To Brethren in
Responsible Positions
-
Connection With
God's Work
-
The Need of Divine
Guidance
-
Use of Individual
Judgment
Connection with God's Work
(Special
Testimonies to Ministers and Workers - series A, NO. 6, 1896, pgs 27-46.)
Cooranbong, Australia, July 6, 1896.
Dear Brother -----:
It has been revealed to me that the Lord
proves and tries all who have named the name of Christ, but especially
those who are stewards in any department of His cause. A connection with
the special work of God for this time brings with it much responsibility,
and the higher the position of trust, the greater the responsibility
attached to it. How humble and sincere the one needs to be who is filling
such a position! How fearful and mistrustful of himself! How careful to
give all the praise and thanksgiving to God!
There is a watcher standing by the side of
all those who are filling positions of trust, ready to reprove and convict
of wrongdoing, or to answer the prayers for help. He watches to see if the
men privileged to bear responsibilities will look to God for wisdom and
avail themselves of every opportunity to perfect a character after the
divine similitude. If they deviate from straight-forward rectitude, God
turns from them; if they do not earnestly strive to understand the will of
God concerning them, He cannot bless or prosper or sustain them.
Those whom God has placed in positions of
responsibility should never seek to exalt themselves or to turn the
attention of men to their work. They must give all the glory to God. They
must not seek for power that they may lord it over God's heritage; for
only those who are under the rule of Satan will
do this.
But the rule-or-ruin system is too often
seen in our institutions. This spirit is cherished and revealed by some in
responsible positions, and because of this God cannot do the work He
desires to do through them. By their course of action those who reveal
this spirit make manifest what they would be in heaven if entrusted with
responsibility.
Those who will look at human souls in the
light of the cross of Calvary need not err regarding the estimate which
should be placed upon them. The reason why God has permitted some of the
human family to be so rich and some so poor will remain a mystery to men
till eternity, unless they enter into right relations with God and carry
out His plans, instead of acting on their own selfish ideas that because a
man is rich he is to be more highly respected than his poor neighbor. God
makes His sun to shine on the just and on the unjust, and this sun
represents Christ, the Sun of Righteousness, who shines as the light of
the world, giving His blessings and mercies, seen and unseen, to rich and
poor alike. This principle is to guide our conduct toward our fellowmen.
The Lord is the teacher of the highest moral sentiments, the loftiest
principles; and no man can deviate from these and be guiltless. It is the
highest insult to God's goodness to doubt whether He would be willing for
us to impart to others the blessings, spiritual and temporal, which He has
freely given us.
What Constitutes a Christian
A pure religion, an upright, holy life,
constitutes a man a Christian. But ever since his defection in heaven,
Satan's course has been one of perpetual deception and harshness; and there are
professed Christians who are learning his methods and practices. While
they claim to be serving the cause of God they turn their fellowmen from
their rights, in order to serve themselves.
Every human being has been bought with a
price, and as God's heritage he has certain rights, of which no one should
deprive him. The Lord will not accept service from those who practice
double-dealing. The least advantage gained in this way will dishonor God
and the truth. Those who possess Bible religion will do justice, love
mercy, and walk humbly with their God. These are the lines drawn by the
God of justice on this matter.
Again I would urge that living faith in
God be cultivated. There are those who, though thought to be serving God,
are fast becoming girded about with infidelity. To them crooked paths seem
straight; they are living in continual violation of God's truth; corrupt
principles are interwoven into their life practice, and wherever they go
they sow seeds of evil. In the place of leading others to Christ their
influence causes them to question and doubt. They unsettle minds in the
truth by entering into speculative theories which draw them away from the
truth. They help to forge the fetters of doubt and unbelief, faultfinding
and accusing; and souls stumble over them to perdition. The blood of souls
will be upon those who, while they profess to be in the service of God,
are doing the work of His enemy.
What Ought we to be?
Knowing this, what manner of persons ought
we to be? Shall we exalt human wisdom and point to finite, changeable, erring men as a
dependence in time of trouble? or shall we exemplify our faith by our
trust in God's power, revealing the net of false theories, religions, and
philosophies which Satan has spread to catch unwary souls? By thus doing
the word of God, we shall be lights in the world; for if the word of God
is practiced, we show to all those who come within the sphere of our
influence that we reverence and respect God, and that we are working under
His administration. By a humble, circumspect walk, by love, forbearance,
long-suffering, and gentleness, God expects His servants to manifest Him
to the world.
