In August, 1901, while attending the Los
Angeles camp meeting, I was in the visions of the night in a
council meeting. The question under consideration was the establishment
of a sanitarium in Southern California. By some it was urged
that this sanitarium should be built in the city of Los Angeles,
and the objections to establishing it out of the city were pointed
out. Others spoke of the advantages of a country location.
There was among us One who presented this
matter very clearly and with the utmost simplicity. He told us
that it would be a mistake to establish a sanitarium within the
city limits. A sanitarium should have the advantage of plenty
of land, so that the invalids can work in the open air. For nervous,
gloomy, feeble patients, outdoor work is invaluable. Let them
have flower beds to care for. In the use of rake and hoe and
spade they will find relief for many of their maladies. Idleness
is the cause of many diseases.
Life in the open air is good for body and
mind. It is God's medicine for the restoration of health. Pure
air, good water, sunshine, the beautiful surroundings of nature--these
are His means for restoring the sick to health in natural ways.
To the sick it is worth more than silver or gold to lie in the
sunshine or in the shade of the trees.
In the country our sanitariums can be surrounded
by flowers and trees, orchards and vineyards. Here it is easy
for physicians and nurses to draw from the things of nature lessons
teaching of God. Let them point the patients to Him whose hand
has made the lofty trees, the springing
grass, and the beautiful flowers, encouraging them to see in
every opening bud and blossoming flower an expression of His
love for His children.
It is the expressed will of God that our
sanitariums shall be established as far from the cities as is
consistent. So far as possible these institutions should be located
in quiet, secluded places, where opportunity will be afforded
for giving the patients instruction concerning the love of God
and the Eden home of our first parents, which, through the sacrifice
of Christ, is to be restored to man.
In the effort made to restore the sick
to health, use is to be made of the beautiful things of the Lord's
creation. Seeing the flowers, plucking the ripe fruit, listening
to the happy songs of the birds, has a peculiarly exhilarating
effect on the nervous system. From outdoor life men, women, and
children gain a desire to be pure and guileless. By the influence
of the quickening, reviving, life-giving properties of nature's
great medicinal resources the functions of the body are strengthened,
the intellect awakened, the imagination quickened, the spirits
enlivened, and the mind prepared to appreciate the beauty of
God's word.
Under these influences, combined with the
influence of careful treatment and wholesome food, the sick find
health. The feeble step recovers its elasticity. The eye regains
its brightness. The hopeless become hopeful. The once despondent
countenance wears an expression of cheerfulness. The complaining
tones of the voice give place to tones of content. The words
express the belief: God is our refuge and strength, a very present
help in trouble." Psalm 46:1.
The clouded hope of the Christian is brightened. Faith returns.
The word is heard: "Yea, though I walk through the valley
of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for Thou art with
me; Thy rod and Thy staff they comfort me." "My soul
doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my
Saviour." "He giveth power to the faint; and to them
that have no might He increaseth strength." Psalm 23:4;
Luke 1:46, 47; Isaiah 40:29. The acknowledgment of God's goodness
in providing these blessings invigorates the mind. God is very
near and is pleased to see His gifts appreciated.
When the earth was created, it was holy
and beautiful. God pronounced it very good. Every flower, every
shrub, every tree, answered the purpose of its Creator. Everything
upon which the eye rested was lovely and filled the mind with
thoughts of the love of God. Through tempting man to sin, Satan
hoped to counteract the tide of divine love flowing to the human
race; but, instead of this, his work resulted in calling forth
new and deeper manifestations of God's mercy and goodness.
It was not God's purpose that His people
should be crowded into cities, huddled together in terraces and
tenements. In the beginning He placed our first parents in a
garden amidst the beautiful sights and attractive sounds of nature,
and these sights and sounds He desires men to rejoice in today.
The more nearly we come into harmony with God's original plan,
the more favorable will be our position for the recovery and
the preservation of health.