Every truly converted soul can say: "I
am but a little child; but I am God's child." It was at
infinite cost that provision was made whereby the human family
might be restored to sonship with God. In the beginning, God
made man in His own likeness. Our first parents listened to the
voice of the tempter and yielded to the power of Satan. But man
was not abandoned to the results of the evil he had chosen. The
promise of a Deliverer was given. "I will put enmity between
thee and the woman," God said to the serpent, "and
between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and
thou shalt bruise his heel." Genesis 3:15. Before they heard
of the thorn and the thistle, of the sorrow and toil that must
be their portion, or of the dust to which they must return, they
listened to words that could not fail of giving them hope. All
that had been lost by yielding to Satan could be regained through
Christ.
The Son of God was given to redeem the
race. At infinite suffering, the sinless for the sinful, the
price was paid that was to redeem the human family from the power
of the destroyer and restore them again to the image of God. Those who accept the salvation brought
to them in Christ will humble themselves before God as His little
children.
God wants His children to ask for those
things that will enable Him to reveal His grace through them
to the world. He wants them to seek His counsel, to acknowledge
His power. Christ lays loving claims on all for whom He has given
His life; they are to obey His will if they would share the joys
that He has prepared for all who reflect His character here.
It is well for us to feel our weakness, for then we shall seek
the strength and wisdom that the Father delights to give to His
children for their daily strife against the powers of evil.
While education, training, and the counsel of those of experience are all essential, the workers are to be taught that they are not to rely wholly upon any man's judgment. As God's free agents, all should ask wisdom of Him. When the learner depends wholly upon another's thoughts, accepting his plans and going no further, he sees only through that man's eyes and is, so far, only an echo of another.