God requires those to whom He has given
sacred trusts to rise to the full height of their responsibilities. Man is
placed here in the world on test and trial, and those who are given
positions of trust must decide whether they will exalt self, or their
Maker; whether they will use their power to oppress their fellowmen, or to
exalt and glorify God.
Increased responsibilities bring increased
accountability. He who would be a faithful servant must give entire and
willing service to the greatest teacher the world ever knew. His ideas and
principles must be kept pure by the power of God. Every day he must learn
to become worthy of the trust placed in him. His mind must be quickened by
the divine power. His character must be uncontaminated by the influence of
his relatives, his friends, or his neighbors. At times he must turn aside
from active life to commune with God, and to hear His voice saying to him,
"Be still, and know that I am God."
The fruits of the Spirit will be borne by
the man who loves God and keeps the way of the Lord, as the rich clusters
of grapes grow on the living vine. Christ is his stronghold. Christ lived
the law of God in humanity, and so may man do if he will by
faith take hold on the strong and mighty One for strength. If he realizes
that he cannot do anything without Christ by his side, God will give him
wisdom. But he must cherish the love of Christ in his heart, and practice
His lessons; for is he not to love Christ as Christ loved God? Is he not
to demonstrate to all with whom he associates that he has the abiding
presence of Jesus Christ more than he has ever had it before? Because of
his increased responsibilities he must have an increased knowledge of God,
and must reveal that living faith that works by love and purifies the
soul.
Frequent Cause of Failure
But frequently when placed in high
positions of trust, men fail to take time to pray; they think they have no
time to train their every faculty to respond to the convictions of the
Holy Spirit. But if these men would sit at the feet of the meek and lowly
Jesus they would carry out sacred responsibilities, confident, not in
themselves, but in their God. They would render to God the sacrifice of a
noble, self-denying, cross-bearing life. Jesus would be enthroned in their
hearts, giving them physical, mental, and moral power to make Him known.
God longs to work through those to whom He
has given capabilities for great things. He longs to see those who occupy
responsible places representing Him to the world. He desires that Christ
be acknowledged as the greatest teacher the world has ever known, and that
He shall shine through their minds as the Light of the world. "But as many
as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to
them that believe on His name." But in order that this may be, God demands
that every intellectual and physical capability be offered as a
consecrated oblation to Him.
But some men, as soon as they are placed
in sacred positions of trust, regard themselves as great men; and this
thought, if entertained, ends the desire for divine enlightenment, which
is the only possible thing that can make men great. Those who take this
view extinguish all chance of true greatness in themselves, because they
will not become illuminated by the Sun of Righteousness.
But men cannot extinguish the light of
life, even though they close their eyes tightly in order that they may not
see it. The Sun of Righteousness shines none the less because the poor,
foolish human agent surrounds himself with self-created darkness.
Special Dangers of those in Positions of Responsibility
The men who close their eyes to the divine
light are ignorant, deplorably ignorant, both of the Scriptures and of the
power of God. The Holy Spirit's working is not agreeable to them, and they
attribute its manifestations to fanaticism. They rebel against the light,
and do all they can to shut it out, calling darkness light and light
darkness. They complain that the teachings of Christ cause undue
excitement and fanaticism, which spoil those who receive them for the
proper duties of life.
Those who entertain and speak this belief
do not know what they are talking about. They are cherishing a love of
darkness; and just as long as these Christless souls are retained in
positions of responsibility the cause of God is imperiled. They are in
danger of fastening themselves so firmly with the dark leader of all
rebellion that they will never see light; and the longer they are retained
the more hopeless is their chance of receiving Christ or of having a
knowledge of the true God. How uncertain they make everything that is
spiritual and progressive in the truth! Under the influence of their
leader they become more and more determined to work against Christ. But
through good and bad report, through darkness, through all the antagonism
of the agencies of Satan, the Sun of Righteousness calmly shines on,
searching out evil, repressing sin, and reviving the spirit of the humble
and contrite ones. "Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of
eternal life."
