There are many things that need to be corrected
in the Upper Columbia and North Pacific Conferences. [THESE WERE
LOCAL CONFERENCES IN WHAT IS NOW THE NORTH PACIFIC UNION CONFERENCE.--TRUSTEES
OF ELLEN G. WHITE.] The Creator expected the brethren there to
bear fruit according to the light and privileges bestowed upon
them, but in this He has been disappointed. He has given them
every advantage; but they have not improved in meekness, godliness,
benevolence. They have not pursued that course of life, have
not revealed that character nor exercised that influence, which
would tend most to honor their Creator, ennoble themselves, and
make them a blessing to their fellow men. Selfishness exists
in their hearts. They love to have their own way and seek their
own ease, honor, and wealth, and their own pleasure in its grosser
or more refined forms. If we pursue the course of the world and
follow the bent of our own minds, will that work for our best
good? Does not God, who formed man, look for something better
from us?
"Be ye therefore followers of God,
as dear children." Christians must be like Christ. They
should have the same spirit, exert the same influence, and have
the same moral excellence that He possessed. The idolatrous and
corrupt in heart must repent and turn to God. Those who are proud
and self-righteous must abase self and become penitent and meek
and lowly in heart. The worldly-minded must have the tendrils
of the heart removed from the rubbish of the world, around which
they are clinging, and entwined about God; they must
become spiritually minded. The dishonest and
untruthful must become just and true. The ambitious and covetous
must be hid in Jesus and seek His glory, not their own. They
must despise their own holiness and lay up their treasure above.
The prayerless must feel the need of both secret and family prayer,
and must make their supplications to God with great earnestness.
As the worshipers of the true and living
God we should bear fruit corresponding to the light and privileges
we enjoy. Many are worshiping idols instead of the Lord of heaven
and earth. Anything that men love and trust in instead of loving
the Lord and trusting wholly in Him becomes an idol and is thus
registered in the books of heaven. Even blessings are often turned
into a curse. The sympathies of the human heart, strengthened
by exercise, are sometimes perverted until they become a snare.
If one is reproved, there are always some who will sympathize
with him. They entirely overlook the harm that has been done
to God's cause by the wrong influence of one whose life and character
do not in any way resemble those of the Pattern. God sends His
servants with a message to the people professing to be followers
of Christ; but some are children of God only in name, and they
reject the warning.
God has in a wonderful manner endowed man
with reasoning powers. He who fitted the tree to bear its burden
of goodly fruit has made man capable of bearing the precious
fruits of righteousness. He has planted man in His garden and
tenderly cared for him, and He expects him to bear fruit. In
the parable of the fig tree Christ says: "Behold, these
three years I come seeking fruit." For more than two years
has the Owner looked for the fruit that He has a right to expect
from these conferences, but how has His search been rewarded?
How anxiously we watch a favorite tree or plant, expecting it
to reward our care by producing buds, blossoms, and fruit; and
how disappointed we are to find upon it nothing but leaves. With
how much more anxiety and tender interest does the heavenly Father
watch the spiritual growth of those whom He has made in His own
image and for whom He condescended to
give His Son that they may be elevated, ennobled, and glorified.
The Lord has His appointed agencies to
meet men in their errors and backslidings. His messengers are
sent to bear a plain testimony to arouse them from their sleepy
condition and to open the precious words of life, the Holy Scriptures,
to their understanding. These men are not to be preachers merely,
but ministers, light bearers, faithful watchmen, who will see
the threatened danger and warn the people. They must resemble
Christ in their earnest zeal, in their thoughtful tact, in their
personal efforts--in short, in all their ministry. They are to
have a vital connection with God, and are to become so familiar
with the prophecies and the practical lessons of the Old and
the New Testament that they may bring from the treasure house
of God's word things new and old.
Some of these ministers make a mistake
in the preparation of their discourses. They arrange every minutia
with such exactness that they give the Lord no room to lead and
impress their minds. Every point is fixed, stereotyped as it
were, and they cannot depart from the plan marked out. This course,
if continued, will cause them to become narrow-minded, circumscribed
in their views, and will soon leave them as destitute of life
and energy as are the hills of Gilboa of dew and rain. They must
throw the soul open and let the Holy Spirit take possession to
impress the mind. When everything is laid out beforehand, and
they feel that they cannot vary from these set discourses, the
effect is little better than that produced by reading a sermon.
God would have His ministers wholly dependent
upon Him, but at the same time they should be thoroughly furnished
unto every good work. No subject can be treated before all congregations
in the same manner. The Spirit of God, if allowed to do its work,
will impress the mind with ideas calculated to meet the cases
of those who need help. But the tame, formal discourses of many
who enter the desk have very little of the vitalizing power of
the Holy Spirit in them. The habit of preaching such discourses
will effectually destroy a minister's usefulness
and ability. This is one reason why the efforts of the workers
in ----- and ----- have not been more successful. God has had
too little to do with impressing the mind in the desk.
