I call upon our school faculties to use
sound judgment and to work on a higher plane. Our educational
facilities must be purified from all dross. Our institutions
must be conducted on Christian principles if they would triumph
over opposing obstacles. If they are conducted
on worldly-policy plans, there will be a want of solidity in
the work, a want of farseeing spiritual discernment. The condition
of the world previous to the first appearing of Christ is a picture
of the condition of the world just previous to His second advent.
The Jewish people were destroyed because they rejected the message
of salvation sent down from heaven. Shall those in this generation
to whom God has given great light and wonderful opportunities
follow in the trend of those who rejected light to their ruin?
Many today have veils upon their faces.
These veils are sympathy with the customs and practices of the
world, which hide from them the glory of the Lord. God desires
us to keep our eyes fixed upon Him, that we may lose sight of
the things of this world.
As the truth is brought into practical
life, the standard is to be elevated higher and higher to meet
the requirements of the Bible. This will necessitate opposition
to the fashions, customs, practices, and maxims of the world.
Worldly influences, like the waves of the sea, beat against the
followers of Christ to sweep them away from the true principles
of His meekness and grace; but we are to stand as firm as a rock
to principle. It will require moral courage to do this, and those
whose souls are not riveted to the eternal Rock will be swept
away by the worldly current. We can stand firm only as our life
is hid with Christ in God. Moral independence is wholly in place
when opposing the world. By conforming entirely to the will of
God, we shall be placed upon vantage ground, and shall see the
necessity of decided separation from the customs and practices
of the world.
We are not to elevate our standard just
a little above the world's standard, but we are to make the distinction
decidedly apparent. The reason we have had so little
influence upon unbelieving relatives and associates
is that there has been so little decided difference between our
practices and those of the world.
Many teachers permit their minds to take
too narrow and low a range. They do not keep the divine plan
ever in view, but are fixing their eyes upon worldly models.
Look up, "where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God,"
and then labor that your pupils may be conformed to His perfect
character. Point the youth to Peter's ladder of eight rounds,
and place their feet, not on the highest round, but on the lowest,
and with earnest solicitation urge them to climb to the very
top.
Christ, who connects earth with heaven,
is the ladder. The base is planted firmly on the earth in His
humanity; the topmost round reaches to the throne of God in His
divinity. The humanity of Christ embraces fallen humanity, while
His divinity lays hold upon the throne of God. We are saved by
climbing round after round of the ladder, looking to Christ,
clinging to Christ, mounting step by step to the height of Christ,
so that He is made unto us wisdom and righteousness and sanctification
and redemption. Faith, virtue, knowledge, temperance, patience,
godliness, brotherly kindness, and charity are the rounds of
this ladder. All these graces are to be manifested in the Christian
character; and "if ye do these things, ye shall never fall:
for so an entrance shall be ministered unto you abundantly into
the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ."
2 Peter 1:10, 11.
It is no easy matter to gain the priceless
treasure of eternal life. No one can do this and drift with the
current of the world. He must come out from the world and be
separate and touch not the unclean. No one can act like a worldling
without being carried down by the current of the world. No one
will make any upward progress without
persevering effort. He who would overcome must hold fast to Christ.
He must not look back, but keep the eye ever upward, gaining
one grace after another. Individual vigilance is the price of
safety. Satan is playing the game of life for your soul. Swerve
not to his side a single inch, lest he gain advantage over you.
If we ever reach heaven, it will be by
linking our souls to Christ, leaning upon Him, and cutting loose
from the world, its follies and enchantments. There must be on
our part a spiritual co-operation with the heavenly intelligences.
We must believe and work and pray and watch and wait. As the
purchase of the Son of God, we are His property, and everyone
should have an education in the school of Christ. Both teachers
and pupils are to make diligent work for eternity. The end of
all things is at hand. There is need now of men armed and equipped
to battle for God.
It is not men whom we are to exalt, but
God, the only true and living God. The unselfish life, the generous,
self-sacrificing spirit, the sympathy and love of those who hold
positions of trust in our institutions, should have a purifying,
ennobling influence which would be eloquent for good. Their words
in counsel would not then come from a self-sufficient, self-exalted
spirit; but their unobtrusive virtues would be of more value
than gold. If man lays hold of the divine nature, working upon
the plan of addition, adding grace to grace in perfecting a Christian
character, God will work upon the plan of multiplication. He
says in His word: "Grace and peace be multiplied unto you
through the knowledge of God, and of Jesus our Lord." 2
Peter 1:2.