A Daily Christian Experience Essential
The evidence of true value and worth in
men who are in responsible positions is the fact that they have a daily
Christian experience in the things of God. They find music in the words
spoken by Christ. "But when the Comforter is come, whom I will send unto
you from the Father, even the Spirit of truth, which proceedeth from the
Father, He shall testify of Me: and ye also shall bear witness, because ye
have been with Me from the beginning." If men will receive the
ministration of the Holy Spirit--the richest gift God can bestow-they will
impart blessings to all who are connected with them.
But God cannot reveal Himself through some
who are entrusted with responsibilities. He cannot make them channels
through which His grace and compassion and love can flow; for they insult
His goodness by exhibiting a masterful spirit toward those whom they
regard as being in error and needing reproof, eclipsing Christ's love and
mercy by their own unsanctified passions. The enemy of all good is allowed
to rule in their hearts, and their lives will reveal his attributes. They
claim that the word of God directs them, but by their actions they say, We
want not Thy way, but our way.
By their words, their works, and their
spirit those who pursue such a course are making a record in the books of
heaven which they will not care to meet; for God does not value them as
they value themselves. They are abusing their probationary opportunities
and are grievously neglecting the high privileges conferred upon them.
Though finding nothing in the word of God to vindicate their actions or
countenance their opinions, yet they persist in their own way. In that day
when judgment is passed upon all, the sentence will be pronounced against
them, "Thou art weighed in the balances, and art found wanting."
The Stewardship of Men
God may entrust men with money and
possessions, but because of this they are not to lift themselves up. All
they have they hold in trust; it is lent them by God that they may develop
a character like His. They are on trial. God wants to see whether they
will prove themselves worthy of the eternal riches. If they use their
Lord's goods to set themselves above their fellowmen, they prove unworthy
of a place in the kingdom of God. In the great reckoning day they will
hear the words: "If therefore ye have not been faithful in the unrighteous
mammon, who will commit to your trust the true riches? And if ye have not
been faithful in that which is another man's, who shall give you that
which is your own?"
But if those whom the Lord has made
stewards regard their treasures as His gifts and seek to manifest
compassion, sympathy, and love for their fellowmen, they are in harmony
with the character of God, who gave His only-begotten Son to die for their
salvation. If they value the souls of the human race
according to the price paid for their redemption, they will not work out
their natural impulses, but will manifest the attributes of the mind and
will of God, and will be channels through which God's generous, loving
sentiments may flow to humanity.
The Office of Misfortune and Adversity
The Lord has permitted misfortunes to come
to men, poverty to press upon them, adversity to try them, that He may
thus test those whom He has placed in more favored circumstances; and if
those to whom He has entrusted His goods are faithful, He declares them to
be worthy to walk with Him in white, to become kings and priests unto God.
"He that is faithful in that which is least is faithful also in much: and
he that is unjust in the least is unjust also in much."
"Wherefore laying aside all malice, and
all guile, and hypocrisies, and envies, and all evilspeakings, as newborn
babes, desire the sincere milk of the word, that ye may grow thereby: if
so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious. To whom coming, as unto a
living stone, disallowed indeed of men, but chosen of God, and precious,
ye also, as lively stones, are built up a spiritual house, an holy
priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus
Christ. Wherefore also it is contained in the Scripture, Behold, I lay in
Sion a chief cornerstone, elect, precious: and he that believeth on Him
shall not be confounded. Unto you therefore which believe He is precious:
but unto them which be disobedient, the stone which the builders
disallowed, the same is made the head of the corner, and a stone of
stumbling, and a rock of offense, even to them which stumble at the word,
being disobedient: whereunto also they were appointed. But ye are a chosen generation, a royal
priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar people; that ye should show forth
the praises of Him who hath called you out of darkness into His marvelous
light."
Position Powerless to Sanctify
Are acceptable spiritual sacrifices made
to God when men who are placed in positions of great responsibility
magnify themselves and dishonor God? That has been done, and God looks
upon their course with displeasure. Instead of growing up into Christ,
their living head, manifesting His divine attributes to the world, they
have grown earthward. Self has been regarded as of great importance, and
selfishness has attached itself to their work. Devotion to God has not
been seen; spiritual life in Jesus Christ has not been developed.
