Human Needs and
Divine Supply
-
Reasons for
Inefficiency, and the Remedy
-
Need of Divine Power
and Wisdom
-
Return to the First
Love
-
The Power of the
Holy Spirit Awaits Our Demand
(Special
Testimonies to Ministers and Workers - series A, NO. 2, 1892, pgs 9-12.)
Reasons for Inefficiency, and the Remedy
Melbourne, Australia, July 3, 1892.
I would address those who preach the word:
"The entrance of Thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the
simple." All the advantages and privileges that may be multiplied for your
benefit, that you should be educated and trained, rooted and grounded in
the truth, will be no real help to you personally unless the mind and
heart are opened so that truth shall find entrance, and you make a
conscientious surrender of every habit and practice, and every sin that
has closed the door against Jesus. Let the light from Christ search every
dark corner of the soul; with earnest determination adopt a right course
of action. If you hold onto a wrong course, as many of you are now doing;
if the truth does not work in you with transforming power, so that you
obey it from the heart because you love its pure principles; be sure that
for you the truth will lose its vitalizing power, and sin will strengthen.
This is why many are not efficient agents
for the Master. They are constantly making provision to please and glorify
themselves, or they cherish lust in the heart. True, they assent to the
law of Ten Commandments, and many teach the law in theory, but they do not
cherish its principles. They do not obey the command of God to be pure, to
love God supremely, and their neighbor as themselves. While constantly
living a lie, can such have strength, can they have confidence, will such
become efficient workers for God?
The Saviour prayed for His disciples,
"Sanctify them through Thy truth: Thy word is truth." But if the receiver
of Bible knowledge makes no change in his habits or practices to
correspond to the light of truth, what then? The spirit is warring against
the flesh, and the flesh against the spirit; and one of these must
conquer. If the truth sanctifies the soul, sin is hated and shunned,
because Christ is accepted as an honored guest. But Christ cannot share a
divided heart; sin and Jesus are never in copartnership. He who accepts
the truth in sincerity, who eats the flesh and drinks the blood of the Son
of God, has eternal life. "The words that I speak unto you," said Jesus,
"they are spirit, and they are life." When the receiver of truth
cooperates with the Holy Spirit, he will go weighted with the burden of
the message to souls; he will never be merely a sermonizer. He will enter
heart and soul into the great work of seeking and saving that which is
lost. Practicing the religion of Christ, he will accomplish a good work in
winning souls.
Under Bonds to God
Every believer is under bonds to God to be
spiritually minded, keeping himself in the channel of light, that he may
let his light shine to the world. When all those who are engaged in the
sacred work of the ministry shall grow in grace and in the knowledge of
our Lord and Saviour, they will hate sin and all selfishness. A moral
renovation is constantly going on; as they continue looking to Jesus, they
become conformed to His image, and are found complete in Him, not having
their own righteousness, but the righteousness that is in Christ Jesus our
Lord.
The great advantage of the ministerial
institutes is not half appreciated. They are rich in
opportunities, but do not accomplish half what they should because those
who attend them do not practice the truth which is presented before them
in clear lines. Many who are explaining the Scriptures to others have not
conscientiously and entirely surrendered mind and heart and life to the
control of the Holy Spirit. They love sin and cling to it. I have been
shown that impure practices, pride, selfishness, self-glorying, have
closed the door of the heart even of those who teach the truth to others,
so that the frown of God is upon them. Cannot some renovating power take
hold of them? Have they fallen a prey to a moral disease which is
incurable because they themselves refuse to be cured? Oh, that everyone
who labors in word and doctrine would heed the words of Paul, "I beseech
you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your
bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your
reasonable service."
How my heart goes out in rejoicing for
those who walk in humility of mind, who love and fear God. They possess a
power far more valuable than learning or eloquence. "The fear of the Lord
is the beginning of wisdom;" and His love and fear are like a thread of
gold uniting the human agent to the divine. Thus all the movements of life
are simplified. When the children of God are struggling with temptation,
battling against the passions of the natural heart, faith connects the
soul with the only One who can give help, and they are overcomers.
