The policy of consolidation, wherever pursued,
tends to the exaltation of the human in place of the divine.
Those who bear responsibilities in the different institutions
look to the central authority for guidance and support. As the
sense of personal responsibility is weakened, they lose the highest
and most precious of all human experiences, the constant dependence
of the soul upon God. Not realizing their need, they fail of
maintaining that constant watchfulness and prayer, that constant
surrender to God, which alone can enable men to hear and to obey
the teaching of His Holy Spirit. Man is placed where God should
be. Those who are called to act
in this world as heaven's ambassadors are content to seek wisdom
from erring, finite men, when they might have the wisdom and
strength of the unerring, infinite God.
The Lord does not design that the workers
in His institutions shall look to or trust in man. He desires
them to be centered in Him.
Never should our publishing houses be so
related to one another that one shall have power to dictate as
to the management of another. When so great power is placed in
the hands of a few persons, Satan will make determined efforts
to pervert the judgment, to insinuate wrong principles of action,
to bring in a wrong policy; in so doing he can not only pervert
one institution, but through this can gain control of others
and give a wrong mold to the work in distant parts. Thus the
influence for evil becomes widespread. Let each institution stand
in its moral independence, carrying on its work in its own field.
Let the workers in each feel that they are to do their work as
in full view of God, His holy angels, and the unfallen worlds.
Should one institution adopt a wrong policy,
let not another institution be corrupted. Let it stand true to
the principles that were expressed in its establishment, carrying
forward the work in harmony with these principles. Every institution
should endeavor to work in harmony with every other just so far
as this is consistent with truth and righteousness; but further
than this none are to go toward consolidating.