God cannot give His wisdom to men who look
upon their position as sufficient excuse for turning from Bible principles
to their own finite judgment, as if a position in the work of the Lord
gave them liberty of speech, and power to pass resolutions and devise
plans and methods that are not in accordance with God's will. Such need to
learn that elevated position has no power to sanctify the heart. God
permits them to hold these positions that He may prove whether they will
reveal the character of God or the character of weak, finite humanity,
which has never been fully under God's discipline; but positions have no
power to develop a man's character. It rests wholly with the man himself
to prove whether he will work himself, which means that Satan will work
him, or whether he will be worked by the Holy Spirit.
"Unto you therefore which believe He is
precious: but unto them which be disobedient, the stone which the builders disallowed, the same is made
the head of the corner." Have we all made Christ our righteousness? Has He
been placed as the honored memorial stone of the corner? Have His lessons
of humility been cherished, and have they been acted upon? Have His
lessons of mercy, justice, and the love of God been exemplified in our
lives?
God the Source of Strength
Oh, what weakness men manifest when they
separate from the Source of wisdom and power! Have not men been magnified?
Have not human sentiments and imperfect traits of character been held up
as if of great value, while Christ and His righteousness have been
excluded? Have not men woven selfishness into everything they have
touched, revealing it persistently and determinedly in their work? Have
they not treated the message of God with disdain? Have they not handled
means which was not theirs as though they had a right to do with it as
they pleased? And when this means was used to open new fields, have they
not acted as though it came from their own individual capital, which they
deserved great credit for thus appropriating? Has not the money offered as
an oblation to God been used to pile up large buildings in Battle
Creek--to give character to the work, it is said, but really to give
opportunity for men to show the genius and tact they manifest in managing
these large business houses?
"But ye are a chosen generation, a royal
priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar people; that ye should show forth
the praises of Him who hath called you out of darkness into His marvelous
light: which in time past were not a people, but are now the people of
God: which had not obtained mercy, but now have obtained mercy. Dearly beloved, I beseech you as
strangers and pilgrims, abstain from fleshly lusts, which war against the
soul; having your conversation honest among the Gentiles: that, whereas
they speak against you as evildoers, they may by your good works, which
they shall behold, glorify God in the day of visitation."
The Evil of Self-Serving
How do men regard the work of the Lord
when they feel themselves at liberty to be disobedient, unthankful,
unholy, condemnatory, and harsh, loving to serve themselves rather than
the Lord? Those who hold sacred trusts are forming their own destiny by
the spirit and character they reveal; and do they ever think how their
works will appear in the judgment? If the important truth for this time
were an abiding principle in the souls of those who minister in the work
of the Lord, how earnestly they would strive to obtain perfection of
character, that they might surround the souls of those with whom they come
in contact with a life-giving, holy atmosphere that would revive the
hearts of the humble and contrite!
It is a law of God that whoever believes
the truth as it is in Jesus will make it known. The ideas and convictions
of the individual mind will seek for expression. Whoever cherishes
unbelief and criticism, whoever feels capable of judging the work of the
Holy Spirit, will diffuse the spirit by which he is animated. It is the
nature of unbelief and infidelity and resistance of the grace of God to
make themselves felt and heard. The mind actuated by these principles is
always striving to make a place for itself and obtain adherents. All who
walk by the side of an apostate will be imbued by his spirit to share with
others their thoughts and the result of their own inquiries, and the feelings
which prompted their action; for it is not an easy matter to repress the
principles upon which we act.
Some who are supposed to be heart and soul
devoted to God are acting contrary to Him and to His work. Others have
placed confidence in them, but deception covers them as with a garment.
Their minds are controlled by a restless, irrepressible energy, an
eagerness to disclose their sentiments. Thus seeds are sown everywhere.
By
a partially expressed sentiment they cast doubt and unbelief of the truth.
There are those who are not in harmony with the testimonies because men in
high positions of trust have expressed themselves as not in harmony with
them; for the testimonies do not coincide with their opinions, but rebuke
every vestige of selfishness.
Evils of Unsanctified Consolidation
Everything that has been planned in regard
to consolidation shows that men are seeking to grasp the scepter of power
and hold control over human minds. But God does not work with them in
their devising, and the voice they now have in the cause of God is not the
voice of God. They have proved themselves utterly unworthy of a place as
wise managers; for their strength is used to turn men away from their
rights, to benefit themselves. There have been acts of apparent
liberality, but God knows the motive which governed them, and He will not
accept their offerings until they repent and become conscientious doers of
His word.