May the Lord work upon the hearts of those
who have received great light, that they may depart from all iniquity.
Behold the cross of Calvary. There is Jesus, who gave His life, not that
men might continue in sin, not that they may have license to break the law
of God, but that through this infinite
sacrifice they may be saved from all sin. Said Christ, "I sanctify Myself,
that they also might be sanctified," by the perfection of His example.
Will those who preach the truth to others be sanctified by the truth
themselves? Will they love the Lord with heart and mind and soul, and
their neighbor as themselves? Will they meet the highest standard of
Christian character? Are their tastes elevated, their appetites
controlled? Are they cherishing only noble sentiments, strong, deep
sympathy, and pure purposes, that they may indeed be laborers together
with God? We must have the Holy Spirit to sustain us in the conflict; "for
we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities,
against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against
spiritual wickedness in high places."
Need of Divine Power and Wisdom
(Special
Testimonies to Ministers and Workers - series A, NO. 2, 1892, pgs 12-16.)
Melbourne, Australia, July 3, 1892.
We have been asked why it is that there is
so little power in the churches, why there is so little efficiency among
our teachers. The answer is that it is because known sin in various forms
is cherished among the professed followers of Christ, and the conscience
becomes hardened by long violation. The answer is that men do not walk
with God but separate company with Jesus, and as a result we see
manifested in the church selfishness, covetousness, pride, strife,
contention, hard-heartedness, licentiousness, and evil practices. Even
among those who preach the sacred word of God, this state of evil is found;
and unless there
is thorough reformation among those who are unholy and unsanctified, it
would be better that such men should leave the ministry, and choose some
other occupation, where their unregenerate thoughts would not bring
disaster upon the people of God.
Waiting and Watching
The apostle exhorts the brethren, saying,
"Finally, my brethren, be strong in the Lord, and in the power of His
might. Put on the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to stand . . .
in the evil day, and having done all, to stand." Oh, what a day is before
us! What sifting will there be among those who claim to be the children of
God! The unjust will be found among the just. Those who have great light
and who have not walked in it will have darkness corresponding to the
light they have despised. We have need to heed the lesson contained in the
words of Paul, "But I keep under my body, and bring it in subjection: lest
that by any means, when I have preached to others, I myself should be a
castaway." The enemy is diligently working to see whom he can add to the
ranks of apostasy; but the Lord is soon coming, and erelong every case
will be decided for eternity. Those whose works correspond with the light
graciously given them will be numbered on the Lord's side.
We are waiting and watching for the grand
and awful scene which will close up this earth's history. But we are not
simply to be waiting; we are to be vigilantly working with reference to
this solemn event. The living church of God will be waiting, watching, and
working. None are to stand in a neutral position. All are to represent
Christ in active, earnest effort to save perishing souls. Will the church
fold her hands now? Shall we sleep as is represented in
the parable of the foolish virgins? Every precaution is to be taken now;
for haphazard work will result in spiritual declension, and that day will
overtake us as a thief. The mind needs to be strengthened to look deep and
discern the reasons of our faith. The soul-temple is to be purified by the
truth, for only the pure in heart will be able to stand against the wiles
of Satan.
Our Relation to the World
We are not to copy the world's practices,
and yet we are not to stand aloof from the people of the world; for our
light must shine amid the moral darkness that covers the earth. There is a
sad lack in the church, of Christian love one for another. This love is
easily extinguished; and yet without it we cannot have Christian
fellowship, nor love for those for whom Christ died.
Our brethren need to take heed to the
injunction: "But foolish and unlearned questions avoid, knowing that they
do gender strifes. And the servant of the Lord must not strive; but be
gentle unto all men, apt to teach, patient, in meekness instructing those
that oppose themselves; if God peradventure will give them repentance to
the acknowledging of the truth; and that they may recover themselves out
of the snare of the devil, who are taken captive by him at his will."
