and in your present condition would be better off without you,
for now, if anything arises to cross your track and you cannot
control matters, you settle back with stubbornness, a dead weight
on the church. You bear no burden or weight of the cause. God
has borne long with you, but there is a limit to His forbearance,
a line beyond which you may venture, when
His Spirit will no longer strive with you, but leave you in your
own perversity, defiled with selfishness, and debased with sin.
Brother ----- does not possess a right
spirit. His disposition to lead hurts him, for he is not fitted
for any such work. He can act a good part in the church if self
is not made prominent. More meekness and lowliness will make
his efforts a blessing to the church instead of a burden.
Brother and Sister -----, I saw opposite
your names also, in the heavenly record, the word, "Wanting."
You need to be emptied of self and the soul temple cleansed.
Both of you have ability to do good, but it is unsanctified.
You are greatly deficient in the simplicity of godliness. Were
the church left to be molded by your standard of religion, it
would be demoralized into a worldly, unconsecrated form. You
might have been a great blessing to the church, but you have
greatly failed. Jesus bids you come out from the spirit of the
world. Sister -----, I am alarmed for you and for those who are
brought in contact with your influence. You reach a low standard.
"Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap."
By your words and actions you are now casting the seed. You are
either sowing to the flesh or to the Spirit. In the day of final
reckoning everyone must take the sickle and mow down the crop
his own hand has sown.
Your husband is mistaking his work. When
he shall humble his heart as a little child, and when he shall
feel his own importance less and his need of help from God more,
then he may be where he can be used to God's glory. But, as he
is, he does not realize the wants of the cause. There is so much
great I, and so little Jesus exhibited in the life and character
of many, that God will accept nothing from their hands. But few
realize the solemnity of the time in which we live--the day of
God's preparation. Should you both be converted
and devote your ability to studying how to build up the church
instead of weakening it and helping the enemy in his work of
leading its members to the world you would be gaining a valuable
experience every day as you pass along. Brother ----- has been
a great hindrance to the church. He should not be a member of
the church unless his daily life is in harmony with his profession.
God does not acknowledge him as His child. He stands today under
the black banner of the powers of darkness. Satan has him completely
under his control.
Such strong, discouraging influences as
these have been a tide almost too strong for the church to stand
against. Ten members, who were walking in all humbleness of mind,
would have a far greater power upon the world than has the entire
church, with its present numbers and lack of unity. The more
there is of the divided, inharmonious element, the less power
will the church have for good in the world.
Would that I could make plain to your beclouded
senses, my brethren, the great peril you are in. Every action,
good or bad, prepares the way for its repetition. How was it
in the case of Pharaoh? The statement in Holy Writ is that God
hardened his heart, and at every repetition of light in the manifestation
of God's power the statement is repeated. Every time he refused
to submit to God's will his heart became harder and less impressible
by the Spirit of God. He sowed the seed of obstinacy, and God
left it to vegetate. He might have prevented it by a miracle,
but that was not His plan. He allowed it to grow and produce
a harvest of its own kind, thus, proving the truthfulness of
the scripture: "Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also
reap." When a man plants doubts, he will reap doubts. By
rejecting the first light and every following ray, Pharaoh went
from one degree of hardness of heart to another, until the cold,
dead forms of the first-born only
checked his unbelief and obstinacy for a moment. And then, determined
not to yield to God's way, he continued his willful course until
overwhelmed by the waters of the Red Sea.
This case is placed on record for our benefit.
Just what took place in Pharaoh's heart will take place in every
soul that neglects to cherish the light and walk promptly in
its rays. God destroys no one. The sinner destroys himself by
his own impenitence. When a person once neglects to heed the
invitations, reproofs, and warnings of the Spirit of God, his
conscience becomes seared, and the next time he is admonished,
it will be more difficult to yield obedience than before. And
thus with every repetition. Conscience is the voice of God, heard
amid the conflict of human passions; when it is resisted, the
Spirit of God is grieved.
We want all to understand how the soul
is destroyed. It is not that God sends out a decree that man
shall not be saved. He does not throw a darkness before the eyes
which cannot be penetrated. But man at first resists a motion
of the Spirit of God, and, having once resisted, it is less difficult
to do so the second time, less the third, and far less the fourth.
Then comes the harvest to be reaped from the seed of unbelief
and resistance. Oh what a harvest of sinful indulgences is preparing
for the sickle!
When secret prayer and reading of the Scriptures
are neglected today, tomorrow they can be omitted with less remonstrance
of conscience. There will be a long list of omissions, all for
a single grain sown in the soil of the heart. On the other hand,
every ray of light cherished will yield a harvest of light. Temptation
once resisted will give power to more firmly resist the second
time; every new victory gained over self will smooth the way
for higher and nobler triumphs. Every victory is a seed sown
to eternal life.
There is great need of zealous, faithful,
self-denying workers in our churches
throughout the land. No one can labor in the Sabbath school or
in the temperance work without reaping a bountiful harvest, not
only in the end of the world, but in the present life. In the
very effort to enlighten and bless others his own views will
become clearer and broader. The more we endeavor to explain the
truth to others, with a love for souls, the plainer will it become
to ourselves. It ever opens with new beauty and force to the
understanding of the expounder.
There are some good workers in your church, and these self-denying ones will never know how much good they have accomplished by their persevering efforts in the missionary field. But the Lord has claims upon more men and women in the church than have yielded to His demands. Some of the stones composing God's holy temple reflect the light which shines upon them from Jesus Christ, while others emit no light, thus clearly revealing that they are not living stones, elect, precious. They are not devotional, but prayerless, talkative, irreligious. True Christians will copy the pattern given them by our Saviour and will be meek, lowly, forbearing, gentle, easy to be entreated, free from pomposity and stubbornness.