Divine Unity Necessary
There is great necessity for unity in the
work and cause of God; but for a long time influences have been at work seeking to create disaffection,
and the men who feel that they have the power in their hands care little.
They say within themselves: When this consolidation is perfected, we will
show them who is master. We will then bring things into line. But they
will never have that work to do.
As individuals and as members of the
church of God, we need to realize the special work which has been
committed to us. Paul writes to Timothy, "Take heed unto thyself, and unto
the doctrine; continue in them: for in doing this thou shalt both save
thyself, and them that hear thee." We have a very important work before
us. "Unto me, who am less than the least of all saints," writes Paul, "is
this grace given, that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable
riches of Christ; and to make all men see what is the fellowship of the
mystery, which from the beginning of the world hath been hid in God, who
created all things by Jesus Christ: to the intent that now unto the
principalities and powers in heavenly places might be known by the church
the manifold wisdom of God, according to the eternal purpose which He
purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord."
"So thou, O son of man, I have set thee a
watchman unto the house of Israel; therefore thou shalt hear the word at
My mouth, and warn them from Me. When I say unto the wicked, O wicked man,
thou shalt surely die; if thou dost not speak to warn the wicked from his
way, that wicked man shall die in his iniquity; but his blood will I
require at thine hand. Nevertheless, if thou warn the wicked of his way to
turn from it; if he do not turn from his way, he shall die in his
iniquity; but thou hast delivered thy soul." "When I shall say to the
righteous, that he shall surely live; if he trust to his own
righteousness, and commit iniquity, all his righteousnesses
shall not be remembered; but for his iniquity that he hath committed, he
shall die for it. Again, when I say unto the wicked, Thou shalt surely
die; if he turn from his sin, and do that which is lawful and right; if
the wicked restore the pledge, give again that he had robbed, walk in the
statutes of life, without committing iniquity; he shall surely live, he
shall not die. None of his sins that he hath committed shall be mentioned
unto him: he hath done that which is lawful and right; he shall surely
live. Yet the children of thy people say, The way of the Lord is not
equal: but as for them, their way is not equal. When the righteous turneth
from his righteousness, and committeth iniquity, he shall even die
thereby. But if the wicked turn from his wickedness, and do that which is
lawful and right, he shall live thereby. Yet ye say, The way of the Lord
is not equal. O ye house of Israel, I will judge you every one after his
ways."
The Preeminence of the Work of Saving Souls
The saving of human souls is an interest
infinitely above any other line of work in our world. Whoever is brought
under the influences of the truth, and through faith is made partaker of
Christ's love, is by that very fact appointed of God to save others. He
has a mission in the world. He is to be a colaborer with Christ, making
known the truth as it is in Jesus; and when men in any line of God's work
seek to bring the minds and talents of the Lord's human agents under their
control, they have assumed a jurisdiction over their fellowmen that they
cannot maintain without injustice and iniquity. The Lord has placed no man
as judge, either of the pen or the voice of God's workmen.
There are men whose character and life
testify to the fact that they are false prophets and deceivers. These we
are not to hear or tolerate. But those whom God is using are under His
control, and He has not appointed men with human, shortsighted judgment to
criticize and condemn, to pass judgment and reject their work because
every idea does not coincide with that which they suppose to be truth.
The Fallibility of Human Judgment
Men can become just as were the
Pharisees--wide-awake to condemn the greatest teacher that the world ever
knew. Christ gave unmistakable evidence that He was sent of God, yet the
Jewish rulers took upon themselves the work the enemy prompted them to do,
and charged Him who made the Sabbath, who was the Lord of the Sabbath,
with being a Sabbath breaker. Oh, the foolishness of men! the weakness of
men!
There are those who are today doing the
very same things. In their counsels they venture to pronounce judgment
upon the work of God; for they have become trained in doing that which the
Lord has never required them to do. They would better humble their own
hearts before God, and keep their hands off the ark of God, lest the wrath
of God shall break forth upon them; for if God has ever spoken by me, I
testify that they have undertaken a work in criticizing and pronouncing
unsound judgment which I know is not right. They are but finite men and,
being befogged themselves, suppose that other men are in error.
But these men who presume to judge others
should take a little broader view and say, Suppose the statements of
others do not agree with our ideas; shall we for this pronounce them heresy? Shall
we, uninspired men, take the responsibility of placing our stakes, and
saying, This shall not appear in print?