We
shall have to meet crooked elements in the world and in the church. Men
will come claiming to have great light; but those who have experience in
the cause of God will see that what they present as light is great
darkness. Men of this class will have to be treated according to the
specifications of the word of God. Those who are in error may become
excited in advocating their views, but those who are walking in the light
can afford to be calm, gentle with the erring, "apt to teach," making manifest
the fact that they have asked and received wisdom of God. They will have
no occasion to move excitedly, but occasion to move wisely, patiently, "in
meekness instructing those that oppose themselves."
The time has come when those who are
rooted and grounded in the truth may manifest their firmness and decision,
may make known the fact that they are unmoved by the sophistry, maxims, or
fables of the ignorant and wavering. Without foundation men will make
statements with all the positiveness of truth; but it is of no use to
argue with them concerning their spurious assertions. The best way to deal
with error is to present the truth, and leave wild ideas to die out for
want of notice. Contrasted with truth, the weakness of error is made
apparent to every intelligent mind. The more the erroneous assertions of opposers, and of those who rise up among us to deceive souls, are
repeated, the better the cause of error is served. The more publicity is
given to the suggestions of Satan, the better pleased is his satanic
majesty; for unsanctified hearts will be prepared to receive the chaff
that he provides for them. We shall have to meet difficulties of this
order even in the church. Men will make a world of an atom and an atom of
a world.
Using God-Given Talents
Cannot we do more for the churches, that
they may be aroused to act upon the light already given? God has appointed
to every man his work. The lowliest as well as the mightiest have been
endowed with influence that should tell on the Lord's side, and they
should devote their talent to Him, each working in his appointed place of
duty. The Lord expects everyone to do his best. When light shines into the
heart, He expects our work to correspond with our
light, to be in accordance with the measure of the fullness of Christ
which we have received. The more we use our knowledge and exercise our
powers, the more knowledge we shall have, the more power we shall acquire
to do more and better work.
Our talents are not our own, they are the
Lord's property with which we are to trade. We are responsible for the use
or the abuse of the Lord's goods. God calls upon men to invest their
entrusted talents, that when the Master cometh He may receive His own with
usury. With His own blood Christ has purchased us as His servants. Shall
we serve Him? Shall we now study to show ourselves approved unto God?
Shall we show by our actions that we are stewards of His grace? Every
effort put forth for the Master, prompted by a pure, sincere heart, will
be a fragrant offering to Him.
We are walking in the sight of unseen
intelligences. A witness is by our side constantly to see how we trade
with the Lord's entrusted goods. When the good steward returns his talents
with usury, he will claim nothing. He will realize that they are the
talents that God delivered unto him, and will give glory to the Master. He
knows that there would have been no gain without the deposit, no interest
without the principal. He will say, "Lord, thou deliveredst unto me five
talents: behold, I have gained beside them five talents more." Let the
church now consider whether they are putting out to usury the capital the
Lord has given. Without the grace of Christ every soul would have been
bankrupt for eternity; therefore we can rightfully claim nothing. But
while we can claim nothing, yet when we are faithful stewards, the Lord
rewards us as if the merit were all our own. He says, "Well done, thou
good and faithful servant: thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler
over many things: enter thou into the joy of thy Lord."
How many will mourn for lost opportunities
when it is eternally too late! Today we have talent and opportunity, but
we know not how long these may be ours. Then let us work while it is day;
for the night cometh, in which no man can work. "Blessed is that servant,
whom his Lord when He cometh shall find so doing."
Return to the First Love
(Special
Testimonies to Ministers and Workers - series A, NO. 2, 1892, pgs 17-22.)
Melbourne, Australia, July 15, 1892.
The reason so many fail to have success is
that they trust in themselves altogether too much, and do not feel the
positive necessity of abiding in Christ as they go forth to seek and save
that which is lost. Until they have the mind of Christ and teach the truth
as it is in Jesus, they will not accomplish much. I walk with trembling
before God. I know not how to speak or trace with pen the large subject of
the atoning sacrifice. I know not how to present subjects in the living
power in which they stand before me. I tremble for fear lest I shall
belittle the great plan of salvation by cheap words. I bow my soul in awe
and reverence before God, and say, Who is sufficient for these things? How
can I talk, how can I write to my brethren, so that they will catch the
beams of light flashing from heaven? What shall I say?
