Next to the Bible, nature is to be our
great lessonbook. But there is no virtue in deifying nature,
for this is exalting the thing made above the great Master Builder
who designed the work, and who
every hour keeps it operating according to His appointment. As
we sow the seed and cultivate the plant, we are to remember that
God created the seed, and He gives it to the earth. By His divine
power He cares for that seed. It is by His appointment that the
seed in dying gives its life to the blade and to the ear which
contains in itself other seeds to be treasured and again put
into the earth to yield their harvest. We may also study how
the co-operation of man acts a part. The human agent has his
part to act, his work to do. This is one of the lessons which
nature teaches, and we shall see in it a solemn, a beautiful
work.
There is much talk about God in nature,
as if the Lord were bound by the laws of nature to be nature's
servant. Many theories would lead minds to suppose that nature
is a self-sustaining agency apart from the Deity, having its
own inherent power with which to work. In this men do not know
what they are talking about. Do they suppose that nature has
a self-existing power without the continual agency of Jehovah?
The Lord does not work through His laws to supersede the laws
of nature. He does His work through the laws and properties of
His instruments, and nature obeys a "Thus saith the Lord."
The God of nature is perpetually at work.
His infinite power works unseen, but manifestations appear in
the effects which the work produces. The same God who guides
the planets works in the fruit orchard and in the vegetable garden.
He never made a thorn, a thistle, or a tare. These are Satan's
work, the result of degeneration, introduced by him among the
precious things; but it is through God's immediate agency that
every bud bursts into blossom. When He was in the world in the
form of humanity, Christ said: "My Father
worketh hitherto, and I work." John 5:17. So when the students
employ their time and strength in agricultural work, in heaven
it is said of them, Ye "are laborers together with God."
1 Corinthians 3:9.
Let the lands near the school and the church
be retained. Those who come to settle in Cooranbong can, if they
choose, find for themselves homes near by, or on portions of,
the Avondale estate. But the light given me is that all that
section of land from the school orchard to the Maitland road,
and extending on both sides of the road from the meetinghouse
to the school, should become a farm and a park, beautiful with
fragrant flowers and ornamental trees. There should be orchards,
and every kind of produce should be cultivated that is adapted
to the soil, that this place may become an object lesson to those
living close by and afar off.
Then let everything not essential to the
work of the school be kept at a distance, that the sacredness
of the place may not be disturbed through the proximity of families
and buildings. Let the school stand alone. It will be better
for private families, however devoted they may be in the service
of the Lord, to be located at some distance from the school buildings.
The school is the Lord's property, and the grounds about it are
His farm, where the Great Sower can make His garden a lessonbook.
The results of the labors will be seen, "first the blade,
then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear." Mark
4:28. The land will yield its treasures, bringing the joyousness
of an abundant harvest; and the produce gathered through the
blessing of God is to be used as nature's lessonbook, from which
spiritual lessons can be made plain and applied to the necessities
of the soul.