If they still persist in clinging to their
own opinions, they will find that God will not sustain their action. Do
they take the position that all they advance is infallible? that there is
not a shadow of an error or mistake in their productions? Cannot other men
who give just as much evidence that they are led and taught of God catch
at an expression in their work which they do not entertain as their views
in every particular, and command them to cut it out?
Has not our past experience in these
things been sufficient? Will we ever learn the lessons which God designs
we shall learn? Will we ever realize that the consciences of men are not
given into our command? If you have appointed committees to do the work
which has been going on for years in Battle Creek, dismiss them; and
remember that God, the infinite God, has not placed men in any such
positions as they occupied at Minneapolis, and have occupied since then.
Not to be Conscience for Our Fellowmen
I feel deeply over this matter of men
being conscience for their fellowmen. Stand out of the way, and let God
work His own instrumentalities. Some have done work for which God will
call them to account. He will ask of them, Who hath required this at your
hands?
I have not liberty to place my writing in
the hands of men who feel that their work is to act the part of detectives
over their brethren. My brethren in positions of trust, will you not
discern your own deficiencies and put on the whole armor of righteousness yourselves? Will you not be just as
watchful and critical over your own spirits and temperaments and words as
you are over those of others, lest God should be dishonored, and His truth
misrepresented? Your discernment would be greatly improved if you would do
this. The truth, the living word, would be as a fire shut up in your
bones, which would shine forth in clear, unmistakable distinctness,
representing Christ to the world. "Let your light so shine before men,
that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in
heaven."
Could none of those who have made
themselves detectives see the tendency of the position they have taken in
endeavoring to become a controlling power? Where was their clear spiritual
eyesight? Why could they discern a mote in the eye of a brother, while a
beam was in their own eye? Oh, if ever a temple upon earth needed
purifying, the institutions in Battle Creek need it now! Will you not seek
God most humbly, that you may give the Laodicean message with clear,
distinct utterance? Where are God's watchmen who will see the peril and
give the warning? Be assured that there are messages to come from human
lips under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. "Cry aloud, spare not, . .
. show My people their transgression, and the house of Jacob their sins.
Yet they seek Me daily, . . . as a nation that did righteousness, and
forsook not the ordinance of their God."
We are soldiers of Christ. He is the
Captain of our salvation, and we are under His orders and rules. We are to
wear His armor; we are to be marshaled only under His banner. We are to
subdue not our brother soldiers but our enemies, that we may build up
Christ's kingdom. We are laborers together with God. We are to keep on the
whole armor of God, and work as in view of the universe of heaven. Let every
man do his duty, as given him of God.
The Need of Divine Guidance
(Special
Testimonies to Ministers and Workers - series A, NO. 6, 1896, pgs 56-60.)
Christiania, Norway, October 1, 1885.
Dear Brother-----:
I was more sorry than I can express to
learn that under your instruction Brethren-----and-----sought to restrict
the work at the-----camp meeting. You could not have advised them to do a
worse thing, and you should not have put a work into their hands that they
were not fitted to do in a wise manner. Be careful how you repress
advancing work in any locality. There is little enough being done in any
place, and it certainly is not proper to seek to curtail operations in
missionary lines.
After looking matters over carefully and
prayerfully, I wrote as I did in my notes of travel. I wanted to leave the
matter in such a shape as not to discourage the laborers in-----in their
effort to do something, although I desired to give them caution so that
they would not make any extreme moves in their plans. The workers were
doing well, and ought to have been encouraged and advised to go on with
their work. There are men in-----who should have helped them by making
needed donations to invest in the cause. They will have to give to the
work before they will grow in grace and the knowledge of the truth.
You and your workers should have looked at
this matter from different points of view than
you did. You should have investigated the work thoroughly, and asked
yourselves if five thousand dollars was too large a debt to incur in the
important work in which these workers were engaged. Your influence should
have been exerted in such a way as to cause the people to see the
importance of the work, and to realize that it was their duty to rise to
the emergency. You should have done as I wrote of doing, in my notes of
travel. But if our brethren feel at liberty to stop the work when they
cannot see where money is coming from to sustain it, then the work will
not only be contracted in ----- and -----, but in every other state in the
Union. If our workers are going forward in any place, do not put up the
bars, and say, Thus far shalt thou go, and no farther. I feel sad that you
have closed up the school at -----. I see that the brethren sent to look
after this enterprise have not taken measures to advance the work by
soliciting donations from men who could give. There are rich men in the
conference, who have made complaints about the debt that has been
incurred, who ought to have sustained these workers. While reproach and
discouragement have been cast upon the workers, the impression has been
left upon those who have means that they have a perfect right to question
every enterprise that calls for money.