"Repent, and Do the First Works"
The atmosphere of the church is so frigid,
its spirit is of such an order, that men and women cannot sustain or endure the example of primitive
and heaven-born piety. The warmth of their first love is frozen up, and
unless they are watered over by the baptism of the Holy Spirit, their
candlestick will be removed out of its place, except they repent and do
their first works. The first works of the church were seen when the
believers sought out friends, relatives, and acquaintances, and with
hearts overflowing with love told the story of what Jesus was to them and
what they were to Jesus. Oh, that the Lord would awaken those who are in
responsible positions, lest they undertake to do work, relying upon their
own smartness. The work that comes forth from their hands will lack the
mold and superscription of Christ.
Perverting Power of Selfishness
Selfishness mars all that unconsecrated
workers do. They have need to pray always, but they do not. They need to
watch unto prayer. They have need to feel the sacredness of the work, but
they do not feel this. They handle sacred things as they do common things.
Spiritual things are spiritually discerned, and until they can drink of
the water of life, and Christ be in them as a well of water springing up
unto everlasting life, they will refresh no one, bless no one; and except
they repent, their candlestick will be removed out of its place. There is
need of enduring patience, of invincible charity, of omnipotent faith in
the work of saving souls. Self must not be prominent. Wisdom from Christ
must be exercised in dealing with human minds.
Every worker who deals with souls
successfully must come to the work divested of self. There can be no
scolding or fretting, no arbitrary authority exercised, no putting forth
of the finger and speaking vanity; but come to the work with hearts warmed with love for Jesus and for precious souls
for whom He died. Those who are self-sufficient cannot conceal their
weakness. They will come to the trial with overweening confidence in
themselves, and make manifest the fact that Jesus is not with them. These
self-sufficient souls are not few, and they have lessons to learn by hard
experience of discomfiture and defeat. Few have the grace to welcome such
an experience, and many backslide under the trial. They blame
circumstances for their discomfiture, and think their talent is not
appreciated by others. If they would humble themselves under the hand of
God, He would teach them.
Essentials in Service
Those who do not learn every day in the
school of Christ, who do not spend much time in earnest prayer, are not
fit to handle the work of God in any of its branches; for if they do,
human depravity will surely overcome them and they will lift up their
souls unto vanity. Those who become co-workers with Jesus Christ, and who
have spirituality to discern spiritual things, will feel their need of
virtue and of wisdom from Heaven in handling His work. There are some who
neither burn nor shine, yet are contented. They are in a wretchedly cold
and indifferent condition, and a large number who know the truth
manifestly neglect duty, for which the Lord will hold them accountable.
God has given us Jesus, and in Him is the
revelation of God. Our Redeemer says: "If a man love Me, he will keep My
words: and My Father will love him, and We will come unto him, and make
Our abode with him." "Let that therefore abide in you, which ye have heard
from the beginning. If that which ye have heard from the beginning shall
remain in you, ye also shall continue in the Son, and in
the Father." If we know God, and Jesus Christ whom He has sent,
unspeakable gladness will come to the soul. Oh, how we need the divine
presence! For the baptism of the Holy Spirit every worker should be
breathing out his prayer to God. Companies should be gathered together to
call upon God for special help, for heavenly wisdom, that the people of
God may know how to plan and devise and execute the work.
Especially should men pray that the Lord
will choose His agents, and baptize His missionaries with the Holy Spirit.
For ten days the disciples prayed before the Pentecostal blessing came. It
required all that time to bring them to an understanding of what it meant
to offer effectual prayer, drawing nearer and nearer to God, confessing
their sins, humbling their hearts before God, and by faith beholding
Jesus, and becoming changed into His image. When the blessing did come, it
filled all the place where they were assembled, and, endowed with power,
they went forth to do effectual work for the Master.