Another cause of failure in these conferences
is that the people to whom God's messenger is sent wish to mold
his ideas to theirs and to put into his mouth the words that
he should speak. God's watchmen must not study how they shall
please the people, nor listen to their words and utter them;
but they must listen to hear what saith the Lord, what is His
word for the people. If they rely upon discourses prepared years
before they may fail to meet the necessities of the occasion.
Their hearts should be laid open so that the Lord may impress
their minds, and then they will be able to give the people the
precious truth warm from heaven. God is not pleased with those
narrow-minded ministers who devote their God-given powers to
matters of little moment and fail to grow in divine knowledge
to the full stature of men in Christ Jesus. He would have His
ministers possess breadth of mind and true moral courage. Such
men will be prepared to meet opposition and surmount difficulties,
and will lead the flock of God instead of being led by them.
There is altogether too little of the Spirit
and power of God in the labor of the watchmen. The Spirit which
characterized that wonderful meeting on the Day of Pentecost
is waiting to manifest its power upon the men who are now standing
between the living and the dead as ambassadors for God. The power
which stirred the people so mightily in the 1844 movement will
again be revealed. The third angel's message will go forth, not
in whispered tones, but with a loud voice.
Many who profess to have great light are
walking in sparks of their own kindling. They need to have their
lips touched with a live coal from off the altar, that they may
pour forth the truth like men who are inspired. Too many go into
the desk with mechanical discourses that have no light from heaven
in them.
There is too much of self and too little
of Jesus in the ministry of all denominations. The Lord uses
humble men to proclaim His messages. Had Christ come in the majesty
of a king, with the pomp which attends the great men of earth,
many would have accepted Him. But Jesus of Nazareth did not dazzle
the senses with a display of outward glory and make this the
foundation of their reverence. He came as a humble man to be
the Teacher and Exemplar as well as the Redeemer of the race.
Had He encouraged pomp, had He come followed by a retinue of
the great men of earth, how could He have taught humility? how
could He have presented such burning truths as in His Sermon
upon the Mount? His example was such as He wished all His followers
to imitate. Where would have been the hope of the lowly in life
had He come in exaltation and dwelt as a king upon the earth?
Jesus knew the needs of the world better than they themselves
knew. He did not come as an angel, clothed with the panoply of
heaven, but as a man. Yet combined with His humility was an inherent
power and grandeur that awed men while they loved Him. Although
possessing such loveliness, such an unassuming appearance, He
moved among them with the dignity and power of a heaven-born
king. The people were amazed, confounded. They tried to reason
the matter out; but, unwilling to renounce their own ideas, they
yielded to doubts, clinging to the old expectation of a Saviour
to come in earthly grandeur.
When Jesus delivered the Sermon on the
Mount, His disciples were gathered close about Him, and the multitude,
filled with intense curiosity, also pressed as near as possible.
Something more than usual was expected. Eager faces and listening
attitudes gave evidence of the deep interest. The attention of
all seemed riveted upon the speaker. His eyes were lighted up
with unutterable love, and the heavenly expression upon His countenance
gave meaning to every word uttered. Angels of heaven were in
that listening throng. There, too, was the adversary of souls
with his evil angels, prepared to counteract, as far as possible,
the influence of the heavenly Teacher. The truths there uttered have come down through the ages
and have been a light amid the general darkness of error. Many
have found in them that which the soul most needed--a sure foundation
of faith and practice. But in these words spoken by the greatest
Teacher the world has ever known there is no parade of human
eloquence. The language is plain, and the thoughts and sentiments
are marked with the greatest simplicity. The poor, the unlearned,
the most simple-minded, can understand them. The Lord of heaven
was in mercy and kindness addressing the souls He came to save.
He taught them as one having authority, speaking the words of
eternal life.
All should copy the Pattern as closely
as possible. While they cannot possess the consciousness of power
which Jesus had, they can so connect with the Source of strength
that Jesus can abide in them and they in Him, and so His spirit
and His power will be revealed in them.
"Walk in the light, as He is in the light." It is earthliness and selfishness that separate from God. The messages from heaven are of a character to arouse opposition. The faithful witnesses for Christ and the truth will reprove sin. Their words will be like a hammer to break the flinty heart, like a fire to consume the dross. There is constant need of earnest, decided messages of warning. God will have men who are true to duty. At the right time He sends His faithful messengers to do a work similar to that of Elijah.