When Personal Oversight of Details is Inconsistent
God does not require you to take such a
course that the workers in ----- or anywhere else shall not feel at
liberty to make advance movements unless they can consult you, and ask
what your judgment of the matter is, before they advance. I cannot
sanction the idea that you must have a personal oversight of all the details of the work. If I did, the
result would be that no worker would dare to exercise his own judgment in
anything. The workers would have to rely upon one man's brain and one
man's judgment, and the result would be that men would be left in
inefficiency because of their inactivity. There are altogether too many of
this class now, and they amount to next to nothing. I write this because I
feel deeply on this point. We are not doing one half that we ought to do.
It is true that the ----- school must be
sustained, but this need not hinder us from sustaining other schools. We
should have primary schools in different localities to prepare the youth
for our higher schools. It may seem to you that it is wise to close the
school in -----, but I fail to see the wisdom of it. To close up this
school will seem to reflect discredit upon all that the people have done,
and will discourage them from making further advancement. I cannot see
that you have gained anything in making the move that you have, nor can I
feel that it is in accordance with God's order. It will work nothing but
injury, not only to those that have complained about the debt, but also to
the workers. Men who have property and could have helped this enterprise
will breathe more freely. These moneyed men will be encouraged, not to do
more for the cause than they have done, but to do less. They will feel at
liberty to complain concerning anything that calls for an outlay of means.
The Work Not Circumscribed by the Counsel of God
Oh, that the Lord might guide you!
You
should never in a single instance allow hearsay to move you to action, and
yet you have sometimes done this. Never take action to narrow and
circumscribe the work unless you know that you are moved to do
so by the Spirit of the Lord. Our people are doing work for foreign
missions, but there are home missions that need their help just as much as
these foreign missions. We should make efforts to show our people the
wants of the cause of God, and to open before them the need of using means
that God has entrusted to them to advance the work of the Master both at
home and abroad. Unless those who can help in ----- are aroused to a sense
of their duty, they will not recognize the work of God when the loud cry
of the third angel shall be heard. When light goes forth to lighten the
earth, instead of coming up to the help of the Lord, they will want to
bind about His work to meet their narrow ideas. Let me tell you that the
Lord will work in this last work in a manner very much out of the common
order of things, and in a way that will be contrary to any human planning.
There will be those among us who will always want to control the work of
God, to dictate even what movements shall be made when the work goes
forward under the direction of the angel who joins the third angel in the
message to be given to the world. God will use ways and means by which it
will be seen that He is taking the reins in His own hands. The workers
will be surprised by the simple means that He will use to bring about and
perfect His work of righteousness. Those who are accounted good workers
will need to draw nigh to God, they will need the divine touch. They will
need to drink more deeply and continuously at the fountain of living
water, in order that they may discern God's work at every point. Workers
may make mistakes, but you should give them a chance to correct their
errors, give them an opportunity to learn caution, by leaving the work in
their hands.
Use of Individual Judgment
(Special
Testimonies to Ministers and Workers - series A, NO. 6, 1896, pgs 61-65.)
Orebro, Sweden, October 28, 1885.
Dear Brethren ----- and -----:
My prayer is that the Lord may be with you
in great power during the coming conference. Some may be absent that you
might wish were present; but Jesus is your helper. I sincerely hope and
pray that those who bear responsibilities in Michigan, New England, Ohio,
Indiana, and other states will take broader views of the work than they
have done. I hope Michigan will take a step in advance. I feel to regret
the fact that there is such a dearth of breadth of mind and of far-seeing
ability. Workers should be educated and trained for the fields of labor.
We need missionaries everywhere. We need men and women who will give
themselves without reserve to the work of God, bringing many sons and
daughters to God.
Individual Judgment to be Exercised
I have been shown that there is one
practice which those in responsible places should avoid; for it is
detrimental to the work of God. Men in position should not lord it over
God's heritage, and command everything around them. Too many have marked
out a prescribed line which they wish others to follow in the work.