Choosing Men for the Ministry
Altogether too light a matter is made of
selecting men to do the sacred work committed to our hands. As a
consequence of this carelessness, unconverted men are at work in
missionary fields, who are full of passionate lusts, who are unthankful,
who are unholy. Though some of them have been often reproved, they have
not changed their course, and their lustful practices bring reproach upon
the cause of God. What will be the fruit of such labor? Why do not all our
workers remember that every word, good or evil, must be met again in the
judgment? Every inspiration of the Holy Spirit leading men to goodness and
to God is noted in the books of heaven, and the
worker through whom the Lord has brought light will be commended in the
day of God. If the workers realized the eternal responsibility that rests
upon them, would they enter upon the work without a deep sense of its
sacredness? Should we not expect to see the deep movings of the Spirit of
God upon men who present themselves to enter the ministry?
The apostle says, "Put ye on the Lord
Jesus Christ, and make not provision for the flesh, to fulfill the lusts
thereof." Let every soul heed these words, and know that the Lord Jesus
will accept of no compromise. In accepting and retaining workers who
persist in retaining their imperfections of character, and do not give
full proof of their ministry, the standard has been greatly lowered. There
are many in responsible positions who do not heed the injunction of the
apostle, but make provision for fulfilling the lust of the flesh. Unless
the worker puts on the Lord Jesus Christ and finds in Him wisdom,
sanctification, and redemption, how can he represent the religion of
Jesus? All his efficiency, all his reward, is found in Christ. There must
be evidence on the part of those who take the solemn position of shepherds
that they have, without reservation, dedicated themselves to the work.
They must take Christ as their personal Saviour.
Why is it that those who
have been long engaged in the ministry do not grow in grace and the
knowledge of the Lord Jesus? I have been shown that they gratify their
selfish propensities and do only such things as agree with their tastes
and ideas. They make provision for indulgence in pride and sensuality and
carry out their selfish ambitions and plans. They are full of self-esteem.
But although their evil propensities may seem to them as precious as the
right hand or the right eye, they must be separated from the worker, or he
cannot be acceptable before God. Hands are laid upon men to ordain them
for the ministry before they are thoroughly examined as to their
qualifications for the sacred work; but how much better would it be to
make thorough work before accepting them as ministers, than to have to go
through this rigid examination after they have become established in their
position and have put their mold upon the work.
A Consecrated Life
The following quotation shows what true
consecration will do, and this is what we should require of our workers:
"Harlan Page consecrated himself to God,
with a determination to live and labor to promote the Lord's glory, in the
salvation of the perishing. 'When I first obtained hope,' he said on his
dying bed, 'I felt that I must labor for souls. I prayed year after year
that God would make me the means of saving some.' His prayers were
signally answered. Never did Page lose an opportunity of holding up the
lamp to souls. By letters, by conversation, by tracts, by prayers, by
appeals and warnings, as well as by a holy and earnest example, did he try
to reclaim the wandering, or edify the believer. In factories, in schools,
and elsewhere did this mechanic labor, and only the mighty power of grace
can explain how one so humble could achieve so much. His life is a
speaking comment on the words, 'God hath chosen the foolish things of the
world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the
world to confound the things which are mighty; and base things of the
world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things
which are not, to bring to naught things that are.' 'Our faith in eternal realities is weak,' he
cried, 'and our sense of duty faint, while we neglect the salvation of our
fellow beings. Let us awake to our duties, and while we have tongue or
pen, devote them to the service of the Most High, not in our own strength,
but with strong faith and firm confidence.'"
We have increased light. We have a solemn,
weighty message to bear to the world, and God designs that His chosen
disciples shall have a deep experience, and be endowed with the power of
the Holy Spirit. "The Lord seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the
outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart." This was a lesson
that David never forgot, and in his dying testimony to Solomon he said,
"And thou, Solomon my son, know thou the God of thy father, and serve Him
with a perfect heart and with a willing mind: for the Lord searcheth all
hearts, and understandeth all the imaginations of the thoughts: if thou
seek Him, He will be found of thee; but if thou forsake Him, He will cast
thee off forever."
We are living in an important period of
this earth's history; and with the light of truth shining upon us, we
cannot now be excused for a moment in meeting a low standard. As
co-workers with Christ, we are privileged to share with Christ in His
suffering. We are to look at His life, study His character, and copy the
pattern. What Christ was in His perfect humanity, we must be; for we must
form characters for eternity.
