This morning I cannot rest. My mind is
troubled over the situation in Southern California. God has given
to every man his work, but there are some who are not prayerfully
considering their individual responsibility.
When a worker is selected for an office,
that office of itself does not bring to him power of capability
that he did not have before. A high position does not give to
the character Christian virtues. The man who supposes that his
individual mind is capable of planning and devising for all branches
of the work reveals a great lack of wisdom. No one human mind
is capable of carrying the many and varied responsibilities of
a conference embracing thousands of people and many branches
of work.
But a greater danger than this has been revealed
to me in the feeling that has been growing among our workers
that ministers and other laborers in the cause should depend
upon the mind of certain leading workers to define their duties.
One man's mind and judgment are not to be considered capable
of controlling and molding a conference. The individual and the
church have responsibilities of their own. God has given to every
man some talent or talents to use and improve. In using these
talents he increases his capability to serve. God has given to
each individual judgment, and this gift He wants His workers
to use and improve. The president of a conference must not consider
that his individual judgment is to control the judgment of all.
In no conference should propositions be
rushed through without time being taken by the brethren to weigh
carefully all sides of the question. Because the president of
a conference suggested certain plans, it has sometimes been considered
unnecessary to consult the Lord about them. Thus propositions
have been accepted that were not for the spiritual benefit of
the believers and that involved far more than was apparent at
the first casual consideration. Such movements are not in the
order of God. Many, very many matters have been taken up and
carried by vote, that have involved far more than was anticipated
and far more than those who voted would have been willing to
assent to had they taken time to consider the question from all
sides.
We cannot at this time afford to be careless
or negligent in the work of God. We must seek the Lord earnestly
every day if we would be prepared for the experiences that come
to us. Our hearts are to be cleansed from every feeling of superiority,
and the living principles of the truth are to be planted in the
soul. Young and aged and middle-aged should now be practicing
the virtues of Christ's character. They should daily be making
spiritual development, that they may become vessels unto honor
in the Master's service.
"And it came to pass, that, as He
was praying in a certain place, when He ceased, one of His disciples
said unto Him, Lord, teach us to pray, as John also taught his
disciples." Luke 11:1. The prayer that Christ gave to His
disciples in answer to this request is not made in high-flown
language, but expresses in simple words the necessities of the
soul. It is short and deals directly with the daily needs.
Every soul has the privilege of stating
to the Lord his own special necessities
and to offer his individual thanksgiving for the blessings that
he daily receives. But the many long and spiritless, faithless
prayers that are offered to God, instead of being a joy to Him,
are a burden. We need, oh, so much! clean, converted hearts.
We need to have our faith strengthened. "Ask, and it shall
be given you," the Saviour promised; "seek, and ye
shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." Matthew
7:7. We need to educate ourselves to trust in this word and to
bring the light and grace of Christ into all our works. We need
to take hold of Christ and to retain our hold of Him until we
know that the power of His transforming grace is manifested in
us. We must have faith in Christ if we would reflect the divine
character.
Christ clothed His divinity with humanity
and lived a life of prayer and self-denial, and of daily battle
with temptation, that He might help those who today are assailed
by temptation. He is our efficiency and power. He desires that,
through the appropriation of His grace, humanity shall become
partakers of the divine nature and thus escape the corruption
that is in the world through lust. The word of God in the Old
and New Testaments, if faithfully studied and received into the
life, will give spiritual wisdom and life. This word is to be
sacredly cherished. Faith in the word of God and in the power
of Christ to transform the life will enable the believer to work
His works and to live a life of rejoicing in the Lord.
Again and again I have been instructed
to say to our people: Let your faith and trust be in God. Do
not depend on any erring man to define your duty. It is your
privilege to say: "I will declare Thy name unto my brethren:
in the midst of the congregation will I praise Thee.
Ye that fear the Lord, praise Him; all ye
the seed of Jacob, glorify Him; and fear Him, all ye the seed
of Israel. For He hath not despised nor abhorred the affliction
of the afflicted; neither hath He hid His face from him; but
when he cried unto Him, He heard. My praise shall be of Thee:
. . . I will pay my vows before them that fear Him. The meek
shall eat and be satisfied: they shall praise the Lord that seek
Him: your heart shall live forever." Psalm 22:22-26.
These scriptures are right to the point.
Every church member should understand that God is the one to
whom to look for an understanding of individual duty. It is right
that brethren counsel together; but when men arrange just what
their brethren shall do, let them answer that they have chosen
the Lord as their counselor. Those who will humbly seek Him will
find His grace sufficient. But when one man allows another to
step in between him and the duty that God has pointed out to
him, giving to man his confidence and accepting him as guide,
then he steps from the true platform to a false and dangerous
one. Such a man, instead of growing and developing, will lose
his spirituality.
There is no power in any man to remedy
the defective character. Individually our hope and trust must
be in One who is more than human. We need ever to remember that
help has been laid on One who is mighty. The Lord has provided
the needed help for every soul who will accept it.