At Skodsborg, a suburb of Copenhagen, Denmark,
our brethren have established a sanitarium. In this they moved
forward hopefully, under the conviction that they were doing
the very work that God had enjoined upon His people. But our
brethren generally have not taken as much interest in the establishment
of sanitariums in the European countries as they ought, and our
dear brethren having the Skodsborg Sanitarium in hand have moved
forward faster than the means in hand warranted, and now they
are in difficulty and distress.
I am greatly troubled in regard to the
difficulties and dangers surrounding our institutions in Scandinavia.
My mind is stirred to appeal to our people, not only in behalf
of the Christiania publishing house, but also for the Danish
sanitarium. The enemy has been represented to me as waiting eagerly
for an opportunity to destroy these institutions, which are instrumentalities
of God, used for the redemption of mankind. Shall Satan's desire
be gratified? Shall we allow these institutions to be wrested
from our hands and their beneficent work to be stopped? Because
our brethren have made mistakes, shall we leave them alone to
bear the consequences of their miscalculations? Is this the way
in which Christ has dealt with us?
When one burdened with a heavy load is
at the foot of a difficult hill, surrounded with discouragements,
and in need of strong, cheerful helpers, much time is often wasted
in criticism, scolding, and fretting. But this does not move
the load. The ones upon whom the pressure rests most heavily
do not need or deserve the censure. This might more appropriately
fall upon those who should have
shared the burden earlier. But even then censure might be inappropriate,
and it would certainly be useless. Our first thought should be,
How can we help to lift the load? Time is precious. There is
too much at stake to run the risk of delay.
To charge the managers of the Skodsborg
Sanitarium with worldly ambition and a desire to glorify themselves
would do them injustice. In the enlarging of the work they were
seeking the glory of God, and a work has been accomplished which
is far-reaching for good. But they have erred in making investment
beyond their means, and have thus placed themselves in the bondage
of debt. By this the future of the institution and the honor
of the cause are imperiled. Now, instead of adding to the difficulties
of the situation, shall we not courageously grapple with the
work of lifting the debt?
I am stirred by the Spirit of God to sound
an alarm. Oh, what a sight it would be for the angels to see
the institutions established for the illustration and promulgation
of the principles of reform and Christian living, passing out
of the hands of those who can use them in God's work, into the
hands of the world! Brethren, it is time that we interested ourselves
in behalf of these institutions in Europe that are now suffering
for help. As Christ deals with us, so must we deal with our brethren
who are in difficulty.
The Lord's treasures are at hand, entrusted
to us for just such emergencies. Let our people who love God
and His cause come to the help of His imperiled institutions.
Our American brethren should rally to the rescue. Our Scandinavian
brethren in America should be specially aroused to take decided
action. And our brethren in Denmark, Norway, and Sweden should
understand that now is the time for them to come up to the help
of the Lord. Let all who trust in God and believe His word study diligently to understand their
privileges, their responsibilities, and their duty in this matter.
If we fail now to do our work as God's helping hand in relieving
the Scandinavian publishing house and sanitarium, we shall lose
a great blessing.
Who will now place themselves on the Lord's
side? Who will be as His helping hand, lifting wholeheartedly?
Who will encourage the oppressed to trust in the Lord? Who will
manifest that faith which will not fail nor falter, but which
presses forward to victory? Who will now strive to build up that
which Satan is striving to tear down, a work which should be
going forward in strong lines? Who will now do for their brethren
in Europe that which they would wish to have done for them in
similar circumstances? Who will co-operate with the ministering
angels?
The Lord calls upon His people to make
offerings of self-denial. Let us give up something that we intended
to purchase for personal comfort or pleasure. Let us teach our
children to deny self and become the Lord's helping hands in
dispensing His blessings.
I plead with my Scandinavian brethren to
do what they can. We will unite our efforts with your work of
love and helpfulness. There is sufficient means in the hands
of the Lord's stewards to do this work if they will unite in
tender sympathy to restore, to heal, and to bring health and
prosperity to God's instrumentalities.
The sums which you give may be small when
compared with the necessities of the work, but be not discouraged.
Have faith in God. Hold fast to the hand of Infinite Power, and
that which seemed hopeless at first will look different. The
feeding of the five thousand is an object lesson for us. He who
with five loaves and two small fishes fed five thousand men besides
women and children, can do great things for His people today.
Read the account of how the prophet Elisha
fed one hundred men: "There came a man from Baalshalisha,
and brought the man of God bread of the first fruits, twenty
loaves of barley, and full ears of corn in the husk thereof.
And he said, Give unto the people, that they may eat. And his
servitor said, What, should I set this before an hundred men?
He said again, Give the people, that they may eat: for thus saith
the Lord, They shall eat, and shall leave thereof. So he set
it before them, and they did eat, and left thereof, according
to the word of the Lord." 2 Kings 4:42-44.
What condescension it was on the part of
Christ to work this miracle to satisfy hunger! He relieved the
hunger of one hundred sons of the prophets, and again and again
since then, though not always in so marked and visible a way,
He has worked to supply human need. If we had clearer spiritual
discernment, so that we could recognize more readily God's merciful,
compassionate dealing with His people, we would gain a rich experience.
We need to study more than we do into the wonderful working of
God. Men who are not united with us in acknowledging the truth,
He has moved to favor His people. The Lord has His men of opportunity,
like the man who brought the food for the sons of the prophets.
When the Lord gives us a work to do, let
us not stop to inquire into the reasonableness of the command
or the probable result of our efforts to obey it. The supply
in our hands may seem to fall far short of our needs; but in
the hands of the Lord it will be more than sufficient. The servitor
"set it before them, and they did eat, and left thereof,
according to the word of the Lord."
We need greater faith. We should have a
fuller sense of God's relationship to those whom He has purchased
with the blood of His only-begotten Son. We should
exercise faith in the onward progress of the
work of the kingdom of God.
Let us waste no time in deploring the scantiness
of our visible resources, but let us make the best use of what
we have. Though the outward appearance may be unpromising, energy
and trust in God will develop resources. Let us send in our offerings
with thanksgiving and with prayer that the Lord will bless the
gifts and multiply them as He did the food given to the five
thousand. If we use the very best facilities we have, the power
of God will enable us to reach the multitudes that are starving
for the bread of life.
In this work of helping our brethren in
Denmark and Norway, let us lift zealously and nobly, leaving
the result with God. Let us have faith to believe that He will
enlarge our offerings until they are sufficient to place His
institutions on vantage ground.
Faith is the spiritual hand that touches
infinity.
The simple prayers indited by the Holy
Spirit will ascend through the gates ajar, the open door which
Christ has declared: I have opened, and no man can shut. These
prayers, mingled with the incense of the perfection of Christ,
will ascend as fragrance to the Father, and answers will come.
Workers for Christ are never to think, much less to speak, of failure in their work. The Lord Jesus is our efficiency in all things; His Spirit is to be our inspiration; and as we place ourselves in His hands, to be channels of light, our means of doing good will never be exhausted. We may draw upon His fullness and receive of that grace which has no limit