"Thus saith the Lord, Let not the
wise man glory in his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory
in his might, let not the rich
man glory in his riches: but let him that glorieth glory in this,
that he understandeth and knoweth Me, that I am the Lord which
exercise loving-kindness, judgment, and righteousness, in the
earth: for in these things I delight, saith the Lord." Jeremiah
9:23, 24. "He hath showed thee, O man, what is good; and
what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to
love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?" "Who
is a God like unto Thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth
by the transgression of the remnant of His heritage? He retaineth
not His anger forever, because He delighteth in mercy."
Micah 6:8; 7:18. "Wash you, make you clean; put away the
evil of your doings from before Mine eyes; cease to do evil,
learn to do well." Isaiah 1:16, 17.
These are the words of God to us. The past
is contained in the book where all things are written. We cannot
blot out the record; but if we choose to learn them, the past
will teach us its lessons. As we make it our monitor, we may
also make it our friend. As we call to mind that in the past
which is disagreeable, let it teach us not to repeat the same
error. In the future let nothing be recorded which will cause
regret in the by and by.
We may now avoid a bad showing. Every day
we are making our history. Yesterday is beyond our amendment
or control; today only is ours. Then let us not grieve the Spirit
of God today, for tomorrow we shall not be able to recall what
we have done. Today will then be yesterday.
Let us seek to follow the counsel of God
in all things, for He is infinite in wisdom. Though in the past
we have come short of doing what we might have done for our children
and youth, let us now repent and redeem the time. The Lord says:
"Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white
as snow; though they be red like crimson,
they shall be as wool. If ye be willing and obedient, ye shall
eat the good of the land: but if ye refuse and rebel, ye shall
be devoured with the sword." Isaiah 1:18-20. The message,
"Go forward," is still to be heard and repeated. The
varying circumstances taking place in our world call for labor
that will meet these peculiar developments. The Lord has need
of men who are spiritually sharp and clear-sighted, men who are
certainly receiving manna fresh from heaven. The Holy Spirit
works upon the hearts of such men, and God's word flashes light
into the mind, revealing to them more than ever before the true
wisdom.
The education given to the young molds
the whole social fabric. Throughout the world society is in disorder,
and a thorough transformation is needed. Many suppose that better
educational facilities, greater skill, and more recent methods
will set things right. They profess to believe and receive the
living oracles, and yet they give the word of God an inferior
position in the great framework of education. That which should
stand first is made subordinate to human inventions.
It is so easy to drift into worldly plans,
methods, and customs and have no more thought of the time in
which we live, or of the great work to be accomplished, than
had the people in Noah's day. There is constant danger that our
educators will travel over the same ground as did the Jews, conforming
to customs, practices, and traditions which God has not given.
With tenacity and firmness some cling to old habits and a love
of various studies which are not essential, as if their salvation
depended upon these things. In doing this they turn away from
the special work of God and give to the students a deficient,
a wrong education. Minds are directed from
a plain "Thus saith the Lord," which involves eternal
interests, to human theories and teachings. Infinite, eternal
truth, the revelation of God, is explained in the light of human
interpretations, when only the Holy Spirit's power can unfold
spiritual things. Human wisdom is foolishness; for it misses
the whole of God's providences, which look into eternity.
Reformers are not destroyers. They will
never seek to ruin those who do not harmonize with their plans
and assimilate to them. Reformers must advance, not retreat.
They must be decided, firm, resolute, unflinching; but firmness
must not degenerate into a domineering spirit. God desires to
have all who serve Him firm as a rock where principle is concerned,
but meek and lowly of heart, as was Christ. Then, abiding in
Christ, they can do the work He would do were He in their place.
A rude, condemnatory spirit is not essential to heroism in the
reforms for this time. All selfish methods in the service of
God are an abomination in His sight.
Satan works to make the prayer of Christ
of none effect. He makes continual efforts to create bitterness
and discord; for where there is unity there is strength, a oneness
which all the powers of hell cannot break. All who shall aid
the enemies of God by bringing weakness and sorrow and discouragement
upon any of God's people, through their own perverse ways and
tempers, are working directly against the prayer of Christ.