The Lord will surely bless all who seek
to bless others. The school is to be so conducted that teachers
and students will be continually gaining in power through the
faithful use of the talents given them. By putting to a practical
use that which they have learned, they will constantly increase
in wisdom and knowledge. We are to learn from the Book of books
the principles upon which we are to live and labor. By consecrating
all our God-given abilities to Him who has the first right to
them, we may make precious advances in everything that is worthy
of our attention.
When entered upon with this spirit, the
missionary work becomes elevating and uplifting both to the laborer
and to the person helped. Let everyone who claims to be a child
of the heavenly King seek constantly to represent the principles
of the kingdom of God. Let each remember that in spirit, in word,
and in works he is to be loyal and true to all the precepts and
commandments of the Lord. We are
to be faithful, trustworthy subjects of the kingdom of Christ,
that those who are worldly-wise may have a true representation
of the riches, the goodness, the mercy, the tenderness, and the
courtesy of the citizens of the kingdom of God.
The students who will get the most good
out of life are those who will live the word of God in their
connections and dealings with their fellow men. Those who receive
to give will feel the greatest satisfaction in this life. Those
members of the human family who live for themselves are always
in want, for they are never satisfied. There is no Christianity
in shutting up our sympathies to our own selfish hearts. The
Lord has ordained channels through which He lets flow His goodness,
mercy, and truth; and we are to be co-workers with Christ in
communicating to others practical wisdom and benevolence. We
are to bring brightness and blessing into their lives, thus doing
a good and holy work.
If the Avondale school ever becomes what
the Lord is seeking to make it, the missionary effort of teachers
and students will bear fruit. Both in the school and outside,
willing subjects will be brought to allegiance to God. The rebellion
which took place in heaven under the power of a lie, and the
deception which led Adam and Eve to disobey the law of God, opened
the floodgates of woe upon our world; but all who believe in
Christ may become sons and daughters of God. Through the power
of the truth they may be restored, and fallen man may become
loyal to his Maker. The truth, peculiar in its working power,
is adapted to the minds and hearts of wandering sinners. Through
its influence the lost sheep may be brought back to the fold.
Whatever may be the position or possessions
of any individual who has a knowledge of the truth, the word
of God teaches him that all he has is held
by him in trust. It is lent him to test his character. His worldly
business, his talents, his income, his opportunities, are all
to be accounted for to Him to whom by creation and redemption
he belongs. When he uses every precious talent in carrying forward
God's great work of education, when he strives to obtain the
very best knowledge of how to be useful, how to labor for the
salvation of souls ready to perish, God's blessing will surely
attend his efforts. God bestows His gifts upon us that we may
minister to others, and thus become like Him. Those who receive
His gifts that they may impart to others, become like Christ.
It is in helping and uplifting others that we become ennobled
and purified. This is the work that causes glory to flow back
to God. We must become intelligent upon these points. Our souls
must be purified from all selfishness; for God desires to use
His people as representatives of the heavenly kingdom.
Our schools must be conducted under the
supervision of God. There is a work to be done for young men
and women that is not yet accomplished. There are much larger
numbers of young people who need to have the advantages of our
training schools. They need the manual training course, that
will teach them how to lead an active, energetic life. All kinds
of labor must be connected with our schools. Under wise, judicious,
God-fearing directors the students are to be taught. Every branch
of the work is to be conducted in the most thorough and systematic
ways that long experience and wisdom can enable us to plan and
execute.
Let the teachers wake up to the importance
of this subject and teach agriculture and other industries that
it is essential for the students to understand. Seek in every
department of labor to reach the very best results.
Let the science of the word of God be brought
into the work, that the students may understand correct principles
and may reach the highest possible standard. Exert your God-given
abilities, and bring all your energies into the development of
the Lord's farm. Study and labor, that the best results and the
greatest returns may come from the seed sowing, that there may
be an abundant supply of food, both temporal and spiritual, for
the increased number of students that shall be gathered in to
be trained as Christian workers.
We have seen the giant trees felled and
uprooted; we have seen the plowshare pressed into the earth,
turning deep furrows for the planting of trees and the sowing
of seed. The students are learning what plowing means and that
the hoe and the shovel, the rake and the harrow, are all implements
of honorable and profitable industry. Mistakes will often be
made, but every error lies close beside the truth. Wisdom will
be learned by failures, and the energy that will make a beginning
gives hope of success in the end. Hesitation will keep things
back, precipitancy will alike retard; but all will serve as lessons
if the human agent will have it so.
The impression that work is degrading has
laid thousands in the grave. Those who perform only manual labor
frequently work to excess, while brain workers suffer for want
of the healthful vigor physical labor gives. If the intellectual
would share the burden of the laboring class to such a degree
that the muscles would be strengthened, the laborers might devote
a portion of their time to mental and moral culture. Those of
sedentary and literary habits should take physical exercise.
Health should be a sufficient inducement to lead them to unite
physical with their mental labor.