Workers have tried to do this with blind faith, without exercising their
own judgment upon the matter which they had in hand. If those who were
placed as directors were not present, they have followed their implicit
directions just the same. But in the name of Christ, I would entreat you
to stop this work. Give men a chance to exercise their individual
judgment. Men who follow the leading of another, and are
willing that another should think for them, are unfit to be entrusted with
responsibility. Our leading men are remiss in this matter. God has not
given to special ones all the brain power there is in the world.
Men in responsible positions should credit
others with some sense, with some ability of judgment and foresight, and
look upon them as capable of doing the work committed to their hands. Our
leading brethren have made a great mistake in marking out all the
directions that the workers should follow, and this has resulted in
deficiency, in a lack of a caretaking spirit in the worker, because they
have relied upon others to do all their planning, and have themselves
taken no responsibility. Should the men who have taken this responsibility
upon themselves step out of our ranks, or die, what a state of things
would be found in our institutions!
Leading men should place responsibilities
upon others, and allow them to plan and devise and execute, so that they
may obtain an experience. Give them a word of counsel when necessary, but
do not take away the work because you think the brethren are making
mistakes. May God pity the cause when one man's mind and one man's plan is
followed without question. God would not be honored should such a state of
things exist. All our workers must have room to exercise their own
judgment and discretion. God has given men talents which He means that
they should use. He has given them minds, and He means that they should
become thinkers, and do their own thinking and planning, rather than
depend upon others to think for them.
I think I have laid out this matter many
times before you, but I see no change in your actions. We want every responsible man to drop
responsibilities upon others. Set others at work that will require them to
plan, and to use judgment. Do not educate them to rely upon your judgment.
Young men must be trained up to be thinkers. My brethren, do not for a
moment think that your way is perfection, and that those who are connected
with you must be your shadows, must echo your words, repeat your ideas,
and execute your plans.
Effects of Constantly Following Others
There are men who today might be men of
breadth of thought, might be wise men, men to be depended upon, who are
not such, because they have been educated to follow another man's plan.
They have allowed others to tell them precisely what to do, and they have
become dwarfed in intellect. Their minds are narrow, and they cannot
comprehend the needs of the work. They are simply machines to be moved by
another man's thought. Now do not think that these men who do follow out
your ideas are the only ones that can be trusted. You have sometimes
thought that because they do your will to the letter, they were the only
ones in whom you could place dependence. If anyone exercised his own
judgment, and differed with you, you have disconnected from him as one
that could not be trusted. Take your hands off the work, and do not hold
it fast in your grasp. You are not the only man whom God will use. Give
the Lord room to use the talents He has entrusted to men, in order that
the cause may grow. Give the Lord a chance to use men's minds. We are
losing much by our narrow ideas and plans. Do not stand in the way of the
advancement of the work, but let the Lord work by whom He will. Educate,
encourage young men to think and act, to devise and plan, in order that we
may have a multitude of counselors.
How my heart aches to see presidents of
conferences taking the burden of selecting those whom they think they can
mold to work with them in the field. They take those who will not differ
with them, but will act like mere machines. No president has any right to
do this. Leave others to plan; and if they fail in some things, do not
take it as an evidence that they are unfitted to be thinkers. Our most
responsible men had to learn by a long discipline how to use their
judgment. In many things they have shown that their work ought to have
been better. The fact that men make mistakes is no reason why we should
think them unfit to be caretakers. Those who think that their ways are
perfect, even now make many grave blunders, but others are none the wiser
for it. They present their success, but their mistakes do not appear. Then
be kind and considerate to every man who conscientiously enters the field
as a worker for the Master. Our most responsible men have made some unwise
plans, and have carried them out because they thought their plans were
perfect. They have needed the mingling of other elements of mind and
character. They should have associated with other men who could view
matters from an entirely different point of view. Thus they would have
helped them in their plans. . . . What folly it is to trust a great
mission in the hands of one man, so that he shall mold and fashion it in
accordance with his mind, and after his own diseased imagination! Men who
have been narrow, who have served tables, who are not farseeing, are
disqualified for putting their mold upon the work. Those who desire to
control the work think that none can do it perfectly but themselves, and
the cause bears the marks of their defects.
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