The laws of Christ's kingdom are so simple,
and yet so complete, that man-made additions will create confusion.
And the more simple our plans for work in God's service, the
more we shall accomplish. To adopt worldly policy in the work
of God is to invite disaster and defeat. Simplicity and humility
must characterize every effective effort for the advancement
of His kingdom.
In order that the gospel may go to all
nations, kindreds, tongues, and peoples, self-sacrifice must
be maintained. Those in positions of trust are in all things
to act as faithful stewards, conscientiously guarding the funds
that have been created by the people. There must be care to prevent
all needless outlay. In erecting buildings and providing facilities
for the work, we should be careful not to make our preparation
so elaborate as to consume money unnecessarily; for this means
in every case inability to provide for the extension of the work
in other fields, especially in foreign lands. Means are not to
be drawn from the treasury to establish institutions in the home
field, at a risk of crippling the advancement of truth in regions
beyond.
God's money is to be used not only in your
immediate vicinity, but in distant countries, in the islands
of the sea. If His people do not engage in this work, God will
surely remove the power that is not rightly appropriated.
Many among believers have scarcely food
enough to eat, yet in their deep poverty they bring their tithes
and offerings to the Lord's treasury. Many who know what it is
to sustain the cause of God in hard and trying circumstances
have invested means in the publishing houses. They have willingly endured hardship and privation,
and have watched and prayed for the success of the work. Their
gifts and sacrifices express the fervent gratitude of their hearts
to Him who has called them out of darkness into His marvelous
light. Their prayers and their alms come up as a memorial before
God. No incense more fragrant can ascend to heaven.
But the work of God in its wide extent
is one, and the same principles should control in all its branches.
It must bear the stamp of missionary work. Every department of
the cause is related to all parts of the gospel field, and the
spirit that controls one department will be felt throughout the
entire field. If a portion of the workers receive large wages,
there are others, in different branches of the work, who also
will call for high wages, and the spirit of self-sacrifice will
become feeble. Other institutions will catch the same spirit,
and the Lord's favor will be removed from them; for He can never
sanction selfishness. Thus our aggressive work would come to
an end. It is impossible to carry it forward except by constant
sacrifice. From all parts of the world the calls are coming in
for men and means to carry forward the work. Shall we be compelled
to say: "You must wait; we have no money in the treasury"?
Some of the men of experience and piety,
who led out in this work, who denied self and did not hesitate
to sacrifice for its success, are now sleeping in the grave.
They were God's appointed channels, His representative men, through
whom the principles of spiritual life were communicated to the
church. They had an experience of the highest value. They could
not be bought or sold. Their purity and devotion and self-sacrifice,
their living connection with God, were blessed to the upbuilding
of the work. Our institutions were
characterized by the spirit of self-sacrifice.
In the days when we were struggling with
poverty, those who saw how wondrously God wrought for the cause
felt that no greater honor could be bestowed upon them than to
be bound up with the interests of the work by sacred links which
connected them with God. Would they lay down the burden and make
terms with the Lord from a money point of view? No, no. Should
every timeserver forsake his post, they would never desert the
work.
The believers who in the early history
of the cause sacrificed for the upbuilding of the work were imbued
with the same spirit. They felt that God demanded of all connected
with His cause an unreserved consecration of body, soul, and
spirit, of all their energies and capabilities, to make the work
a success.
But in some respects the work has deteriorated.
While it has grown in extent and facilities, it has waned in
piety.
There is a lesson for us in the history
of Solomon. The early life of this king of Israel was bright
with promise. He chose the wisdom of God, and the glory of his
reign excited the wonder of the world. He might have gone from
strength to strength, from character to character, even approaching
nearer the similitude of the character of God; but how sad his
history; he was exalted to most sacred positions of trust, but
he proved unfaithful. He grew into self-sufficiency, pride, self-exaltation.
The lust for political power and self-aggrandizement led him
to form alliances with heathen nations. The silver of Tarshish
and the gold of Ophir were procured at a terrible expense, even
the sacrifice of integrity, the betrayal of sacred trusts. Association
with idolaters corrupted his faith; one false step led to another;
there was a breaking down of the
barriers which God had erected for the safety of His people;
his life was corrupted by polygamy; and at last he gave himself
to the worship of false gods. A character that had been firm
and pure and elevated became weak, marked with moral inefficiency.
Evil counselors were not wanting, who swayed
that once noble, independent mind as they chose, because he did
not make God his guide and counselor. His fine sensibilities
became blunted; the conscientious, considerate spirit of his
early reign was changed. Self-indulgence was his god; and, as
the result, severe judgment and cruel tyranny marked his course.
The extravagance practiced in selfish indulgence necessitated
a grinding taxation upon the poor. From the wisest king that
ever swayed a scepter, Solomon became a despot. As a king he
had been the idol of the nation, and that which he said and did
was copied. His example exerted an influence the result of which
can be fully known only when the works of all shall come in review
before God, and every man shall be judged according to the deeds
done in the body.
Oh, how can God bear with the misdeeds
of those who have had great light and advantages, and yet follow
the course of their own choosing, to their eternal harm! Solomon,
who at the dedication of the temple had solemnly charged the
people, "Let your heart therefore be perfect with the Lord
our God" (1 Kings 8:61), chose his own way, and in his heart
separated from God. The mind that was once given to God and inspired
of Him to write the most precious words of wisdom (the book of
Proverbs),--truths which are immortalized,--that noble mind,
through evil associations and yielding to temptation, became
inefficient, weak in moral power, and Solomon dishonored himself, dishonored Israel, and dishonored
God.
Looking upon this picture, we see what
human beings become when they venture to separate from God. One
false step prepares the way for another, and every step is taken
more easily than the last. Thus souls are found following another
leader than Christ.
All who occupy positions in our institutions
will be tested. If they will make Christ their pattern, He will
give them wisdom and knowledge and understanding; they will grow
in grace and aptitude in Christ's way; their characters will
be molded after His similitude. If they fail of keeping the way
of the Lord, another spirit will control the mind and judgment,
and they will plan without the Lord and will take their own course
and leave the positions they have occupied. The light has been
given them; if they depart from it, let no man present a bribe
to induce them to remain. They will be a hindrance and a snare.
The time has come when everything is to be shaken that can be
shaken, that those things which cannot be shaken may remain.
Every case is coming in review before God; He is measuring the
temple and the worshipers therein.