The Power of the Holy Spirit Awaits Our
Demand and Reception
(Special
Testimonies to Ministers and Workers - series A, NO. 2, 1890, pgs 23-25.)
Melbourne, Australia, December 28, 1891.
Just prior to His leaving His disciples
for the heavenly courts, Jesus encouraged them with the promise of the
Holy Spirit. This promise belongs as much to us as it did to them, and yet
how rarely it is presented before the people, and its reception spoken of
in the church. In consequence of this silence upon this most important
theme, what promise do we know less about by its practical fulfillment
than this rich promise of the gift of the Holy Spirit, whereby efficiency
is to be given to all our spiritual labor? The promise of the Holy Spirit
is casually brought into our discourses, is incidentally touched upon, and
that is all. Prophecies have been dwelt upon, doctrines have been
expounded; but that which is essential to the church in order that they
may grow in spiritual strength and efficiency, in order that the preaching
may carry conviction with it, and souls be converted to God, has been
largely left out of ministerial effort. This subject has been set aside,
as if some time in the future would be given to its consideration. Other
blessings and privileges have been presented before the people until a
desire has been awakened in the church for the attainment of the blessing
promised of God; but the impression concerning the Holy Spirit has been
that this gift is not for the church now, but that at some time in the
future it would be necessary for the church to receive it.
All Other Blessings
This promised blessing, if claimed by
faith, would bring all other blessings in its train,
and it is to be given liberally to the people of God. Through the cunning
devices of the enemy the minds of God's people seem to be incapable of
comprehending and appropriating the promises of God. They seem to think
that only the scantiest showers of grace are to fall upon the thirsty
soul. The people of God have accustomed themselves to think that they must
rely upon their own efforts, that little help is to be received from
heaven; and the result is that they have little light to communicate to
other souls who are dying in error and darkness. The church has long been
contented with little of the blessing of God; they have not felt the need
of reaching up to the exalted privileges purchased for them at infinite
cost. Their spiritual strength has been feeble, their experience of a
dwarfed and crippled character, and they are disqualified for the work the
Lord would have them to do. They are not able to present the great and
glorious truths of God's Holy Word that would convict and convert souls
through the agency of the Holy Spirit. The power of God awaits their
demand and reception. A harvest of joy will be reaped by those who sow the
holy seeds of truth. "He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious
seed, shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with
him."
The world have received the idea from the
attitude of the church that God's people are indeed a joyless people, that
the service of Christ is unattractive, that the blessing of God is
bestowed at severe cost to the receivers. By dwelling upon our trials, and
making much of difficulties, we misrepresent God and Jesus Christ whom He
has sent; for the path to heaven is made unattractive by the gloom that
gathers about the soul of the believer, and many turn in disappointment
from the service of Christ. But are those who thus present Christ believers? No, for
believers rely upon the divine promise, and the Holy Spirit is a comforter
as well as a reprover.
The Christian must build all the
foundation if he would build a strong, symmetrical character, if he would
be well balanced in his religious experience. It is in this way that the
man will be prepared to meet the demands of truth and righteousness as
they are represented in the Bible; for he will be sustained and energized
by the Holy Spirit of God. He who is a true Christian combines great
tenderness of feeling with great firmness of purpose, with unswerving
fidelity to God; he will in no case become the betrayer of sacred trusts.
He who is endowed with the Holy Spirit has great capacities of heart and
intellect, with strength of will and purpose that is unconquerable.
My brethren, you are required by our
Saviour to take heed how you witness for Him. You need to go deeper and
still deeper in the study of the word. You have all classes of minds to
meet, and as you teach the truths of the sacred word, you are to manifest
earnestness, respect, and reverence. Weed out storytelling from your
discourses, and preach the word. You will then have more sheaves to bring
to the Master. Remember that in your audience there are those who are
constantly harassed by temptation. Some are wrestling with doubt, almost
in despair, almost hopeless. Ask God to help you to speak words that will
strengthen them for the conflict.--Review and Herald, December 22, 1904.
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